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Cells and the microscope

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Presentation on theme: "Cells and the microscope"— Presentation transcript:

1 Cells and the microscope
Biology Cells and the microscope

2 How living things are organised
Today’s objectives To learn about how: To make up a slide of onion tissue and look at the cells using a microscope How living things are organised

3 Learn about how living things are organised
Homework Blue book Pg 16 11,12 Orange book Pg 19 Q9 Learn about how living things are organised

4 Organisation of a living thing

5 Learn how a living thing is organised
Homework Pg 15 Q3,4 Learn how a living thing is organised

6 How is the body organized?
To understand how the body is organized, think about how a school is organized.. A school needs to be very organized. Every pupil in the school needs to know where they should be and what they are doing. However... Not all pupils study the same subjects. Not all pupils can work together efficiently. There is not room for all the pupils to be in the same place.

7 How is the body organized?
A school is made up of an organized system. Individual pupil Tutor group Year group Junior / Senior Cycle School

8 Organisation of a living thing
All living things are made of small units called cells. animal plant

9 How is the body organized?
Cells are the basic units of life. Groups of cells work together to form tissues. Groups of tissues work together to form organs. cell tissue organ Take this down

10 How is the body organized?
Groups of organs form organ systems. For example, the human digestive system is made up of several organs including the mouth, gullet, stomach and small intestine. The different organs in a system are linked together by tubes or vessels. What other human body systems can you think of?

11 How is the body organized?
Why do organisms have to be so organized? Organization of the body allows complex organisms to carry out many different jobs at the same time. body life processes Be sensitive and respond to things grow reproduce respire move feed excrete Being organized means that the body does not waste energy, so it is more efficient.

12 Matching systems and organs

13 What did you learn today?

14 Cells

15 What animal and plant cells look like How cells work
Learning objectives What cells are What animal and plant cells look like How cells work The differences between plant cells and animal cells

16 Draw out a diagram of a microscope in your notes copy.
Homework Draw out a diagram of a microscope in your notes copy. Write a sentence about what each part of the microscope does.

17 What are living things made of?
Cells are the building blocks of life. They come in all shapes and sizes. Some organisms are made up of only one cell and are called uni-cellular. Others are made up of lots of cells and are called multi-cellular.

18 7A Cells What are cells? Animal and plant cells Cells to organisms
Contents 7A Cells What are cells? Animal and plant cells Cells to organisms Where do cells come from? Summary activities

19 animal cell plant cell nucleus cytoplasm cell membrane
What is a cell? Animal and plant cells all have three basic parts animal cell Plant cell plant cell nucleus cytoplasm cell membrane Plant cells also have some extra features that make them different to animal cells.

20 The cell – a living factory!

21 What does each part do?

22 A typical animal cell

23 A typical plant cell

24 Typical animal and plant cells

25 Comparing cell structure

26 The microscope

27 Cells What are cells? Animal and plant cells Cells to organisms
Contents Cells What are cells? Animal and plant cells Cells to organisms Where do cells come from? Summary activities

28 When does the body need to produce new cells?
Think of the following situations….. growth Your body loses cells and cells are constantly dying but your skin doesn’t disappear and you don’t get smaller. repair You cut your finger. The wound is eventually healed and weeks later you cannot even see where the cut used to be. reproduction Your body can make sex cells. In humans, these cells are sperm or egg cells. These cells contain the same genetic information that can be found in other body cells.

29 How does the body produce new cells?
The body needs to produce new cells for three main reasons: growth repair reproduction How does it produce these cells? The body is always producing new cells from old cells dividing. This is called cell division.

30 Where do cells come from?
Cell division occurs extremely quickly and each new cell is also able to divide.

31 Cell division

32 7A Cells What are cells? Animal and plant cells Cells to organisms
Contents 7A Cells What are cells? Animal and plant cells Cells to organisms Where do cells come from? Summary activities

33 cell – The building block that all living things are made of.
Glossary cell – The building block that all living things are made of. cell membrane – covering of a cell that controls what enters and leaves the cell. cell wall – Outer layer of a plant cell that gives the cell its shape. chloroplast – The part of a plant cell containing chlorophyll. cytoplasm – The liquid material inside a cell. nucleus – The control centre of a cell. organ – A group of tissues that work together. system – A group of organs that work together. tissue – A group of the same type of cells that work together. vacuole – A space inside a cell filled with watery sap.

34 Anagrams

35 Cells summary

36 Multiple-choice quiz


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