Contributed by:
kevin
Fri, Jan 14, 2022 07:27 PM UTC
Discovery Pictures and the British Broadcasting Corporate ion have partnered to bring you The Human Body, a remarkable large-format film that brings a fascinating new dimension to the exploration of the miracle of life in its most personal of settings—our own bodies. For the first time ever, students will view their intimate, everyday world from some amazingly intricate and novel perspective.
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Contents Page ■ About The Human Body ...............................1 Pre-Viewing Teaching Strategies . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 2 ■ Activity 1. Name That Part Teaching Strategy . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 2 Activity Master. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 3 ■ Activity 2. Pumping for Life Dear Teacher: Teaching Strategy . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 4 D iscovery Pictures and the British Broadcasting Corporation have partnered to bring you The Human Body, a remarkable large-format film that brings a fascinating new Activity Master. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 5 ■ Activity 3. Be a Brain Teaching Strategy . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 6 dimension to the exploration of the miracle of life in its most personal of settings—our own bodies. For the first time ever, Activity Master. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 7 students will view their intimate, everyday world from some ■ Activity 4. The Brain Team amazingly intricate and novel perspectives. Teaching Strategy . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 8 The film uses ground-breaking photographic techniques and Activity Master. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 9 state-of-the-art technology to transport viewers on an incredible voyage into the workings of the human body. Post-Viewing Teaching Strategies . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 10 ■ Activity 5. It’s a Cell Call This Teacher’s Resource Guide, which Teaching Strategy . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 10 was prepared with the help of pro- fessional educators like yourself, will Activity Master. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 11 further your students’ understanding of ■ Activity 6. A World of Sense the body’s organ systems and how they Teaching Strategy . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 12 work together, and the relationship Activity Master. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 13 between a healthy lifestyle and a healthy body. The material is designed for use ■ Activity 7. Tasty Aromas with students between ages 8 and 14. Teaching Strategy . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 14 Activity 1 includes space for a Body Activity Master. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 15 Heart strings Maintenance Plan for student self- assessment and for tracking inform- ■ Activity 8. Bone Basics ation learned as students work on the various activity masters. Be Teaching Strategy . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 16 sure to send copies of the letter on page 24 home with your Activity Master. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 17 students so they can share it, as well as their Body Maintenance ■ Activity 9. On the Other Hand Plans, with their parents, guardians or caregivers. Teaching Strategy . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 18 The material is designed to be flexible. Please feel free to modify Activity Master. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 19 and duplicate the copyrighted materials to suit your students’ ■ Activity 10. The Living System needs. And, please share these materials with other teachers in your school. Teaching Strategy . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 20 Activity Master. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 21 I hope you and your students enjoy viewing The Human Body as much as we enjoyed making the film and bringing it to you! ■ Activity 11. My Personal Body Inventory and Health Profile Sincerely, Teaching Strategy . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 22 Activity Master. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 23 Jana Bennett ■ Letter to Parents . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 24 Executive-in-Charge ■ Resources . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 24 Discovery Pictures © 2001 DCI/BBC
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About “The film explores the complexities of the human body by investigating, in great detail, the functions the body performs routinely every day,” notes executive producer Jana Bennett. “We investigated and portrayed the human body in ways never seen before. This film brings images to the audience on a scale never before captured in the history of cinema.” To make The Human Body come T hree years in the making, The Human Body reveals the incredible story of life. In astonishing detail, this large-format film presents a alive took not only the marriage of the latest developments in medical imaging with cutting-edge look at the biological processes that go on without cinematic techniques and cameras, our control and often without our notice. Throughout