You need: Clean paper (2) / Pencil Pleasure reading book (if needed)

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You need: Clean paper (2) / Pencil Pleasure reading book (if needed) Warm Up: Mental Math – be ready I CAN: demonstrate knowledge of the parts, functions, and interactions of the body systems. Feb.13, 2018

On today’s test… First, check over your scan-tron. Name? Date? Test?

2/13/18

On today’s test… Second, you will not need answer 31-50. You may mark them out. Third, be aware of your student code – just because you DON’T use that space for answers. Lastly, extra credit may be done on the back of your scan-tron. Cover it with notebook paper.

Test on Body Systems You may NOT use your notes, books, neighbors, or neighbor’s notes/books. Talking/communicating will look like cheating and get a zero. When you finish – LOOK BACK OVER YOUR TEST. Put your head down, draw or doodle, read a pleasure reading book. Do NOT bring out extra stuff.

Homeostasis Homeo…homoios, homo -Greek -means “like” or “same/similar” Stasis… -English -means a period of inactivity or balance

Egg Observations When I say “egg” – what do you imagine in your head? Write that down. Is this what you imagined…why or why not? How do they compare/contrast? Let’s talk about why…and hypothesize. After they write observations/prior knowledge of “chicken egg” – I show the egg with no shell. They write observations again. I explain what I have done. They hypothesize about what happened and why. I am careful to talk about the calcium carbonate of the shell is similar to the calcium bones need. It is used for protection for the egg. Calcium carbonate happens to be a base – so it reacts and dissolves when add to an acid like vinegar. I intentionally made them react to dissolve the egg shell. Last question – if the shell is gone, why is it not a blob that slips through my fingers? How does it hold it’s shape? Students should eventually – through hypotheses and/or prior knowledge and experience – realize that the egg has a “thin skin” or membrane in addition to the shell. A membrane like a cell!

Observations of an egg Observations of “de-shelled” egg

Check your chart 89.8g 90.3g 94.6g 91.7g 88.9g 91.7g 89.0g 89.3g 93.1g Soaking liquid Initial Mass Hypothesis Mass after soak Net change Observations No liquid water Corn syrup Paint Food color 89.8g 90.3g 94.6g 91.7g 88.9g 91.7g 89.0g 89.3g 93.1g 84.0g

Egg Observations Let’s take it to the next level… What if we put the egg into different solutions like water?...corn syrup?...blue water? Write out the chart we have started and add in your hypotheses. At this point, we “demo” the addition of an egg to each solution…but we need a comparison – so we maintain a control. The water and syrup look alike – but how are they different? (Viscosity or thickness) The blue food coloring and blue water color (paint) is interesting in that they look very similar to each other and could confuse the folks running the experiment. We have already taken some measurements – like initial mass of each egg. If we are making scientific observations, the expectation is that we will record observations and be sure to include measurements WITH UNITS!!! Next – we sit and wait for eggs to change (and that will work best if done overnight – so let the kids relax and move to another activity such as cell 4x16 vocabulary.

Check your chart 89.8g 90.3g 94.6g 91.7g 88.9g 91.7g 89.0g 89.3g 93.1g Soaking liquid Initial Mass Hypothesis Mass after soak Net change Observations No liquid water Corn syrup Paint Food color 89.8g 90.3g 94.6g 91.7g 88.9g 91.7g 89.0g 89.3g 93.1g 84.0g

CELLS Even if cells are very tiny, they are made up of smaller parts, and the parts do different jobs. Cell membrane Nucleus