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A Science teacher by trade, I've also been known to be found teaching Maths and PE! However, strange as it may seem, my real love is designing resources that can be used by other teachers to maximise the experience of the students. I am constantly thinking of new ways to engage a student with a topic and try to implement that in the design of the lessons.

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A Science teacher by trade, I've also been known to be found teaching Maths and PE! However, strange as it may seem, my real love is designing resources that can be used by other teachers to maximise the experience of the students. I am constantly thinking of new ways to engage a student with a topic and try to implement that in the design of the lessons.
Adaptations of gas exchange surfaces (AQA A-level Biology)
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Adaptations of gas exchange surfaces (AQA A-level Biology)

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This lesson describes the adaptations of gas exchange surfaces in single-celled organisms, insects, bony fish and dicotyledonous plants. The PowerPoint and accompanying worksheets are part of the first lesson in a series of 6 lessons that have been designed to cover the detail of point 3.2 (Gas exchange) of the AQA A-level Biology specification. The lesson has been intricately planned to challenge the students on their understanding of the surface area to volume ratio (as covered in the previous lesson) and to make direct links to upcoming lessons on gas exchange and transport systems in humans. The lesson begins by explaining that single-celled organisms are able to diffuse oxygen and carbon dioxide across their body surface but that as organisms increase in size and their SA/V ratio decreases, they need adaptations at their gas exchange surfaces to be able to obtain the oxygen to meet their metabolic demands. This leads into the next part of the lesson which describes the roles of the following structures in insects and bony fish: spiracles, tracheae, tracheoles and tracheole fluid operculum, gill arch, gill filaments and lamellae The next task challenges the students to use their knowledge of topics 1 and 2 to come up with the letters that form the key term, countercurrent flow. This is a key element of the lesson and tends to be a principle that is poorly understood, so extra time is taken to explain the importance of this mechanism. Students are shown two diagrams, where one contains a countercurrent system and the other has the two fluids flowing in the same direction, and this is designed to support them in recognising that this type of system ensures that the concentration of oxygen is always higher in the oxygenated water than in the blood in the lamellae. The final part of the lesson describes the role of the stomata and the mesophyll cells in the gas exchange of a dicotyledonous plant. Students will learn that guard cells contain chloroplasts which generate ATP and then they are challenged to order a series of statements to form a description of the events that result in the opening of the stomata. The differing structures of the spongy mesophyll and palisade mesophyll cells are then considered before the students are challenged to explain how carbon dioxide moves through the leaf after entering via the stomata and then how water vapour and oxygen leave. Clear links are made to the loss of water vapour by transpiration so students are prepared for the lessons covering this biological process later in topic 3.
Rods & cone cells (AQA A-level Biology)
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Rods & cone cells (AQA A-level Biology)

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This fully-resourced lesson describes how the functional differences of the retinal rod and cone cells is related to their structures. The detailed PowerPoint and accompanying resources are part of the 2nd in a series of 2 lessons that have been designed to cover the details included in point 6.1.2 of the AQA A-level Biology specification. However, as explained at the start of the lesson, it has been specifically planned to be taught after the lessons in topic 6.3, so that students are aware and understand the meaning of terms such as depolarisation and hyperpolarisation. It is likely that students will be aware that the human retina contains rod and cone cells, so this lesson builds on that knowledge and adds the detail needed at this level. Over the course of the lesson, students will learn that these cells contain different optical pigments and that this feature along with their differing connectivity to the bipolar neurones means that they have different sensitivities to light, colour perception and visual acuity. Exam-style questions are interspersed throughout to check on current understanding and also make links to previously covered topics. For example, students are challenged to recognise a description of the mitochondria so they can discover that this cell structure is found in the inner segment where it is responsible for generating the ATP needed to pump sodium ions out of the cells. As detailed above, this lesson ties in closely with topic 6.3 and students will be expected to make links to synapses and to the changes in membrane potential that occur when sodium ions move in or out of a cell
Maths in Edexcel A-level Biology REVISION
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Maths in Edexcel A-level Biology REVISION

