BIOLOGY I H: MIDTERM REVIEW QUESTIONS
Answer the following questions on a separate sheet of paper WITHOUT using notes or books.
Unit 1—Inquiry
- What are important safety rules to follow in lab?
- What is the difference between observation and inference?
- What is SI? Why is SI used?
- What are the basic units to measure mass, length, volume, time and temperature?
- What is the difference between quantitative and qualitative data?
- What are the steps in the scientific method?
- What is a variable? What is the difference between an independent and dependent variable?
- What does it mean to have a controlled experiment?
- What is a theory?
- Describe the seven characteristics of life?
Unit 2—Chemistry
- Why is it important to study chemistry in biology class?
- What are elements? What is the biological significance of elements?
- Describe the structure of an atom.
- Define the following: covalent bond, ionic bond, hydrogen bond, peptide bond.
- What is an ion? How are positive ions formed? How are negative ions formed?
- What does it mean for a molecule to be polar? Give an example.
- What is the most abundant compound in most living things?
- Describe the unique characteristics of water.
- Describe the pH scale and what it means to be acidic or basic.
- What is a functional group? Name them.
- What are the characteristics of the functional groups?
- All organic compounds must contain what element? How many electrons can this element share?
- How are hydrocarbons named (prefix, suffix)?
- What are the four groups of organic compounds? What are their monomers and polymers?
- Give examples of each of the four organic compounds.
- What are the functions of the four organic compounds?
- Compare and contrast dehydration synthesis and hydrolysis.
- Compare and contrast saturated and unsaturated, in reference to lipids.
- Explain, in detail, how an enzyme works.
Unit 3—Cells
- Who was the first scientist to describe living cells through a simple microscope?
- Who was the first scientist to describe cells using a compound microscope? Why is he so important?
- Who was the scientist to conclude all animals are made of cells? Who was the scientist to conclude all plants are made of cells?
- What are the parts of the cell theory?
- Compare and contrast prokaryotes and eukaryotes.
- List the organelles of a cell as well as their function.
- Compare and contrast active and passive transport processes. Give examples of each.
- Describe the different effects of osmosis on cells.
- What is cell specialization? What type of cell has cell specialization?
- List the levels of organization in a multicellular organism from the simplest level to the most complex level.
- How do cells communicate with one another?
- Why do cells communicate with one another?
Unit 4—Energy
- What is the only usable form of energy? How is energy released?
- Where does photosynthesis take place?
- What are the basic structures of leaves, and why are they important (stoma, chloroplast, thylakoid, grana, stroma)?
- What are the products of photosynthesis? What are the reactants?