but also a good measure of the film we follow a family from dawn to dusk as ingenuity as well. As a result, The they go about their daily routines. But this is no Human Body is an incredible ordinary story. This is the tale of what takes place technological achievement for beneath the skin—a tale that allows us to see the Discovery Pictures and the BBC. extraordinary accomplishments of our everyday The film’s opening sequence—a close tracking shot over the body—is just one instance where The everyday biological processes that keep us ticking “ingenuity” played a major role. Play at monitor-image of are all in a day’s work for the human body. Finding a Luke's eye “You had to light the body with an way to film and illustrate those activities for a screen enormous number of big film lamps seven stories tall required a cinematic inventiveness to accomplish that [tracking shot over the body],” explains writer- that was anything but routine. Co-produced by producer Richard Dale. “The lights gave off tremendous heat and Discovery Pictures and the BBC, The Human Body ultraviolet light, which could have been very damaging to the skin. incorporates ground-breaking computer graphics with The commercially available UV filters were not adequate to stop stunning real-life images to create a day in the life of a that much light, so our photographers developed little aquariums human body. “This film is one of the most technically that could fit in front of the lamps. They had cold water, which is complex large-format films ever made,” states director- quite a good absorber of UV, constantly running through them.” producer Peter Georgi. “To get the subject matter on the large screen, we’ve pushed the boundaries, taken Ultimately, The Human Body shows us more than a biological advantage of the most advanced scanning electron wonder at its best; the film also shares the emotions of life. From microscopes, the latest thermal imaging and high- the joy of learning and the anxiety of puberty, to the potential definition digital video cameras, the cutting edge in wonder of pregnancy and birth, The Human Body tells us the medical computer graphics…whatever we thought amazing story of our own lives—through our own bodies. “Large could provide the best possible images.” format has traditionally climbed mountains and gone to the bottom of the ocean, but we have turned the camera on ourselves And provide images it does! The Human Body will and looked to our own bodies as a place for exploration,” provide a glimpse of: observes Dale. “Technology makes it possible to think about our ■ the 100 billion new red blood cells the body lives differently and to suddenly realize how marvelous the generates each morning; human body is.” ■ the 40 yards of new hair that sprouts every day; ■ a human egg nestling into the folds of a The Human Body is a presentation of The fallopian tube; Learning Channel and BBC Worldwide of a ■ a thermal image of a child riding a bicycle; Discovery Pictures / BBC co-production in ■ a trip on a tomato from mouth to stomach; association with the Maryland Science ■ babies able to hold their breath under water, and Center and the Science Museum, London ■ the inside of an ear as cells actually dance with major funding provided by the to music. National Science Foundation and distributed by nWave Pictures Distribution. 1
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Pre-Viewing Teaching Strategies 1. Review with students the words appearing in italics on 2. Use the synopsis of The Human Body on page 1 to give the teaching strategies pages in this guide (the left-hand students a brief summary of the film. Review with them pages) and the activity masters (the right-hand pages). the major body parts and their functions. Explain that these are just some of the things they will 3. Reproduce and distribute the Letter to Parent/Guardian learn more about during the film and from the activities on page 24 for students to take home. they will do after viewing the film. ■ Activity 1 Pre-viewing Name That Part Activity Part B. First talk with your students about the Student Objectives: To develop an understanding of where the importance of living a healthy lifestyle—proper various body parts are located in relation to one another and to consider diet and exercise, avoiding smoking, drugs and what it takes to create—and maintain—a healthy body. alcohol, etc. You might want to have students add to Materials: None their Body Maintenance Plan as the unit progresses and as they learn more about different aspects of Teaching Tips their bodies. Part A. Have students research any needed information about the functions of body parts in preparation for the diagram matching Add-on Activities activity below. To play Body Trivia, divide your students into “teams” of ■ Students might work in their 3 to 5 students each. Each student should find at least 5 interesting facts original groups to identify about his or her team’s chosen body part, then teams should combine and demonstrate a facts into a master list and develop true/false and fill-in-the-blank “mechanical body questions based on them. Teams take turns quizzing other teams, with part”—something the team that first responds correctly winning a point. When all teams that performs the have asked their questions, the team with the most points wins. same function