**Create Lessons and Interactive Games - based on AQA biology specification ( can be used for revision). Includes: Content, AFL Questions, Exam style Questions and Answers
**
**Based on AQA biology specification**
**Create Lessons and Interactive Games - based on AQA biology specification ( can be used for revision). Includes: Content, AFL Questions, Exam style Questions and Answers
**
**Based on AQA biology specification**
Learning Objective:
Know what an organism is
State the name of the organelles found in a plant and animal cell
Describe the role for the organelles found in a plant and animal cell
Part 1 - Lesson
Objective :
Know the terms: nucleus, chromosomes, DNA, gene
Understand the purpose of the gene
Contains: Content and Activity with Answers
**Based on AQA biology specification ( can be used for revision). Includes: Content, AFL Questions, Exam style Questions and Answers
**
Based on AQA biology specification
Students should be able to explain how the structures of plant tissues
are related to their functions.
Plant tissues include:
• epidermal tissues
• palisade mesophyll
• spongy mesophyll
• xylem and phloem
• meristem tissue found at the growing tips of shoots and roots.
The leaf is a plant organ. Knowledge limited to epidermis, palisade and
spongy mesophyll, xylem and phloem, and guard cells surrounding
stomata.
**Based on AQA biology specification ( can be used for revision). Includes: Content, AFL Questions, Exam style Questions and Answers
**
Based on AQA biology specification
4.5.2.1 Structure and function
Students should be able to explain how the structure of the nervous
system is adapted to its functions.
The nervous system enables humans to react to their surroundings and
to coordinate their behaviour.
Information from receptors passes along cells (neurones) as electrical
impulses to the central nervous system (CNS). The CNS is the brain and
spinal cord. The CNS coordinates the response of effectors which may
be muscles contracting or glands secreting hormones.
stimulus receptor coordinator effector response
**Based on AQA biology specification ( can be used for revision). Includes: Content, AFL Questions, Exam style Questions and Answers
**
Based on AQA biology specification
Students should be able to explain how the various structures in a reflex
arc – including the sensory neurone, synapse, relay neurone and motor
neurone – relate to their function. Students should understand why reflex
actions are important.
Reflex actions are automatic and rapid; they do not involve the
conscious part of the brain.
**Based on AQA biology specification ( can be used for revision). Includes: Content, AFL Questions, Exam style Questions and Answers
**
Based on AQA biology specification
Students should be able to explain that homeostasis is the regulation
of the internal conditions of a cell or organism to maintain optimum
conditions for function in response to internal and external changes.
Homeostasis maintains optimal conditions for enzyme action and all cell
functions.
In the human body, these include control of:
• blood glucose concentration
• body temperature
• water levels.
These automatic control systems may involve nervous responses or
chemical responses.
All control systems include:
• cells called receptors, which detect stimuli (changes in the
environment)
• coordination centres (such as the brain, spinal cord and pancreas)
that receive and process information from receptors
• effectors, muscles or glands, which bring about responses which
restore optimum levels.
**Based on AQA biology specification ( can be used for revision). Includes: Content, AFL Questions, Exam style Questions and Answers
**
Based on AQA biology specification
Students should be able to describe the principles of hormonal
coordination and control by the human endocrine system.
The endocrine system is composed of glands which secrete chemicals
called hormones directly into the bloodstream. The blood carries the
hormone to a target organ where it produces an effect. Compared to the
nervous system the effects are slower but act for longer.
The pituitary gland in the brain is a ‘master gland’ which secretes
several hormones into the blood in response to body conditions. These
hormones in turn act on other glands to stimulate other hormones to be
released to bring about effects.
Students should be able to identify the position of the following on a
diagram of the human body:
• pituitary gland
• pancreas
• thyroid
• adrenal gland
• ovary
• testes.
**Based on AQA biology specification ( can be used for revision). Includes: Content, AFL Questions, Exam style Questions and Answers
**
Based on AQA biology specification
Blood glucose concentration is monitored and controlled by the
pancreas.
If the blood glucose concentration is too high, the pancreas produces
the hormone insulin that causes glucose to move from the blood into the
cells. In liver and muscle cells excess glucose is converted to glycogen
for storage.
Students should be able to explain how insulin controls blood glucose
(sugar) levels in the body.
Type 1 diabetes is a disorder in which the pancreas fails to produce
sufficient insulin. It is characterised by uncontrolled high blood glucose
levels and is normally treated with insulin injections.
In Type 2 diabetes the body cells no longer respond to insulin produced
by the pancreas. A carbohydrate controlled diet and an exercise regime
are common treatments.
