pptx, 4.12 MB
pptx, 4.12 MB
docx, 17.03 KB
docx, 17.03 KB
docx, 14.9 KB
docx, 14.9 KB
docx, 18.41 KB
docx, 18.41 KB
docx, 14.06 KB
docx, 14.06 KB
docx, 217.56 KB
docx, 217.56 KB
docx, 219.46 KB
docx, 219.46 KB

This fully-resourced lesson describes how natural selection leads to behavioural, anatomical and physiological adaptations. The PowerPoint and accompanying resources have been designed to cover specification points 4.3 & 4.4 of the Pearson Edexcel A-level Biology A specification

President Trump’s error ridden speech about antibiotics is used at the beginning of the lesson to remind students that this is a treatment for bacterial infections and not viruses as he stated. Moving forwards, 2 quick quiz competitions are used to introduce MRSA and then to get the students to recognise that they can use this abbreviation to remind them to use mutation, reproduce, selection (and survive) and allele in their descriptions of evolution through natural selection. The main task of the lesson challenges the students to form a description that explains how this strain of bacteria developed resistance to methicillin to enable them to see the principles of natural selection. This can then be used when describing how the anatomy of the modern-day giraffe has evolved over time. The concept of convergent evolution is introduced and links are made to the need for modern classification techniques as this is covered later in topic 4. Moving forwards, students will understand how natural selection leads to adaptations and a quick quiz competition introduces the different types of adaptation and a series of tasks are used to ensure that the students can distinguish between anatomical, behavioural and physiological adaptations. The Marram grass is used to test their understanding further, before a step by step guide describes how the lignified cells prevent a loss of turgidity. Moving forwards, the students are challenged to explain how the other adaptations of this grass help it to survive in its environment. A series of exam-style questions on the Mangrove family will challenge them to make links to other topics such as osmosis and the mark schemes are displayed to allow them to assess their understanding. The final part of the lesson focuses on the adaptations of the anteater but this time links are made to the upcoming topic of taxonomy so that students are prepared for this lesson on species and classification hierarchy.

Due to the extensiveness of this lesson and the detail contained within the resources, it is estimated that it will take in excess of 2 hours of allocated A-level teaching time to deliver this lesson.

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Topic 4: Biodiversity and natural resources (Edexcel SNAB)

This lesson bundle contains 10 lesson PowerPoints and their accompanying resources which are filled with a wide variety of tasks to motivate and engage the students whilst covering the detailed content of topic 4 of the Pearson Edexcel A-level Biology A (Salters Nuffield) specification. Extensive planning has gone into each lesson to ensure that understanding is complete and that students are challenged to make links to previously covered topics. The tasks include exam-style questions, differentiated tasks, guided discussion points and quick quiz competitions and together these cover the following specification points in topic 4: * The meaning of the terms biodiversity and endemism * Measuring biodiversity within a habitat using species richness and within a species by calculating the heterozygosity index * Comparing biodiversity between habitats by calculating an index of diversity * The concept of niche and examples of behavioural, anatomical and physiological adaptations * Natural selection can lead to adaptation and evolution * The Hardy-Weinberg equation can be used to see whether a change in allele frequency is occurring in a population over time * Reproductive isolation can lead to the formation of new species * Classification is built around the species concept * Critical evaluation of new data by the scientific community, which leads to new taxonomic groupings * The ultrastructure of plant cells * The structure and function of the polysaccharides starch and cellulose * The similarities and differences between the structures, position and function of sclerenchyma fibres, xylem vessels and phloem * Evaluate the methods used by zoos and seed banks in the conservation of endangered species and their genetic diversity If you would like to sample the quality of the lessons in this bundle, then download the isolation and speciation, ultrastructure of plant cells and xylem, phloem and sclerenchyma lessons as these have been uploaded for free

£14.00

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