as the part they lungs studied (i.e., a take in oxygen (O 2) and expel computer as the brain, carbon dioxide (C02) a pump as the heart). As diaphragm a class, they could link Digestion muscle that helps us breathe in their parts together to and out form a machine that kidney works like parts of the human body. You might helps filter waste from the blood want to share The Robot Zoo: A Mechanical Guide brain to the Way Animals Work, by Philip Whitfield the body’s “control center” Obin (Turner Publishing, 1994) with students. The liver book contains detailed, tongue-in-cheek secretes bile that helps digestion illustrations that transform 16 different creatures into complex machines. heart pumps blood through the body ■ Younger students could use fabric paint to draw “body shirts” showing major organs, the stomach breaks down the food that we eat skeletal system, the circulatory system, etc., on white T-shirts. large intestine removes the liquid and “leftovers” from digested food small intestine absorbs the nutrients from digested food © 2001 DCI/BBC
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Activity Name That Part 1 T he new large-format film, The Human Body, will take you on the most fantastic trip you’ve ever experienced—inside an actual human body. You’ll meet a N ow you’re going to become a specialist! You and your team will pick one of the body parts you’ve identified. Each member of your team will do some Reproducible Master family—parents-to-be Heather and Buster, their teenage research and develop a list of interesting facts about your nephew Luke, 15, and his sister Zannah, 8. You’ll go inside a part. Then, combine your lists and try to stump your cell—the body’s basic building block. You’ll see the many classmates in a game of Body Trivia. (Your teacher will miracles we live through each day as—hidden from us and explain the rules.) often unnoticed—our bodies are achieving incredible things. My team’s body part is: ______________________________ In this film, you will see how all of those parts you have Use the back of this sheet for your list of interesting facts. work together as a remarkable interdependent system. You’ll learn that regardless of the differences in how we look on Part B. Like any complex machine, your body needs proper the outside, and although we may live very different lives, we care and maintenance to work well. In the space below, begin all share the same basic structure. But first, before we begin your own Body Maintenance Plan. (An example has been this journey, let’s find out what you already know! given.)You can finish it on another page. Part A. The human body below is like a car that is made My Body Maintenance Plan up of different kinds of parts—together they make the body New Facts New Facts New Facts “hum” at top speed. As the “body mechanic,” it’s your job to Eat 5 Diet identify where those parts are located. Draw a line from the name of the part to its correct location, and write on the line fruits and below each what that part does. vegetables a day. ____________________________ Exercise ____________________________________ I will also ____________________________________ do this: ________________________________________ I won’t ________________________________________________ do this: large intestine ____________________________ Add-on Using your choice of building materials ____________________________ Activity (anything from toothpicks small intestine to bricks!), build a class exhibit that ____________________________ shows how the body is put together. © 2001 DCI/BBC 3
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■ Activity 2 Pumping for Life Pre-viewing Activity Student Objectives: To learn about the respiratory system Part B. Demonstrate for your students the correct and how the heart works. ways to take a pulse—by placing their index and middle fingers Materials: Tennis balls, modeling clay, toothpicks or tacks together at the pulse point on the neck or wrists. (To make it easier for your Teaching Tips students to see and count their pulse, Part A. Review with students the following background: you might have them use a The diaphragm—the muscle that separates the chest and toothpick inserted into a small the abdominal cavity—helps us to breathe in and out as lump of clay and have them it expands and contracts, exchanging carbon dioxide for rest the clay on their wrist oxygen. Blood carries the oxygen and nutrients through pulse point with the toothpick the left side of the heart and from there, via the pointing up. Another method arteries, to all of the body’s cells, as carbon dioxide and is to use a metal thumb tack other waste products are returned to the blood. This placed on the wrist with the blood flows through the body’s veins to the right side of pointed end up.) Tell your students the heart and from there to the lungs. The lungs release the that the average pulse rate for a carbon dioxide and waste products and pick up oxygen— young person can range from 90 to 120 repeating the cycle. Blood in vein beats per minute. The average pulse rate for an adult (the rate they approximated in their tennis ball After doing the tennis ball experiment, have students discuss experiment) is about 72 beats per minute. A word of caution: the results. Then talk with them about the effects of changes Students’ physical abilities may