Presentation is loading. Please wait.

Presentation is loading. Please wait.

MONDAY 3-2-15 LEARNING OBJECTIVE: PROCEDURE WRITING PRACTICE ENTRY TASK (1 ST P): GET YOUR DNA SAMPLE, NECKLACE AND A DROPPER FROM THE FRONT OF THE ROOM.

Similar presentations


Presentation on theme: "MONDAY 3-2-15 LEARNING OBJECTIVE: PROCEDURE WRITING PRACTICE ENTRY TASK (1 ST P): GET YOUR DNA SAMPLE, NECKLACE AND A DROPPER FROM THE FRONT OF THE ROOM."— Presentation transcript:

1 MONDAY 3-2-15 LEARNING OBJECTIVE: PROCEDURE WRITING PRACTICE ENTRY TASK (1 ST P): GET YOUR DNA SAMPLE, NECKLACE AND A DROPPER FROM THE FRONT OF THE ROOM GET A PAPER TOWEL FOR YOUR TABLE

2 MONDAY 3-2-15 LEARNING OBJECTIVE: PROCEDURE WRITING PRACTICE ENTRY TASK: WRITE A MINI ESSAY DESCRIBING THE PROCESS OF HOW YOU EXTRACTED YOUR DNA FROM YOUR CHEEK CELLS ON FRIDAY. ELABORATE ON WHAT DID YOU LEARN FROM THE EXPERIENCE.

3 PLAN OF THE DAY COLLECT YOUR DNA ON NECKLACE (1 ST PERIOD) CHECK DNA TEST RESULTS PROCEDURE WRITING – IDENTIFY ALL PARTS NEEDED

4 TUESDAY 3-3-15 LEARNING OBJECTIVE: PROCEDURE WRITING PRACTICE WHY CELLS DIVIDE ENTRY TASK: GET YOUR AQUATIC PLANT PROCEDURE PRACTICE PAPER OUT. FINISH FINDING AND LABELING THE PARTS (5 MINUTES)

5 PLAN OF THE DAY GO OVER PROCEDURE WRITING PRACTICE – IDENTIFY ALL PARTS NEEDED DO PROCEDURE QUIZ START THE CELL DIVISION CHAPTER

6 WHEN FINISHED WITH PROCEDURE QUIZ, READ PAGES 274-278 FROM CELL DIVISION CHAPTER 10 IN YOUR JOURNAL, ANSWER QUESTIONS 1A AND 2 A&B FROM PAGE 278

7 HTTPS://WWW.YOUTUBE.COM/WATCH?V=Q6UCKWIIFMG

8 WEDNESDAY 3-4-15 LEARNING OBJECTIVE: WHY THE RATIO OF SURFACE AREA TO VOLUME MATTERS FOR CELLS ENTRY TASK: WHAT ARE THE TWO MAIN PROBLEMS MENTIONED IN BOOK (10.1) IF A CELL GETS TOO BIG?

9 GLUE GUIDING QUESTIONS FOR CHAPTER 10 IN YOUR JOURNAL

10 PLAN OF THE DAY WORK ON CELL SIZE COMPARISON CUBE MODELS

11 CELL SIZE COMPARISON MODELS WORK WITH YOUR TABLE PARTNER YOU WILL FILL OUT YOUR OWN HANDOUT FOR DATA TABLE AND QUESTIONS YOU WILL SHARE ONE HANDOUT OF THE PATTERNS FOR CELL COMPARISON WORK ON THE CUTTING AND GLUING TOGETHER YOU HAVE 15 MINUTES TO FINISH THE CUBES AND ANSWER THE QUESTIONS ON HANDOUT!

12

13 THURSDAY 3-5-15 LEARNING OBJECTIVE: HOW ARE THE TERMS CHROMATIN, CHROMOSOMES AND SISTER CHROMATIDS RELATED ENTRY TASK: WHAT ARE SOME DIFFERENCES BETWEEN SEXUAL AND ASEXUAL REPRODUCTION?