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The Pearson Edexcel A-level Biology A (Salters Nuffield) specification states that a minimum of 10% of the marks across the assessment papers will require the use of mathematical skills. This revision lesson has been designed to include a wide range of activities that challenge the students on these exact skills because success in the maths in biology questions can prove the difference between one grade and the next! Step-by-step guides are used to walk students through the application of a number of the formulae and then exam-style questions with clear mark schemes (which are included in the PowerPoint) will allow them to assess their progress. Other activities include differentiated tasks, group discussions and quick quiz competitions such as “FROM NUMBERS 2 LETTERS” and “YOU DO THE MATH”. The lesson has been written to cover as much of the mathematical requirements section of the specification as possible but the following have been given particular attention: Hardy-Weinberg equation Chi-squared test Calculating size Converting between quantitative units Standard deviation Estimating populations of sessile and motile species Percentages and percentage change Cardiac output Geometry Due to the detail and extensiveness of this lesson, it is estimated that it will take in excess of 2/3 hours of A-level teaching time to work through the activities and it can be used throughout the duration of the course
The Contact process (OCR GCSE Chemistry)
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The Contact process (OCR GCSE Chemistry)

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This lesson is fully-resourced, engaging and detailed and explains how the Contact process is one of the 3 steps involved in making sulfuric acid. The PowerPoint and accompanying resources, which are differentiated, have been written to cover point C6.1(d) of the OCR Gateway A GCSE Chemistry specification. The lesson begins with a challenge where students have to use the 1st letters of the answers to questions on previously covered topics to come up with the word CONTACT. At this point, the students are introduced to the contact process as the 2nd step in a 3 stage process to make sulfuric acid. The lesson goes through the details of each of the 3 steps but particular time is spent exploring the conditions needed for the contact process in step 2. Students are continuously tested on their knowledge of reversible reactions and the key concepts to do with equilibrium position and equilibrium yield are explained so they can understand how the conditions of 2 atmospheres and 450 degrees celsius are chosen. Again through a prior knowledge check of empirical formula, the students will be introduced to vanadium oxide as the catalyst. As well as exam-style questions with displayed answers to check on current understanding, there are discussion points as well as quick quiz competitions to introduce key terms and values in a memorable way.
DNA and GENES (AQA A-level Biology)
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DNA and GENES (AQA A-level Biology)

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This fully-resourced lesson looks at the structure of genes and explores their role as a base sequence on DNA that codes for the amino acid sequence of a polypeptide. Both the PowerPoint and accompanying resource have been designed to cover the second part of point 4.1 of the AQA A-level Biology specification and has been written to specifically tie in with the previous lesson on DNA in prokaryotes and eukaryotes. The lesson begins with a prior knowledge check as the students have to recognise the key term chromosome from a description involving DNA and histones. This allows genes, as sections of a chromosome, to be introduced and the first of a number of quiz rounds is then used to get the students to meet the term locus so that they can understand how each gene has a specific location on a chromosome. Whenever possible, opportunities are taken to make links to the other parts of the AQA specification and this is utilised here as students are reminded that alternative versions of a gene (alleles) can be found at the locus. Moving forwards, students will learn that 3 DNA bases is a triplet and that each triplet codes for a specific amino acid. At this point, the genetic code is introduced and students are challenged to explain how the code contains 64 different triplets. By comparing this number against the number of different amino acids in proteins, students will see how each amino acid is encoded for by more than one triplet and how this explains the degenerate nature of the genetic code. Again, an opportunity is taken to link to gene mutations. Finally, the students are told that most of the nuclear DNA in a eukaryote doesn’t code for a polypetptide and that even within a gene, there are coding and non-coding regions known as exons and introns respectively. The last section of the lesson uses a quiz round to check on all of the key terms which have been met in the two lessons on DNA, genes and chromosomes.
Slow and fast skeletal muscle fibres (AQA A-level Biology)
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Slow and fast skeletal muscle fibres (AQA A-level Biology)