vary widely, and some may not be in altitude on how the respiratory system works. When you able to safely undertake even limited exercise. All students should change altitudes too quickly your body isn’t able to adjust fast be monitored carefully during any kind of physical activity. enough to the change in the air pressure. The higher you go, the “thinner” the air Add-on Activities becomes and the ■ Students might learn more about the diaphragm and less oxygen there is. investigate the causes and various “cures” for hiccups. That means you ■ Students might interview someone they know who has take in less oxygen asthma to learn what can trigger an asthma attack, what it feels each time you like to have an asthma attack and what doctors can do to help. breathe. Most ■ Students can do some research to learn about the people begin to stethoscope, which was invented almost 200 years ago. They notice the effects of could compare the early model to the one used today to see higher altitudes at how similar or different they are. Heart 7,000 to 8,000 feet ■ Older students might check out the American Heart above sea level (at a Association Web site (www.americanheart.org) to research ski resort in the Colorado Rockies or the Swiss Alps, for heart-healthy nutrition, and plan a week’s worth of heart- example). The symptoms of this condition—known as healthy meals. altitude sickness—include headaches, shortness of breath and ■ Students might research and report on the pioneers of heart nausea. They generally go away within a few days, after your surgery and the technological advances that have occurred in body has adjusted. Anoxia (meaning “no oxygen”) is one of this field. As a starting point, students might want to review the most common problems mountain climbers face. Along “Pioneers of Heart Surgery,” NOVA Online, with a shortage of oxygen, there is a simultaneous increase in www.pbs.org/wgbh/nova/heart/ the amount of carbon dioxide in the blood, which causes us pioneers.html. to breathe faster in an effort to eliminate it. © 2001 DCI/BBC
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Activity Pumping for Life 2 Reproducible Master How many times did you open and close your T he human heart really doesn’t look much like the heart on a Valentine’s Day card. Actually, it looks more like an upside-down pear. hand? __________________________________________________ What did your hand feel like at the end?__________________ The heart is part of the circulatory system. It works ____________________________________________________________________________ together with the lungs and diaphragm, which are part of ____________________________________________________________________________ the respiratory system. The respiratory system causes oxygen to be inhaled into the body and removes waste such What you just did for one minute, your heart does all day as carbon dioxide as air is exhaled. long! Imagine how strong your heart must be to pump constantly without stopping, 24 hours a day. Part A. In the film The Human Body, you’ll see Luke’s heart and lungs working together to keep his body moving Part B. The pulse you feel when you put your fingers on the basketball court. on the pulse points in your neck or on your wrist is the blood being pumped through your body—kind of like water Try this experiment. Put being pumped through a hose and a garden sprinkler. a tennis ball in your hand and squeeze it as Your pulse rate changes as you become more active and hard and as quickly as your heart beats harder to increase the flow of oxygen you can. Your goal will throughout the body. The average resting pulse rate for a young be to compress it 70 person ranges from 90 to 110 beats per minute. As you get times in one minute— older, the pulse rate slows to an average of 72 beats per minute. that’s close to the number of times your What is your resting pulse rate?__________________________ Red blood cells heart contracts in Now raise your arms over your head 10 times. What is your one minute. active pulse rate?________________________________________ N ow that you know how to take your pulse, keep a log of the different activities you do for one full day and take your pulse at six different points during the day. Use the space below to keep a record of your pulse rate during various activities. Some examples are listed. In bed on awakening____________ Brushing your teeth ________________Walking ________________________________ Playing sports__________________ After eating________________________ Just before going to sleep______________________ Other ________________________ __________________________________ ____________________________________________ Now, make a bar graph of the changes in your pulse rate as you went through the day. 130 120 110 100 90 80 70 Add-on Interview the school nurse, your doctor or another local health professional to learn about high blood pressure and how a healthy lifestyle can help to prevent or manage it. Use what Activity you learn to add to your Body Maintenance Plan. © 2001 DCI/BBC 5
