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Welcome to Biology Week 1-Weekending August 18th!

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Presentation on theme: "Welcome to Biology Week 1-Weekending August 18th!"— Presentation transcript:

1 Welcome to Biology Week 1-Weekending August 18th!
The following are the assignments for the week!

2 Monday AGENDA GOOD NEWS Set up Interactive Notebook-INB
Complete Coverpage

3 Students will review : Class procedures/expectations/students Code of Conduct Lab equipment, safety and emergency equipment use Vocabulary for experimentation- observation, inference, cause, effect, compare, contrast, procedures, problem, variables- IV & DV, control, theory, law, trials, graphing… Technology, scientists, pseudoscience, models

4 Sunshine State Standards: SC. 912. N. 1
Sunshine State Standards: SC.912.N Describe and explain what characterizes science and its methods. SC.912.N Describe how scientific inferences are drawn from scientific observations and provide examples from the content being studied. SC.912.N Recognize the role of creativity in constructing scientific questions, methods and explanations. SC.912.N Explain that scientific laws are descriptions of specific relationships under given conditions in nature, but do not offer explanations for those relationships. SC.912.N Recognize that theories do not become laws, nor do laws become theories; theories are well supported explanations and laws are well supported descriptions. SC.912.N Recognize that the strength or usefulness of a scientific claim is evaluated through scientific argumentation, which depends on critical and logical thinking, and the active consideration of alternative scientific explanations to explain the data presented. SC.912.N Identify sources of information and assess their reliability according to the strict standards of scientific investigation. SC.912.N Describe and provide examples of how similar investigations conducted in many parts of the world result in the same outcome. SC.912.N Explain that scientific knowledge is both durable and robust and open to change. Scientific knowledge can change because it is often examined and re-examined by new investigations and scientific argumentation. Because of these frequent examinations, scientific knowledge becomes stronger, leading to its durability. SC.912.N Describe instances in which scientists' varied backgrounds, talents, interests, and goals influence the inferences and thus the explanations that they make about observations of natural phenomena and describe that competing interpretations (explanations) of scientists are a strength of science as they are a source of new, testable ideas that have the potential to add new evidence to support one or another of the explanations. SC.912.N Explain that a scientific theory is the culmination of many scientific investigations drawing together all the current evidence concerning a substantial range of phenomena; thus, a scientific theory represents the most powerful explanation scientists have to offer. SC.912.N Describe the role consensus plays in the historical development of a theory in any one of the disciplines of science. SC.912.N Identify what is science, what clearly is not science, and what superficially resembles science (but fails to meet the criteria for science). SC.912.N Identify which questions can be answered through science and which questions are outside the boundaries of scientific investigation, such as questions addressed by other ways of knowing, such as art, philosophy, and religion. SC.912.N Identify examples of pseudoscience (such as astrology, phrenology) in society. SC.912.N Describe the function of models in science, and identify the wide range of models used in science. SC.912.N Explain how scientific knowledge and reasoning provide an empirically-based perspective to inform society's decision making. SC.912.N Define a problem based on a specific body of knowledge, for example: biology, chemistry, physics, and earth/space science, and do the following:  pose questions about the natural world, conduct systematic observations, examine books and other sources of information to see what is already known, review what is known in light of empirical evidence, plan investigations, use tools to gather, analyze, and interpret data (this includes the use of measurement in metric and other systems, and also the generation and interpretation of graphical representations of data, including data tables and graphs), pose answers, explanations, or descriptions of events, generate explanations that explicate or describe natural phenomena (inferences), use appropriate evidence and reasoning to justify these explanations to others, communicate results of scientific investigations, and evaluate the merits of the explanations produced by others. LA The student will organize information to show understanding or relationships among facts, ideas, and events (e.g., representing key points within text through charting, mapping, paraphrasing, summarizing, comparing, contrasting, or outlining) LA The student will record information and ideas from primary and/or secondary sources accurately and coherently, noting the validity and reliability of these sources and attributing sources of information MA.912.S Determine appropriate and consistent standards of measurement for the data to be collected in a survey or experiment. MA.912.S Collect, organize, and analyze data and present visual summaries from the following: bar graphs line graphs stem and leaf plots circle graphs histograms box and whisker plots scatter plots cumulative frequency (ogive) graphs

5 MONDAY- Instructions for setting up your interactive notebook
Please remember in the interactive notebook, every page counts as two pages; the front of a page is numbered 1, the back is numbered 2, the next front is numbered 3, the back is numbered 4. Etc. We are going to place the syllabus on the inside front cover of your notebook. The first page is the All Bout you page. We will then place the handout for the left side of the interactive notebook on the next page and handout for the right side of the interactive notebook next. Then the next two pages-front and back will be used for the Table of Contents.

6 Monday-Video https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=juxLuo-sH6M
Introduction to Biology- The Characteristics of Living things Watch as a whole group- Discussion

7 Tuesday AGENDA Good News TOC- Video- Characteristics of Life
Begin Cornell Notes-Introduction to Biology-Page 1 Homework-Write a summary for the Cornell notes-Signed syllabus, Safety Contract and $5.00 lab fee

8 Tuesday- Cornell Notes Introduction to Biology Placed on page 1
Review the Power Point- you may do this on your own or with the teacher. You are required to have at least 5 questions on the left side of the page and the information to answer the questions on the right. A diagram of how to set up your paper is included. Title of notes 9 Notes- Highlight key Words.-this is MARKING the text Q U E S T I O N Summary-must be at least 4 sentences

9 Wednesday AGENDA Good News TOC About Me Cover Page
Home work-Complete “About Me” cover page

10 Thursday AGENDA Good News TOC Bell Ringer Lab- Worms-pg. 3
Homework- On page 2- Draw a diagram –labeled- of the lab set up

11 Thursday-Assignment Worm Lab

12 Friday AGENDA Good News TOC Re-Cap- Lab The Martian and the Car –Pg. 5
Drawing of your car Pg. 4 Home work- complete any assignment that is missing from this week.

13 Friday-Assignment Page 10
Read The Martian and the Car and complete the paragraph according to the instructions and draw your car.

14 Friday-Homework Complete any assignment that is missing from
your notebook this week

15 The End of a GREAT WEEK!


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