LHS Biology 2013

Mr. Zahm

Syllabus for Unit 1 – Basic Biology Principles

Chapters Class Periods

1 – Biology in the 21’st Century 7

2 – The Chemistry of Life 5

3 – Cell Structure and Function 7-10

(total 19-22)

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CHAPTER 1 (“Biology in the 21’st Century”): ESSENTIAL ELEMENTS

- and Vocabulary List

Chapters Class Periods

1 – Biology in the 21’st Century 7

2 – The Chemistry of Life 5

3 – Cell Structure and Function 7-10

(total 19-22)

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Essential (Most important) Questions

1.  How do we know something is alive?

2.  What traits do all living things share?

3.  How do a living thing’s (organisms’) structures support it’s functions (necessary activities)?

Essential Ideas (Concepts)

1.  All living things share the same basic characteristics/traits.

2.  Prokaryotes and Eukaryotes have similarities and differences.

3.  Living things are organized from a simple level (organelle) to more complex (a multicellular organism)

4.  An organism’s form is related to its function.

Essential Skills (to Be Able to Perform)

1.  Describe the common characteristics exhibited by all living things-both prokaryotic and eukaryotic

2.  Compare cellular structures (parts) and their functions (jobs) in prokaryotic and eukaryotic cells

3.  Describe and explain the relationships between the structures and the functions at all levels of organization:

o  the organelle,

o  cell,

o  tissue,

o  organ,

o  organ system,

o  and multicellular organism.

Vocabulary (31 words)

Vocab #1 (Matter & Life)

1-15: atom, molecule, organelle, cell, tissue, organ, organ system, organism,

prokaryotic, eukaryotic, unicellular, multicellular, deoxyribonucleic acid (DNA),

ribonucleic acid (RNA)

Vocab #2 (Scientific Process) – on separate sheet

Vocab #3 (Cell Structure)

16- 31: chromosome, chromatin, cytoplasm, endoplasmic reticulum, mitochondrion,

chloroplast, vacuole, Golgi apparatus, lysosome, cell wall, centriole, nucleus,

plasma membrane, vesicle, nucleolus, endosymbiosis

CHAPTER 2 (“The Chemistry of Life”): ESSENTIAL ELEMENTS

- and Vocabulary HW’S #3 & 4

Chapters Class Periods

1 – Biology in the 21’st Century 7

2 – The Chemistry of Life 5

3 – Cell Structure and Function 7-10

(total 19-22)

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Essential (Most important) Questions

1.  How is a life a product of the organization and interaction of matter?

Big Ideas (Concepts)

1.  The chemical structure of water is unique and essential to life (make it possible)

2.  Examples of how the properties of water make life on Earth possible

3.  The levels of biochemical organization (atoms, molecules, macromolecules)

4.  The Chemical characteristics (properties) and structural shapes of carbon atoms and organic molecules

5.  Enzymes and substrate interaction

Essential Skills to Be Able to Perform

1.  Describe the importance of water on Earth.

2.  Describe the importance of carbon in organic molecules.

3.  Compare the structure and function of carbohydrates, lipids, proteins and nucleic acids in living things

4.  Explain the structure and function of enzymes

Vocabulary

Vocab #3 (Chemistry 1 – More Matter & Carbon-based Molecules) – 22 words

compound, ionic bond, covalent bond, mixture, solution, solute, solvent,

concentration, capillary action, adhesion, cohesion, macromolecule, carbohydrate,

lipid, nucleic acid, deoxyribonucleic acid (DNA), ribonucleic acid (RNA), monomer,

polymer, amino acid, protein (polypeptide), enzyme

Vocab #4 (Carbon Chemistry 2) – 18 words

substrate, catalyst, active site, buffer, activation energy,

dehydration synthesis (condensation), hydrogen bond, hydrolysis,

monosaccharide, nucleotide, pH, polarity, reaction rates, specific heat,

surface tension, biochemical conversion, denature, temperature


CHAPTER 3 (“Cell Structure and Function”): ESSENTIAL ELEMENTS

- and Vocabulary List

Chapters Class Periods

1 – Biology in the 21’st Century 7

2 – The Chemistry of Life 5

3 – Cell Structure and Function 7-10

(total 19-22)

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Essential (Most important) Questions

1.  How do organisms maintain a biological balance between their internal and external environments?

Big Ideas (Concepts)

1.  Chemical structure and function of the plasma membrane

2.  Active versus passive transport mechanisms

3.  Vesicle transport system within the cell Mechanisms of regulation

Essential Skills to Be Able to Perform

1.  Describe how the structure of the plasma membrane allows to function as a regulatory structure and/or protective barrier for a cell

2.  Compare and contrast active versus passive transport mechanisms

3.  Describe how membrane-bound cellular organelles facilitate intracellular transport of materials

4.  Explain mechanisms organisms use to maintain homeostasis

Vocabulary

1-16: equilibrium, permeability, selectively/semi-permeable, impermeable,

phospholipid bilayer, passive transport, active transport, osmosis, diffusion,

hypotonic, hypertonic, isotonic, concentration gradient, homeostasis, extracellular, intracellular

17-28: endocytosis, exocytosis, facilitated diffusion, endoplasmic reticulum,

Golgi apparatus, intracellular transport, pumps (ion, molecular), vesicles,

carrier/transport protein, ATP, homeostatic mechanism (feedback loop)