Qed Inductive Lesson Plan Template – Biology Example
Preliminary PreparationTopic / Defense Against Infectious Disease: Blood Groups
Principle with Related Concepts / Principle: Safe blood donation depends on the absence of specific antigens so that antibodies of the donor will not attack the recipient’s antigen. / Related Concepts: blood groups, antigens, antibodies, immune system, donor, receiver, red blood cells, plasma
Objective
(See phase 5 below.) / When given a hypothetical organ donation scenario with one donor and 5 possible recipients (with all blood groups listed), students will select the recipients who will need anti-rejection medication and give reasons for their selection.
Lesson Phases with Students
Phase 1: Introduction
Focus of lesson is established. / Remind students that this lesson continues the study of the body’s defense systems.
Tell students that new topic for today’s lesson will be blood groups.
Ask students to briefly share blood donation experiences.
Tell students that at the end of the lesson they will act as members of a hospital transplant committee and will be using their knowledge of blood groups to determine potential organ recipients’ need for anti-rejection medication.
Phase 2:
Open-Ended
When presented with differentiated examples, students make observations & comparisons used for further analysis / Engagement stimulus:
Matrix containing blood groups and their associated antigens and antibodies. Students attempt to predict and record all safe donor/recipient combinations based on the information provided.
Open-ended questions (Q) and tasks (T) focused on the stimulus:
- Q: Ask students what they notice about each blood group in the top chart: A, B, AB, O.
- Q: Ask students what they notice about the example in the bottom chart.
- T: Ask students in pairs to fill in the blank cells in the bottom chart in order to predict all safe donor/recipient combinations based on the information provided.
Phase 3: Convergent
Lesson moves toward a single concept or principle. / Guiding questions* and explanations that focus on the following content:
1. How are the blood groups determined? (Students cannot answer this question from the engagement stimulus chart so instructor needs to provide additional content information)
- Humans belong to one of four basic blood groups A, B, AB, and O.
- Blood type is genetically determined by the presence or absence of specific substances that act as antigens and which are found on the surface of the red blood cells.
- The letters A & B are used to refer to the specific type of antigen on the surface of the red blood cell.
- These antigens are either sugars or proteins, and are attached to various components in the red blood cell membrane.
- Antigens of the ABO blood group are sugars. They are produced by a series of reactions in which enzymes catalyze the transfer of sugar units.
- A person's DNA determines the type of enzymes they have, and, therefore, the type of sugar antigens that end up on their red blood cells.
- In contrast, the antigens of the Rh blood group are proteins.
- They provoke the production of antibodies against foreign substances that may harm the body.
- They provide a chemical signature that allows the immune system to recognize the body’s own cells.
- Antigens of a particular group induce the production of antibodies against other groups. (Ex: Antigen A induces the production of antibodies against antigen B in the plasma).
- Antibodies are substances produced by the immune system to fight and protect the body from foreign invasion. They are found in the plasma of the blood.
- For a safe blood donation, blood group antigens of both donor and recipient must be compatible otherwise the red blood cells of the donated blood will clump together (agglutinate), break apart, and block capillaries.
- Blood group O contains neither antigen A nor B. It only contains antibodies A and B so matches with blood groups A and B with antigens A and B.
- People with Blood group O are referred to as “Universal Donors” because they can donate to all blood groups.
- People with group AB referred to as “Universal Receivers” can receive blood from all blood groups.
- This because they neither have anti-A nor anti-B antibodies to attack the antigens A and B present in blood groups A and B.
- There is a small margin of safety in certain blood group mixing, because the volume of donated blood is usually relatively small and the donor’s antibodies are quickly diluted in the plasma.
- In most cases, mixing blood groups that do not match can result in death.
Phase 4: Closure
Student understanding is summarized and linked to previous understanding. / Summary of understanding:
Students are asked to work in pairs in order to
- Revise their blood group chart
- Explain to each other why it is important to do a blood type test before giving a person a blood transfusion (must use the terms antigen and antibodies in their explanation).
- Explain how the blood plays a part in the body’s defense (must use the terms red blood cells, plasma,antigens, antibodies and immune system in their explanation.
Phase 5: Application
Students apply their understanding in a new context. / Objective activity:
Hypothetical organ donation case study with one donor and 5 possible recipients. Partners select the recipients who will need anti-rejection medication and tell each other reasons for their selection.
Materials / 6 copies of Blood Group Chart Worksheet and Organ Donation Scenario Worksheet
Possible set up to show electronic simulation as technology option:
Rev. 9-20-06