Hall of fame THE HALL OF FAME A photograph or cartoon drawing hall of fame of people in history who have made a positive contribution to science. This.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
What has a cow got to do with immunology?. WALT: Just how important was Edward Jenner to the History of Medicine? WILFs: (C) Can describe the story of.
Advertisements

Medicine Past and Present powerpoint by Michelle Nunes Don Gaspar de Portola School
Book p.44 Some people have made a difference in the lives of others! Let’s read the life story of Louis Pasteur, a very special person. Book p.44.
Let’s start with a story… In 1796 an English physician, Edward Jenner, attempted a very famous and risky experiment. In those days people used to die of.
Edward Jenner was born in As a young boy, Edward enjoyed science and nature spending hours on the banks of the River Severn looking for fossils.
Foods and Diseases Many foods are made with microorganisms. Bacteria Artificial Sweeteners Chocolate Buttermilk Vinegar Corn Syrup Olives.
THE STORY OF SMALLPOX. HISTORY OF SMALLPOX As early as 10,000 BC Found on Egyptian mummies During the 1700’s around half a million European people.
Robert Koch An online learning resource from HistoryGCSE.org.
02/17/11 AIM: Why is HIV so dangerous ? DO NOW: What does your body “PRODUCE” (make) to give you immunity?
By Anousheh. He was an English physician and scientist who was the pioneer of “Smallpox vaccine”. Smallpox was a deadly disease which had wiped out a.
The History of Medicine & Surgery in the 18th & 19th C.
Disease: Edward Jenner
Key Terms – Scientific and Medical Advances
The Immune System Protects The Human Body 3.1. Four Ways to Transmit Infectious Diseases  Direct Contact – shaking hands, sharing a drinking container.
Terry Kotrla, MS, MT(ASCP)BB
Introduction to Health Science and Technology
HISTORY OF MICROBIOLOGY Medical Microbiology Mrs. Bagwell.
Viruses What are they? How do they work? Where do they come from? And… What good are they? Viruses.
Viruses Chapter 18.2 Pages How were Viruses Discovered? Late 1800’s - bacteria known to causes disease Scientists found tobacco plants were.
Vaccination. Vocabulary Check Vaccination: conferring immunity to a disease by injecting an antigen (of attenuated microorganisms or inactivated component)
1 Introduction to Zoology. 2 Zoology Scientific study of the diversity of animal life.
When Mitty finds an envelope containing scabs from the 1902 smallpox epidemic, his life is turned upside down. A scab crumbles to dust in his hand as.
Lesson Overview Lesson Overview Fighting Infectious Disease Lesson Overview 35.3 Fighting Infectious Disease.
Microorganisms and Disease Chapter 1 Lesson 5
Viruses – main characteristic 1 – surprising fact 1 – question.
Ester linkages Eukarya Bacteria Ether linkages Archaea Isoprene.
Put these events in the correct order
PATHOGENS. HOW DO PATHOGENS CAUSE DISEASE? EVIL SPIRITSSWAMP AIR IMBALANCE OF BODY FLUIDS.
“Look at the wee- beasties.” or a visit to the Microorganism Hall of Fame.
35.3 Fighting Infectious Disease
Infinite, eternal and unchangeable In holiness. The symptoms of smallpox Symptoms of smallpox.
Pathology - the scientific study of the nature of disease and its causes A PATHOGEN is any disease causing agent. Quick Exercise: How many diseases can.
Microbiology Defination - Bacteriology: the study of bacteria
Do Now Review “10 Great Public Health Achievements” that you read for homework (1) Write down at least 3 ways your life might be different if you lived.
Learning Objective To be able to describe how we treat and prevent disease Key words: Medicine, Penicillin, antibiotics, immunisation, vaccine Starter.
Introduction to Microbiology. Microbiology Study of microscopic (living ) things E.g. viruses, bacteria, algae, protists, fungi.
HISTORY Revision Grids MEDICINE ROMAN MEDICINE & PUBLIC HEALTH MIDDLE AGES MEDICINE & PUBLIC HEALTH RENAISSANCE MEDICINE & PUBLIC HEALTH Date of the Exam.
Disease and Infection Bingo (Industrial Revolution and 20 th Century) BINGO !
Introduction to Microbiology part 2. Microbiology Study of microscopic (living ) things For example: viruses, bacteria, algae, protists, fungi.
Viruses Characteristics, Structures, Types, and Replication.
Do Now Quiz 1. What are antigens and where are they found? 2. What are antibodies and where are they made? 3. Explain the relationship between antigens.
1 Introduction to Zoology. 2 Zoology Scientific study of the diversity of animal life.
Aim: How does your body become immune (resistant) to disease?
Vaccines Combating Viruses. There are many different viral infections, most of which you have probably already heard of! List some viral infections that.
How does your body defend itself against microbes?
Modern Science vs. Infectious Disease
Smallpox Smallpox was one of the most devastating diseases the world has ever known. It killed millions of people every year. Few people reached adulthood.
Unit 4 - Immunology and Public Health
Disease & Germ Theory.
A  PATHOGEN is any disease causing agent. 
Germ Theory Joe Maag and Jason Falk.
Louis Pasteur (1822–1895) 프랑스의 화학자, 미생물학자 Germ theory
Aim: How does your body become immune (resistant) to disease?
Smallpox.
Examiner’s commentary
MEDICINE IN MEDIEVAL ENGLAND c
Starter Quiz 1. Where does the term Quackery come from?
Introduction to Zoology
Small pox.
Starter Edward Jenner Louis Pasteur Robert Koch Edwin Chadwick
(16 marks) + [SPaG: 4 marks]
It is a strand of hereditary material surrounded by a protein coating.
Smallpox.
Medicine Past and Present
Let’s start with a story…
How Does Science Separate Myths from Reality?
Vaccinations.
Presentation transcript:

Hall of fame THE HALL OF FAME A photograph or cartoon drawing hall of fame of people in history who have made a positive contribution to science. This section will contain background information and some interesting facts to make the scientists more human and less boring

THE HALL OF FAME When visitors click on the hall of fame icon they should get transported to a cartoon hall of fame. There will be characteure drawings on the wall of these famous people in history, it would be great if their eyes were moving or something there was something animated about these images. Nancy can draw the images but she would need input from you as to how you would want them in flash format?

Van Leewenhoek 1676 Edward Jenner 1776 Ingaz Semmelweiz 1850 Louis Pasteur 1861 Robert Koch 1884 Alexander Flemming 1929 Hey welcome to the hall of fame. I’d like you to meet some of my friends. You might have heard of some of them - they’re quite famous you know! Click on their pictures to find out who discovered antibiotics because he was really MESSY and who deliberately gave a small boy a deadly disease to test his theory!!! Go on, have a look. I imagine these to be in either B&W or coloured characteur format. They would be either talking to each other or their eyes would be moving around the screen as if following something.

Van Leewenhoek 1676 Edward Jenner 1776 Ingaz Semmelweiz 1850 Louis Pasteur 1861 Robert Koch 1884 Alexander Flemming 1929 Hey welcome to the hall of fame. I’d like you to meet some of my friends. You might have heard of some of them - they’re quite famous you know! Click on their pictures to find out who discovered antibiotics because he was really MESSY and who deliberately gave a small boy a deadly disease to test his theory!!! Go on, have a look.

Van Leewenhoek 1676 Edward Jenner 1776 Ingaz Semmelweiz 1850 Louis Pasteur 1861 Robert Koch 1884 Alexander Flemming 1929 In the 1700s smallpox was the most deadly human disease killing 1000s of people every year. In 1976, Edward Jenner was a doctor living in England and he noticed that milkmaids seemed to not get the disease. On closer inspection, he noticed that only milkmaids who caught the harmless infection cowpox from their cows did not die from smallpox. Could it be possible that if you caught cowpox first them somehow your body could fight smallpox? He decided to test his theory.... on a 10 year old boy! He vaccinated him with cowpox and then exposed him to smallpox. Lucky for the boy, Jenner was "right". He did not contract smallpox. The smallpox vaccine was the first successful vaccine ever to be developed and remains the only effective preventive treatment for the deadly smallpox disease. Thanks to Jenner’s discovery, the World Health Organisation declared smallpox an eradicated disease in It is the ONLY disease to be completely eradicated from earth in the past two centuries!!! Smallpox virus