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This fully-resourced lesson describes the structure and general properties of slow and fast skeletal muscle fibres. The detailed PowerPoint and accompanying resources are the second in a series of 2 lessons that cover the content detailed in point 6.3 of the AQA A-level Biology specification and due to the obvious links, this lesson also challenges the students on their knowledge of respiration, cell structures and biological molecules like glycogen and haemoglobin The following structure and properties are covered over the course of this lesson: Reliance on the aerobic or anaerobic pathways to generate ATP Resistance to fatigue mitochondrial density capillary density myoglobin content (and colour) fibre diameter phosphocreatine content glycogen content A wide variety of tasks are used to cover this content and include knowledge recall and application of knowledge exam-style questions with fully-displayed mark schemes as well as quick quiz competitions to maintain motivation and engagement. This lesson has been specifically planned to tie in with the previous lesson in topic 6.3, titled “Contraction of skeletal muscles”, and this lesson has been uploaded for free
Topic 8.4.1: Recombinant DNA technology (AQA A-level Biology)
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Topic 8.4.1: Recombinant DNA technology (AQA A-level Biology)

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This fully-resourced lesson bundle covers the content as detailed in topic 8.4.1 of the AQA A-level Biology specification (recombinant DNA technology). All of the lessons have been written to contain a wide range of activities that will maintain student engagement whilst this potentially difficult concept is explained. Links are continuously made to previous lessons in topic 8 as well as those covered in the AS year (mainly topic 4) If you would like to see the quality of the lessons, download the producing DNA fragments lesson as this has been uploaded for free
Control of blood glucose concentration (CIE IGCSE Biology SUPPLEMENT)
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Control of blood glucose concentration (CIE IGCSE Biology SUPPLEMENT)

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This resource, which consists of an engaging and detailed PowerPoint and a differentiated worksheet, has been designed to cover the content in the supplement section of topic 14.4 in the CIE IGCSE Biology specification, specifically the control of blood glucose concentration and the symptoms and treatment of diabetes type I. A wide range of activities are found across the lesson which will engage and motivate the students whilst the important content is covered and understanding and previous knowledge checks are included at regular points so students can assess their progress. The following content is covered across this resource: The release of insulin by the pancreas when high glucose levels are detected The role of the liver and muscle cells in the conversion of glucose to glycogen Negative feedback in this homeostatic control mechanism Diagnosis and treatment of type I diabetes Type I diabetes as an autoimmune disease (link to topic 10) The release of glucagon and the role of the liver cells when blood glucose concentration is low As shown above, links are made to other topics where possible so students can recognise the importance of making connections between related subjects. This lesson has been designed for students studying on the CIE IGCSE Biology course but is suitable for older students who are looking at this topic at A-level and need to recall the key details
The structure and function of the kidneys (CIE IGCSE Biology SUPPLEMENT)
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The structure and function of the kidneys (CIE IGCSE Biology SUPPLEMENT)

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The engaging PowerPoint and accompanying differentiated worksheets which come as part of this lesson resource have been designed to cover the SUPPLEMENT section of topic 13.1 of the CIE IGCSE Biology specification which states that students should be able to describe the structure and function of the kidneys. Students will initially be introduced to the gross anatomy of the kidneys with the cortex and medulla and the associated ureter before moving on to the fine anatomy of the tubules and focusing on the key functions like ultrafiltration and selective reabsorption. Lots of discussion points and student discovery have been written into the lesson to encourage students to think about why a certain process takes place before attempting to explain it using the Biology. In addition, there are lots of understanding checks and prior knowledge checks so that students are challenged on their knowledge of previously learned topics such as active transport and the components of blood. The final task of the lesson challenges the students to use their knowledge of the formation of urea from earlier in topic 13 and combine it with what they have learnt in this lesson to arrange statements about the journey of this molecule into the right order This lesson has been designed for students who are studying the CIE IGCSE Biology course but is suitable for older students who are studying the kidney at A-level and want to recall some of the key details of the structure and function of this organ
Mitosis (CIE IGCSE Biology CORE & SUPPLEMENT)
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Mitosis (CIE IGCSE Biology CORE & SUPPLEMENT)