14 REPRODUCTION ASEXUAL DONE BY SOMATIC OR BODY CELLS DONE ALSO BY UNICELLULAR ORGANISMS CREATES IDENTICAL DAUGHTER CELLS REPRODUCTION IS QUICK AND PRODUCES LARGE QUANTITIES OF OFFSPRING SEXUAL DONE BY GAMETES OR SEX CELLS CREATES GENETICALLY DIFFERENT DAUGHTER CELLS GENETIC DIVERSITY HELPS ENSURE SURVIVAL OF SPECIES – ALLOWS FOR QUICK ADJUSTMENTS TO CHANGING ENVIRONMENT

15 PLAN OF THE DAY CHROMOSOMES WORK ON VOCABULARY FOLDABLE

16 What do we need for cell division? Chromatin: a mass of DNA found in the nucleus

17 What do we need for cell division? Chromosome: a compacted piece of chromatin that is used for cell division Sister Chromatids: A pair of identical Chromosomes Centromere: The center section where the sister chromatids are connected Sister chromatids Centromere TEM 36,600 

18 DNA supercoil

19 LE 8-4 Sister chromatids Centromere TEM 36,600  Sister chromatids Chromosome distribution to daughter cells Chromosome duplication

20

21 10.2 vocabulary (p. 279) In your journal, write the definition and do a diagram/drawing for the vocabulary words in section 10.2 DUE MARCH 16

22 FRIDAY 3-6-15 LEARNING OBJECTIVE: HOW THE CELL CYCLE WORKS ENTRY TASK: GET A MITOSIS HANDOUT FROM THE FRONT OF THE ROOM AND START READING PAGE 46

23 PLAN OF THE DAY CELL CYCLE VIDEO MITOSIS HANDOUT

24 How do cells divide? Cell Cycle: an orderly sequence of events where cells divide The cell cycle consists of two major phases – Interphase (90% of the time) – Cell division (10% of the time)

25 The Cell Cycle In humans and other mammals, cells that reproduce daily have a cell cycle that usually lasts 10 to 20 hours. Cell division

26 The Cell Cycle: series of events that cells go through from “birth” to reproduction Cell division

27 Interphase Phase where all metabolic processes and functions happen – Ex: Cellular respiration Protein creation Movement Growth Other desired function

28 Interphase Interphase is also when the cell prepares for cell division – Ex: Increases proteins Duplicates organelles Grows in size Duplication of DNA

29 Cell Division The division phase of the cell There are two main parts of M phase – Mitosis – Cytokinesis

30 Cell Division Mitosis – The division of a cells nucleus and DNA into two equal parts – Creates two daughter nuclei Cytokinesis – The division of the cells cytoplasm Together they create two identical daughter cells

31 Mitosis Prophase: – Sister chromatids are formed – Formation of spindle – Nuclear envelope breaks down Metaphase: – Sister chromatids line up – Spindle is formed and attaching to chromosomes

32 LE 8-6a I NTERPHASE P ROPHASE P ROMETAPHASE Kinetochore Fragments of nuclear envelope Centrosome Early mitotic spindle Chromatin Centrosomes (with centriole pairs) LM 250  Nucleolus Nuclear envelope Plasma membrane Chromosome, consisting of two sister chromatids Centromere Spindle microtubules

33 Mitosis Anaphase: – Separation of sister chromatids – Spindle pulls chromosomes to either side of the cell Telophase: – Spindle breaks down – Nuclear envelopes form (2) – Chromosomes loosen to become chromatin Cytokinesis: – Cell pulls apart to create two identical cells

34 LE 8-6b M ETAPHASE A NAPHASETELOPHASE AND C YTOKINESIS Metaphase plate Spindle Daughter chromosomes Nuclear envelope forming Cleavage furrow Nucleolus forming

35 Cytokinesis in animal cells Animal Formation begins with indentation Cell is pulled/ pinched until it breaks apart Plants Formation begins with a disc containing cell wall materials A cell plate forms between the two nuclei Cleavage furrow Cleavage furrow Daughter cells Cleavage furrow Contracting ring of microfilaments SEM 140 

36 Cytokinesis in plant cells Formation begins with a disc containing cell wall materials A cell plate forms between the two nuclei Cell wallNew cell wall Daughter cellsCell plateVesicles containing cell wall material