Obesity is a risk factor for Type 2 diabetes.
Students should be able to compare Type 1 and Type 2 diabetes and
explain how they can be treated.
(HT only) If the blood glucose concentration is too low, the pancreas
produces the hormone glucagon that causes glycogen to be converted
into glucose and released into the blood.
(HT only) Students should be able to explain how glucagon interacts
with insulin in a negative feedback cycle to control blood glucose (sugar)
levels in the body
Interactive Trivia. Useful For AFL or Revision
Students should be able to explain how the main sub-cellular structures,
including the nucleus, cell membranes, mitochondria, chloroplasts in
plant cells and plasmids in bacterial cells are related to their functions.
Most animal cells have the following parts:
• a nucleus
• cytoplasm
• a cell membrane
• mitochondria
• ribosomes.
In addition to the parts found in animal cells, plant cells often have:
• chloroplasts
• a permanent vacuole filled with cell sap.
Plant and algal cells also have a cell wall made of cellulose, which
Part 1 - Lesson
Learning Objective:
Know the definition of species, characteristics, inherited variation and environmental variation
Describe the difference between inherited variation and environmental variation
**Based on AQA biology specification ( can be used for revision). Includes: Content, AFL Questions, Exam style Questions and Answers
**
Based on AQA biology specification
Students should be able to describe cellular respiration as an
exothermic reaction which is continuously occurring in living cells.
The energy transferred supplies all the energy needed for living
processes.
Respiration in cells can take place aerobically (using oxygen) or
anaerobically (without oxygen), to transfer energy.
Organisms need energy for:
• chemical reactions to build larger molecules
• movement
• keeping warm.
Aerobic respiration is represented by the equation:
glucose + oxygen carbon dioxide + water
Students should recognise the chemical symbols:
C6
H12O6
, O2
, CO2
and H2O.
**Based on AQA biology specification ( can be used for revision). Includes: Content, AFL Questions, Exam style Questions and Answers
**
Based on AQA biology specification
Students should understand that meiosis leads to non-identical cells
being formed while mitosis leads to identical cells being formed.
Sexual reproduction involves the joining (fusion) of male and female
gametes:
• sperm and egg cells in animals
• pollen and egg cells in flowering plants.
In sexual reproduction there is mixing of genetic information which leads
to variety in the offspring. The formation of gametes involves meiosis.
Asexual reproduction involves only one parent and no fusion of gametes.
There is no mixing of genetic information. This leads to genetically
identical offspring (clones). Only mitosis is involved.
AQA - Explain how uni-cellular organisms are adapted to carry out functions that in multi-cellular organisms are done by different types of cell.
Learning Objective:
Define unicellular organism
Identify structures in an amoeba and euglena
Explain how unicellular organisms are adapted to carry out different functions
**Based on AQA biology specification ( can be used for revision). Includes: Content, AFL Questions, Exam style Questions and Answers
**
Based on AQA biology specification:
During exercise the human body reacts to the increased demand for
energy.
The heart rate, breathing rate and breath volume increase during
exercise to supply the muscles with more oxygenated blood.
If insufficient oxygen is supplied anaerobic respiration takes place in
muscles. The incomplete oxidation of glucose causes a build up of
lactic acid and creates an oxygen debt. During long periods of vigorous
activity muscles become fatigued and stop contracting efficiently.
(HT only) Blood flowing through the muscles transports the lactic acid
to the liver where it is converted back into glucose. Oxygen debt is the
amount of extra oxygen the body needs after exercise to react with the
accumulated lactic acid and remove it from the cells.
**Based on AQA biology specification ( can be used for revision). Includes: Content, AFL Questions, Exam style Questions and Answers
**
Based on AQA biology specification
Students should be able to describe:
• different levels of organisation in an ecosystem from individual
organisms to the whole ecosystem
• the importance of interdependence and competition in a community.
Students should be able to, when provided with appropriate information:
• suggest the factors for which organisms are competing in a given
habitat
• suggest how organisms are adapted to the conditions in which they
live.
An ecosystem is the interaction of a community of living organisms
(biotic) with the non-living (abiotic) parts of their environment.
To survive and reproduce, organisms require a supply of materials from
their surroundings and from the other living organisms there.
Plants in a community or habitat often compete with each other for light
and space, and for water and mineral ions from the soil. Animals often
compete with each other for food, mates and territory.
Within a community each species depends on other species for food,
shelter, pollination, seed dispersal etc. If one species is removed it can
affect the whole community. This is called interdependence. A stable
community is one where all the species and environmental factors are in
balance so that population sizes remain fairly constant.