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This lesson has been designed to cover the content in specification point 17.3 (Mitosis) which is part of topic 17 (Inheritance) of the CIE IGCSE Biology specification. A wide range of activities have been written into the lesson to motivate and engage the students whilst ensuring that the following content of both the Core & Supplement sections are covered in detail. The duplication of chromosomes before mitosis Mitosis is a form of division that results in genetically identical cells The important roles of mitosis for living organisms Stem cells use mitosis before differentiation to produce specialised cells Understanding checks have been included in the lesson at regular points to allow the students to assess their understanding as well as previous knowledge checks to topics like organelles in animal and plant cells. This lesson has been designed for GCSE-aged students but is suitable for older students who are studying mitosis at A-level and need to recall the key points
AQA A-level Biology Topic 5 REVISION (Energy transfers in and between organisms)
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AQA A-level Biology Topic 5 REVISION (Energy transfers in and between organisms)

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This is a fully-resourced REVISION lesson that uses a combination of exam questions, understanding checks, quick tasks and quiz competitions to enable students to assess their understanding of the content found within Topic 5 (Energy transfers in and between organisms) of the AQA A-level Biology specification. The sub-topics and specification points that are tested within the lesson include: The light dependent reaction including the production of ATP and reduced NADP and the photolysis of water The light-independent reaction to form triose phosphate and regenerate RuBP Identify environmental factors that limit the rate of photosynthesis Glycolysis as the first stage of both aerobic and anaerobic respiration The conversion of pyruvate to lactate The stages of aerobic respiration that occur in the mitochondria Losses of energy through food chains The roles of microorganisms in the nitrogen cycle The environmental issues of the use of fertilisers as seen with eutrophication Students will be engaged through the numerous quiz rounds such as “Can you DEPEND on your knowledge” and “Are you on the right PATH” whilst crucially being able to recognise those areas which require their further attention during general revision or during the lead up to the actual A-level terminal exams
Temperature & enzyme activity (Edexcel Int. A-level Biology)
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Temperature & enzyme activity (Edexcel Int. A-level Biology)

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This lesson explains the effects of temperature on the rate of enzyme activity and describes how to calculate the temperature coefficient. The PowerPoint and the accompanying resources have been designed to cover point 5.21 of the Edexcel International A-level Biology specification and this lesson has been specifically planned to tie in with a lesson in topic 2 where the roles and mechanism of action of enzymes were introduced. The lesson begins by challenging the students to recognise optimum as a key term from its 6 synonyms that are shown on the board. Time is taken to ensure that the students understand that the optimum temperature is the temperature at which the most enzyme-product complexes are produced per second and therefore the temperature at which the rate of an enzyme-controlled reaction works at its maximum. The optimum temperatures of DNA polymerase in humans and in a thermophilic bacteria and RUBISCO in a tomato plant are used to demonstrate how different enzymes have different optimum temperatures and the roles of the latter two in the PCR and photosynthesis are briefly described to prepare students for these lessons in modules 6 and 5. Moving forwards, the next part of the lesson focuses on enzyme activity at temperatures below the optimum and at temperatures above the optimum. Students will understand that increasing the temperature increases the kinetic energy of the enzyme and substrate molecules, and this increases the likelihood of successful collisions and the production of enzyme-substrate and enzyme-product complexes. When considering the effect of increasing the temperature above the optimum, continual references are made to the previous lesson and the control of the shape of the active site by the tertiary structure. Students will be able to describe how the hydrogen and ionic bonds in the tertiary structure are broken by the vibrations associated with higher temperatures and are challenged to complete the graph to show how the rate of reaction decreases to 0 when the enzyme has denatured. The final part of the lesson introduces the Q10 temperature coefficient and students are challenged to apply this formula to calculate the value for a chemical reaction and a metabolic reaction to determine that enzyme-catalysed reactions have higher rates of reaction
The pancreas and the release of insulin (OCR A-level Biology)
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The pancreas and the release of insulin (OCR A-level Biology)

