Activity: Boy or Girl?
Goals: To model how the selection of chromosomes determines gender.
Background Information:What factors determinewhether a baby is a boy or girl? As with other traits, the sex of the baby is determined by the genes on chromosomes. Among the 23 pairs of chromosomes in each body cell is a single pair of chromosomes called the sex chromosomes. The sex chromosomes determine whether a person is a male or female. The sex chromosomes are the only pair of chromosomes that do not always match. If you are a female, your two sex chromosomes match. The two chromosomes are called X chromosomes. If you are a male, your sex chromosomes do not match. One of your sex chromosomes is an X chromosome, the other is a Y chromosome. The Y chromosome is much smaller than the X chromosome.
As you know, each egg and sperm cell has only one chromosome from each pair. Since both of a female’s sex chromosomes are X chromosomes, all the eggs carry one X chromosome. Males, however, have two different sex chromosomes. This means that half of a male’s sperm cells carry an X chromosome, while half carry a Y chromosome. When a sperm within an X chromosome fertilizes an egg, the egg has two X chromosomes. The fertilized egg will develop into a girl. When a sperm cell with a Y chromosome fertilizes an egg, the egg has one X chromosome and one Y chromosome. The fertilized egg will develop into a boy. Thus, it is the sperm cell that determines the sex of a child.
Materials: three red beads, one white bead, two paper bags –one labeled “male parent” and the other labeled “female parent”
Procedure:
- What I Know: Write a sentence or two about what you already know about the topic of sex chromosomes.
- Create a Punnett square that show the probability for an offspring being a boy or girl. These are you expected results in the What I Observed section of this activity.
- Place two red beads in the “female parent” bag. The red beads represent the X chromosomes.
- Place one red and one white bead in the “male parent” bag. The white bead represents the Y chromosome.
- Without looking, pick one bead from each bag. Two red beads represent a female offspring. One red and one white bead represent a male offspring.
- Record the sex of the offspring of the chart provided.
- Put the beads back in the correct bags. Repeat step 4 nine more times.
- What I Did: Write a short summary of the procedure you used to complete this activity.
- What I Observed:This section should include your Punnett square showing your expected results and the data table showing your observed results.
A. Expected Results
Create a Punnett square showing your expected results for the sex of an offspring. What percentage do you expect will be male? female?
Punnett square:
B. Observed Results
Trial / Sex chromosome selected from “female parent” bag / Sex chromosome selected from “male parent” bag / Sex of offspring1
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- What I Learned: Write a complete explanation of what you learned from completing this activity based on the data you collected.
- What I Wonder: Pose a question that arises from this activity or topic.
- Questions: Answer the following questions in complete statements.
- How many males were produced?
- How many females were produced?
- How close were your observedresults to the expected probabilities for male and female?