Biology Introduction  Understand your world  Make informed decisions  Self  Family  Medical  Diet  Make informed votes  Understand significance.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
Characteristics of Life
Advertisements

The Science of Life Biology bio = living or life -logy = the study of.
Biology Concepts 1.1 What is life?. What is life?  Living things vs. nonliving objects:  Comprised of the same chemical elements  Obey the same physical.
Chapter 4 & 18 review. 1. What are the characteristics of living organisms? (on webquest) – Made up of at least one cell – Has DNA – Needs energy and.
Human Biology, Science, and Society
Chapter 1 A View of Life 陳玉婷 Yu-Ting Chen #4071 食生系 R #6071 防檢疫 R607.
What is Biology?. The study of Living Things What does this phrase represent? “King Henry Died By Drinking Chocolate Milk”
Biology 4. What is Life? Properties of Life Reproduction.
A View of Life 1 Defining Life (1) How do you know if something is alive? What are properties of living things that non- livings things do no possess?
Chapter 1: A View of Life. Characteristics of Life Living Things are organized  Small molecules form larger molecule within a cell  Some organisms are.
Classification S7L1a: Students will be able to compare organisms by similar and dissimilar characteristics. S7L1b: Students will be able to classify organisms.
What is Biology? The science of living organisms and life processes, including the study of structure, functioning, growth, origin, evolution and distribution.
Chapter 1 Reading Quiz What is the lowest level of matter?
Introduction to Ecology February 20 th, Ecology: deals with different levels of organization.
INTRODUCTION TO BIOLOGY AND CLASSIFICATION. What is Biology? The study of living things.
Inquiry into Life Twelfth Edition Chapter 1 Lecture PowerPoint to accompany Sylvia S. Mader Copyright © The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. Permission required.
Everyone is a Biologist ! Nature of Science/Characteristics of Life.
Mader: Biology 8 th Ed. A View of Life Chapter 1 Assignment # 2.
Chapter 1- Invitation to Biology Scientific study of life Scientific study of life Lays the foundation for asking basic questions about life and the natural.
Unit 1 – Science Inquiry Biology BIOLOGY – what is it?  Biology is the study of anything that was living or once was living.
Intro to Biology Purpose: to introduce the recurring themes of this course and describe the mechanisms by which science is explored.
Biology Chapter 1. Biology Scientific study of life Lays the foundation for asking basic questions about life and the natural world.
 Biology is the study of life  7 Characteristics of Life ◦ Cellular Organization---made of one (unicellular) or many (multicellular) cells. Atoms--Molecules--Organelles--Cell--Tissue-
CHAPTER ONE The Science of Life Biology The study of life Characteristics of Life  Organization  Cells  Response to Stimuli  Homeostasis  Metabolism.
Get Ready for A & P! The Scientific Method Get Ready for A & P! The Scientific Method.
 Concepts & Methods in Biology Chapter 1. Biology Scientific study of life Lays the foundation for asking basic questions about life and the natural.
What is biology?  Bio means “life”  logy mean “study”  Life” emerges at the level of cells  Nature has levels of organization properties emerge at.
Invitation to Biology Chapter 1. Biology Scientific study of life Lays the foundation for asking basic questions about life and the natural world.
Biology: Exploring Life  Understand your world  Make informed decisions  Self  Family  Medical  Diet  Make informed votes  Understand significance.
AP Biology What is Biology? How do we study it? What is Biology? How do we study it?
Four Big Ideas Big Idea 1: the process of evolution drives the diversity and unity of life. Big Idea 2: biological systems utilize free energy and molecular.
Chapter 1 Exploring Life and Science. What characteristics are shared by living organisms? 1.Organized from the atom to the biosphere 2.Maintain a relatively.
The Nature of Science Chapter 1.
1 2 Characteristics of Life 3 Organization of Cells.
Biology Scientific study of life Lays the foundation for asking basic questions about life and the natural world.
Gary A. Bulla, Ph.D. Bio General Biology If you are a biology major- don’t take this course!
Introductory Biology: Cellular Dr. Heather Townsend Chapter 1.
How Scientists Work Ch. 1 Mrs. Griffin What Is Science?  Goal: To investigate and understand the natural world.  Deals only with the natural world.
What is Biology?.
Human Biology, Science, and Society
Biology The Study of Life. Characteristics of Living Things Made up of one or more Cells Reproduces Displays Organization (DNA) Grows & Develops Requires.
Life Science Overview Cells, Classification, and Ecosystems.
7 th Science Chapter 1.  Section 1: The Work of Science  Types of Science  1. Earth science – atmosphere, solar system, geology (rock layers, volcanoes,
1) To explain how scientists classify living things 2) To identify the 6 kingdoms of life.
BSC 2010 Chapter 1. Defining Biology Science of living organisms Science-From Greek “to know” –Body of knowledge –Method of inquiry.
Foundation year BIOLOGY-BIOL (101) Exploring Life & Science Dr. Huda Kassem.
Chapter 1 Humans In The World Of Biology. The Scientific Method Scientific Method –A procedure that is used to solve problems or answer questions. –A.
A View of Life Chapter 1. Learning Objective 1 What are the three basic themes of biology? What are the three basic themes of biology? 1. Evolution 2.
What is Biology? Biology is the study of life (bios = “life”; logia = “the study of”) Biology consists of several specialized disciplines –Botany: the.
Copyright © 2009 Pearson Education, Inc. Human Biology Concepts and Current issues  Chapter 1  Science, and Society  Characteristics of Life  Levels.
INTRODUCTION TO BIOLOGY Chapter 1. PROCESS OF SCIENCE Two main scientific approaches Discovery science - describing nature Hypothesis-driven science -
Concepts and Methods in Biology Chapter 1 1. Biology Scientific study of life Lays the foundation for asking basic questions about life and the natural.
Unit 1: The Nature of Life. What is science? (1-1) an organized way of using evidence to learn about the natural world It also refers to the body of knowledge.
Biology 105 Unit 1: Biology a view of Life Pgs 1-25 Unit 1: Biology a view of Life Pgs 1-25.
1 2 Characteristics of Life 3 Organization of Cells.
Chapter 1 The Science of Life.
Concepts & Methods in Biology
Unit 1: Biology a view of Life Pgs 1-19
Unit 1 – Science Inquiry Biology.
Write the hierarchy of life
Chapter 1 Human Biology is a Science.
Introduction to Biology
1.
Introduction to Zoology
College Prep Biology Mr. Martino
Characteristics of Life
Biology 4.
The Science of Biology.
Humans In The World Of Biology
Presentation transcript:

Biology Introduction

 Understand your world  Make informed decisions  Self  Family  Medical  Diet  Make informed votes  Understand significance of accomplishments

 Bios = life  ology = study of  Biology = study of life

 Organization  Atom  Molecule  Cell  Tissue  Organ  Organ system

 Organization (cont.)  Multicelled organism  Population  Community  Ecosystem  Biosphere

 Acquire energy  Autotrophs  Heterorophs  Metabolize  Maintain homeostasis

 Grow  Reproduce  Respond  Adapt

 Taxonomy—ID and organize into logical groups  Nomenclature—name organisms  Binomial nomenclature (Genus, species)  Homo sapiens  Canis lupus  Felis concolor

 Domain Eukarya  KingdomAnimalia  PhylumArthropoda  ClassInsecta  OrderLepidoptera  FamilyDanaidae  GenusDanaus  Speciesplexippus Monarch Butterfly

 Eubacteria  Archaebacteria  Eukarya  Kingdom Protista  Kingdom Fungi  Kingdom Plantae  Kingdom Animalia

 Gather information about the world  Do it objectively  Explain the natural world using rules or patterns in the natural world  Explanations that are testable  Can use information for prediction  No conclusion drawn in science is final!  However, can say many things with high probability

 Observation  Hypothesis  Test  Analyze & Interpret  Repeat  Theory

 Control Group  Standard of Comparison  Identical to testing group other than the variable being tested  Sampling Error  Certain amount of error in any study  Try to minimize by taking large sample sizes

 Observation: Some students fall asleep in Dr. Bern’s class  Hypothesis: Dr. Bern is the most boring Biology instructor  Test: Count number of sleeping students in Dr. Bern’s and Mr. Harnden’s classes  Results: 3/48 Students sleeping in Dr. Bern’s class, 4/48 students sleeping in Mr. Harnden’s class  Repeat: Count sleeping students in Dr. Bern’s and Ms. Henderson’s classes  Results: 3/48 students sleeping in Dr. Bern’s class, 2/48 students sleeping in Ms. Henderson’s  Analysis: 4% of students sleep in Ms. Henderson’s class, 6% in Dr. Bern’s, 8% in Mr. Harnden’s. There is a 3% margin of error.  Conclusion: Student’s sleep in Dr. Bern’s class at the same rate as other Biology instructors  Theory: Whether or not students fall asleep in class doesn’t depend on the instructor

 Can we use viruses that attack bacteria (bacteriophages) to fight infections?

 Hypothesis - Bacteriophages can protect mice against infectious bacteria  Prediction - Mice injected with bacteriophages will not die as a result of bacterial injection

 Experimental group  Inject with bacteria and bacteriophage  Control group  Inject with bacteria and saline

 Experimental group All mice lived  Control group All mice died  Conclusion - Bacteriophage injections protect mice against bacterial infections

 Prediction - Bacteriophage injections will be more effective treatment than single dose of the antibiotic streptomycin  Test - Mice injected with bacteria, then with saline, streptomycin, or bacteriophage

 With 2nd injection:  Bacteriophage - 11 of 12 mice lived  60 mg/gm streptomycin - 5 of 12 lived  100 mg/gm streptomycin - 3 of 12 lived  Saline - all mice died  Conclusion - Bacteriophage treatment can be as good or better than antibiotic

 Limited to our knowledge and understanding of the natural world  Cannot answer philosophical, moral, or ethical questions  Limited by man’s falibility