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This detailed and engaging lesson covers the detail of specification points 5.1.4 (c and d) of the OCR A-level Biology A specification which states that students should be able to demonstrate and apply an understanding of the histology of the pancreas and the control of insulin secretion. There is a particular emphasis on structure throughout the lesson so that students can recognise the exocrine and endocrine tissues of the pancreas as well as describe their specific functions. The lesson begins with a list of endocrine glands and the students are challenged to select the gland which also has exocrine functions. This leads into a focus on the exocrine tissues of the pancreas, beginning with the enzymes that are secreted and form pancreatic juice. Students will discover how groups of these cells are called acini and the secretion of the enzymes into the lobule at the centre will lead to the intralobular ducts and finally the formation of the pancreatic duct. Moving forwards, students are introduced to the Islets of Langerhans and the specialised alpha and beta cells that are found within this endocrine tissue. The rest of this lesson looks at how the release of insulin from the beta cells is controlled. Some of the structures and substances involved have been met in earlier topics so a fun quiz round is used to see which students can recall these parts first. A series of questions and discussion points challenge the students to verbalise answers and to discuss key points so that the cascade of events that take place in the lead up to the release can be considered. In the final task, students have to describe these events in detail and this task has been differentiated so that students of differing abilities can access the work. This lesson has been specifically designed for students on the OCR A-level Biology A course and ties in well with the other lessons from module 5.1.4 on the control of blood glucose concentration and diabetes mellitus type I and II
Blood clotting (Edexcel A-level Biology B)
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Blood clotting (Edexcel A-level Biology B)

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This fully-resourced lesson describes the roles of the platelets and plasma proteins in the sequence of events that lead to blood clotting. The engaging PowerPoint and accompanying resources have been primarily designed to cover the content detailed in point 4.4 (viii) of the Edexcel A-level Biology B specification and includes descriptions of the roles of thromboplastin, thrombin and fibrin but time has also been taken to look at haemophilia as a sex-linked disease so that students are prepared for topic 8 (genetic variation). The lesson begins with the introduction of clotting factors as integral parts of the blood clotting process and explains that factor III, thromboplastin, needs to be recalled as well as the events that immediately precede and follows its release. Students will learn how damage to the lining and the exposure of collagen triggers the release of this factor and how a cascade of events then results. Quick quiz rounds and tasks are used to introduce the names of the other substances involved which are prothrombin, thrombin, fibrinogen and fibrin. In a link to the upcoming topic of proteins, students will understand how the insolubility of fibrin enables this mesh of fibres to trap platelets and red blood cells and to form the permanent clot. The final part of the lesson introduces haemophilia as a sex-linked disease and students are challenged to apply their knowledge to an unfamiliar situation as they have to write genotypes and determine phenotypes before explaining why men are more likely to suffer from this disease than women.
Structure of plant cells (Edexcel Int. A-level Biology)
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Structure of plant cells (Edexcel Int. A-level Biology)