37 TO DO NOW WORK ON THE MITOSIS HANDOUT 1.READ PAGE 46 2.COLOR THE DIFFERENT STAGES OF MITOSIS (FOLLOW INSTRUCTIONS ON PAGE 46) WHEN FINISHED, I’LL CHECK YOUR WORK WORK ON VOCABULARY FOLDABLE

38 MITOSIS ANIMATIONS 6:00 HTTPS://WWW.YOUTUBE.COM/WATCH?V=C6HN3SA0IP0 HTTPS://WWW.YOUTUBE.COM/WATCH?V=JCZQKMOOYPK CRASH COURSE 11:00 HTTPS://WWW.YOUTUBE.COM/WATCH?V=JCZQKMOOYPK MORE TECHNICAL (OXFORD UNIVERSITY) 7:00 HTTPS://WWW.YOUTUBE.COM/WATCH?V=3BWVRG8DWPK

39 MONDAY 3-9-15 LEARNING OBJECTIVE: IDENTIFYING THE DIFFERENT STAGES OF THE CELL CYCLE ENTRY TASK: IN A NEW PAGE IN YOUR JOURNAL, COPY THE FOLLOWING TITLE AND DIAGRAM (MAKE CIRCLES AT LEAST TWO INCHES IN DIAMETER

40 HOMEWORK DUE TOMORROW READING AND NOTES OF SECTION 10.3 (PAGES 286-290)

41 PLAN OF THE DAY GETTING FAMILIAR WITH HOW TO USE A COMPOUND MICROSCOPE IDENTIFYING THE DIFFERENT STAGES OF THE CELL CYCLE UNDER THE MICROSCOPE WITH PREPARED ONION ROOT SLIDES

42 ONION ROOT INVESTIGATION GO TO PAGE 283 IN YOUR BOOK, TO THE QUICK LAB SECTION: MITOSIS IN ACTION FOLLOW THE INSTRUCTIONS FOR WHAT TO DO, AND ANSWER QUESTIONS IN YOUR JOURNAL. LISTEN TO YOUR TEACHER FOR SOME MODIFICATIONS USE THE COLORING HANDOUT FROM FRIDAY AND PAGE 285 TO FIND THE DIFFERENT STAGES OF THE CELL CYCLE

43

44 ONION ROOT TIP

45

46

47

48 TUESDAY 3-10-15 LEARNING OBJECTIVE: HOW THE CELL CYCLE IS REGULATED CANCER CAUSES AND CURES ENTRY TASK: WHAT IS CANCER? WHAT CAUSES CANCER?

49 PLAN OF THE DAY IDENTIFYING THE PHASES OF MITOSIS COMPUTER ACTIVITY MITOSIS QUIZ CANCER NOTES CANCER TREATMENT THROUGH HISTORY PODCAST

50 HTTP://WWW.BIOLOGY.ARIZONA.EDU/DEFAULT.HTML

51 Name ___________________________ pd. ______ Place the letters in the correct order. Number one being the first step and 6 being the last step 1.________ 2.________ 3.________ 4.________ 5.________ 6.________ A. B. C. D. E. F. What is the purpose of mitosis?

52

53 Benign vs. malignant tumor Benign tumor: – abnormal mass of normal cells Malignant tumor: Masses of cells that result from the reproduction of cancer cells Cancer – Disease caused by cells that loose their ability to control rate of division

54

55

56 2:00 http://www.dnalc.org/view/15536-Cell- division-tumor-growth-and-metastasis-3D- animation-with-basic-narration.html http://www.dnalc.org/view/15536-Cell- division-tumor-growth-and-metastasis-3D- animation-with-basic-narration.html 12:00 https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=46Xh7OF kkCE https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=46Xh7OF kkCE

57 http://www.npr.org/2010/11/18/131406108/- emperor-of-all-maladies-traces-cancer- treatments http://www.npr.org/2010/11/18/131406108/- emperor-of-all-maladies-traces-cancer- treatments


Download ppt "MONDAY 3-2-15 LEARNING OBJECTIVE: PROCEDURE WRITING PRACTICE ENTRY TASK (1 ST P): GET YOUR DNA SAMPLE, NECKLACE AND A DROPPER FROM THE FRONT OF THE ROOM."

Similar presentations


Ads by Google