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This lesson describes the structure and ultrastructure of plant cells to allow students to compare this structure against animal cell structure. The detailed PowerPoint and accompanying resources have been designed to cover points 4.1 (i) & (ii) in unit 2 of the Edexcel International A-level Biology specification and also describes the functions of the cell wall, chloroplast, amyloplast, vacuole, tonoplast, plasmodesmata, pits and middle lamella The lesson begins with a task called REVERSE GUESS WHO which will challenge the students to recognise a particular organelle from a description of its function. This will remind students that plant cells are eukaryotic and therefore contain a cell-surface membrane, a nucleus (+ nucleolus), a mitochondria, a Golgi apparatus, ribosomes and rough and smooth endoplasmic reticulum like the animal cells. Moving forwards, the next part of the lesson focuses on the relationship between the structure and function of the vacuole, chloroplast, plasmodesmata and cellulose cell wall. When considering the vacuole, key structures such as the tonoplast are described as well as critical functions including the maintenance of turgor pressure. A detailed knowledge of the structure of the chloroplast at this early stage of their A-level studies will increase the likelihood of a clear understanding of photosynthesis when covered in topic 5. For this reason, time is taken to consider the light-dependent and light-independent reactions and to explain how these stages are linked. Students will learn that chloroplasts and amyloplasts can contain stores of starch so an opportunity is taken to challenge them on their knowledge of this polysaccharide as it was covered in topic 1. The final task challenges them to recognise descriptions of the cell wall, chloroplast, amyloplasts, vacuole, tonoplast and plasmodesmata which will leave 2 remaining which describe the pits and middle lamella.
Human gas exchange system (AQA A-level Biology)
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Human gas exchange system (AQA A-level Biology)

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This lesson describes the gross structure of the human gas exchange system, including the trachea, bronchi, bronchioles and lungs. The PowerPoint and accompanying resources are part of the third lesson in a series of 6 which have been designed to cover the detail of topic 3.2 in the AQA A-level Biology specification which is titled gas exchange and this lesson has been specifically planned to prepare students for the next lesson where the essential features of the alveoli are described. The lesson is filled with a range of activities such as guided discussion periods, exam-style questions (with markschemes) and quiz competitions and these run alongside the slides containing the detailed A-level Biology content to cover the following features: The incomplete rings of cartilage, ciliated pseudostratified columnar epithelium and goblet cells in the trachea The narrowing airways of the primary, secondary and tertiary bronchi The elastic fibres and smooth muscle in the terminal and respiratory bronchioles The pleural cavity and fluid of the lungs When describing the production of mucus by the goblet cells in the trachea, time is taken to consider cystic fibrosis and the inheritance of this autosomal recessive disorder. Students will be supported in working out genotypes from a pedigree tree to prepare them for the topic of inheritance (7.1)
Adrenal glands (OCR A-level Biology A)
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Adrenal glands (OCR A-level Biology A)

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This lesson describes the structure and functions of the adrenal glands, and includes the hormones secreted by the cortex and the medulla. The detailed PowerPoint and accompanying resources have been designed to cover point 5.1.4 (b) of the OCR A-level Biology A specification This lesson has been planned to closely tie in with the previous lesson on endocrine communication, and specifically the modes of action of peptide and steroid hormones. At the start of the lesson, the students have to use the knowledge acquired in this last lesson to reveal the key term cortex and this leads into the description of the structure of the adrenal glands in terms of the outer region and the inner region known as the medulla. The main part of the lesson focuses on the range of physiological responses of the organs to the release of adrenaline. Beginning with glycogenolysis, the need for adrenaline to bind to adrenergic receptors is described including the activation of cyclic AMP. A quiz competition is used to introduce other responses including lipolysis, vasodilation, bronchodilation and an increase in stroke volume. Links to previous topics are made throughout the lesson and students are challenged on their knowledge of heart structure and polysaccharides. The final part of the lesson introduces the three zones of the adrenal cortex and the steroid hormones that they produce along with their functions. Once again, a series of exam-style questions are used to challenge their ability to apply their understanding to an unfamiliar situation and to make biological links and the mark schemes are embedded in the PowerPoint.
Biodiversity and calculating an index of diversity (AQA A-level Biology)
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Biodiversity and calculating an index of diversity (AQA A-level Biology)

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This lesson describes the meaning of biodiversity, explains how it relates to a range of habitats, and describes how to calculate an index of diversity. The PowerPoint and accompanying worksheets are part of the first in a series of 2 lessons that have been designed to cover the content of topic 4.6 of the AQA A-level Biology specification. The second lesson describes the balance between conservation and farming. A quiz competition called BIOLOGICAL TERMINOLOGY SNAP runs over the course of the lesson and this will engage the students whilst challenging them to recognise species, population, biodiversity, community and natural selection from their respective definitions. Once biodiversity as the variety of living organisms in a habitat is revealed, the students will learn that this can relate to a range of habitats, from those in the local area to the Earth. When considering the biodiversity of a local habitat, the need for sampling is discussed and some key details are provided to initially prepare the students for these lessons in topic 7. Moving forwards, the students will learn that it is possible to measure biodiversity within a habitat, within a species and within different habitats so that they can be compared. Species richness as a measure of the number of different species in a community is met and a biological example in the rainforests of Madagascar is used to increase its relevance. The students are introduced to an unfamiliar formula that calculates the heterozygosity index and are challenged to apply their knowledge to this situation, as well as linking a low H value to natural selection. The rest of the lesson focuses on the index of diversity and a 3-step guide is used to walk students through each part of the calculation. This is done in combination with a worked example to allow students to visualise how the formula should be applied to actual figures. Using the method, they will then calculate a value of d for a comparable habitat to allow the two values to be considered and the significance of a higher value is explained. All of the exam-style questions have mark schemes embedded in the PowerPoint to allow students to continuously assess their progress and understanding.
Transcription (AQA A-level Biology)
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Transcription (AQA A-level Biology)

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This detailed lesson explains how the process of transcription results in the production of mRNA, either directly from DNA in prokaryotes or following splicing in eukaryotes. Both the detailed PowerPoint and accompanying resource have been designed to specifically cover the second part of point 4.2 of the AQA A-level Biology specification but also provides important information that students can use when being introduced to gene expression in topic 8. The lesson begins by challenging the students to recall that most of the nuclear DNA in eukaryotes does not code for polypeptides. This allows the promoter region and terminator region to be introduced, along with the structural gene. Through the use of an engaging quiz competition, students will learn that the strand of DNA involved in transcription is known as the template strand and the other strand is the coding strand. Links to previous lessons on DNA and RNA structure are made throughout and students are continuously challenged on their prior knowledge as well as they current understanding of the lesson topic. Moving forwards, the actual process of transcription is covered in a 7 step bullet point description where the students are asked to complete each passage using the information previously provided. They will learn that the RNA strand formed at the end of transcription in eukaryotes is a primary transcript called pre-mRNA and then the details of splicing are explained. An exam-style question is used to check on their understanding before the final task of the lesson looks at the journey of mRNA to the ribosome for the next stage of translation. This lesson has been written to challenge all abilities whilst ensuring that the most important details are fully explained.
Light-dependent reactions of photosynthesis (Edexcel Int. A-level Biology)
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Light-dependent reactions of photosynthesis (Edexcel Int. A-level Biology)

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This lesson describes the light-dependent reactions of photosynthesis, including cyclic and non-cyclic photophosphorylation. The detailed PowerPoint and accompanying resources have been designed to cover point 5.3 in unit 4 of the Edexcel International A-level Biology specification and therefore this lesson describes how light energy is trapped by exciting electrons in chlorophyll and the role of these electrons in generating ATP, reducing NADP in photophosphorylation and producing oxygen through photolysis of water. This is a topic which students tend to find difficult so this lesson has been intricately planned to walk them through each of the key reactions in the light-dependent stage. Time is taken to describe the roles of the major protein complexes that are embedded in the thylakoid membrane and this includes the two photosystems, the proton pump and ATP synthase. A series of exam-style questions have been written that link to other biological topics in this course such as cell structure and membrane transport as well as application questions to challenge them to apply their understanding. Some of these resources have been differentiated to allow students of differing abilities to access the work and to be pushed at the same time. Students will learn that there are two pathways that the electron can take from PSI and at the completion of the two tasks which describe each of these pathways, they will understand how ATP is generated in non-cyclic and cyclic fashion. The final task of the lesson asks them to compare these two forms of photophosphorylation to check that they understand when photolysis is involved and reduced NADP is formed. Due to the detail included in this lesson, it is estimated that it will take in excess of 2.5 hours of allocated A-level teaching time to complete