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■ Activity 3 Be a Brain Part B. To determine which eye is dominant, students should cut a one-inch circle in a sheet of Pre-viewing Activity paper and hold it about one foot in front of their eyes. Student Objectives: To identify the major parts of the With both eyes open, they should focus on a distant object and brain and their functions and to learn about brain preference. hold the index finger in line with the center of the hole and the Materials: None distant object. First, they should close the left eye—if everything is still lined up, the right eye is dominant. Then, they Teaching Tips should close the right eye—if everything is still lined up, the left Part A. Brain Structure. Provide this background: Today, we eye is dominant. To determine which ear is dominant, students know a great deal about how the brain works. For example, we should cup the left ear and listen as you whisper a phrase, then know that different parts of the brain control different abilities and cup the right ear and listen as you whisper from the same functions—but that wasn’t always the case. That idea was location. Students can determine dominance according to which introduced 200 years ago by an Austrian doctor named Franz ear heard the phrase more clearly. Check out the site at Joseph Gall, who also believed he could diagnose what was http://faculty.washington.edu/chudler/neurok.html for happening in the brain by “reading” the different bumps on the more information. head. Gall’s theory, phrenology, quickly became very popular. However, today we know that Gall’s theory has no true scientific Brain Dominance. Explain to your students that the right side basis. With the help of today’s technology, we can actually look of the brain controls the muscles on the left side of the body inside the skull and see the brain as it works. [Answer key to the and the left side of the brain controls the muscles on the right brain matching quiz: 1. E, 2. D, 3. C, 4. A, 5. B] side of the body. Although the two sides of the brain share many functions, they also have unique specialties. The right Cerebrum side controls spatial ability and intuitive thought; the left side controls verbal language and analytical ability. Scientists today Cerebellum are learning more about brain dominance. A left-brain- dominant person is analytical, verbal and logical. Left-brain- Brain Stem dominant people are good at logic and word problems and generally not so good at creative, nonlinear thought. A right- Pituitary Gland brain-dominant person tends to be creative and holistic in thought. Right-brain-dominant people tend to see the whole Hypothalamus picture but may miss the details. They may need help with expressive language and logic. Be sure to stress to students that, while they may tend to be right- or left-brained, they need to develop both their analytical and creative sides to be Now review this information with students before they do the a well-rounded individual. lobe quiz: The biggest part of your brain is divided into two equal parts—the right hemisphere and the left hemisphere. The [Answer key to the brain dominance quiz: Students who two hemispheres work together and share information through answered “true” for questions 1, 2, 4, 7 and 8 tend to be right- a thick band of nerve fibers called the corpus callosum, which brained. Students who answered “true” for questions 3, 5 and 6 divides them. Each hemisphere is further divided into four tend to be left-brained. Since many people exhibit some of both lobes, each responsible for certain functions and senses. tendencies, student scores could be inconclusive.] [Answer key to the lobe function quiz: 2–vision; 3–hearing, memory; 4–pain, touch, pressure, sensation of temperature] Add-on Activities ■ Students can research why we yawn or laugh, how we Frontal Lobe understand language, or why we need sleep. ■ Working in small groups, students might pick one disease or Occipital Lobe condition that affects the brain. Each group could prepare a class report on the Temporal Lobe disease’s causes, symptoms, affects, treatments available, and how the disease Parietal Lobe might affect other body parts. © 2001 DCI/BBC
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Activity Be a Brain 3 Reproducible Master our brain is faster and more powerful than the most powerful computer you’ve ever seen. As you learn in The Part B. There are several ways to test which side of Human Body, it controls everything your body does. To do so, it your body is dominant. Try the exercises suggested by uses nearly a fifth of all the calories you eat or drink—more than your teacher to see how you measure up: any other part of your body! Which hand do you normally write with? ________ Part A. Each part of your brain has a very distinct and Which foot do you use to kick a ball? ___________ important role to play. See how much you already know by Which eye is dominant? ________Which ear did you matching the name of the part to its description below. Then, label use to hear better? ___________ the parts in the drawing. Have you ever heard someone say they are right- A. Cerebrum 1.__ Are you too cold? Too hot? Should you brained or left-brained? What do you think that means? shiver or sweat? This “body thermo- ______________________________________________________________________ meter” will let you know what to do! ______________________________________________________________________ B. Cerebellum 2.__ It may be tiny, but those hormones it makes are sure a big deal. Test yourself to see which side of your brain you C. Brain Stem 3.__ This connects the brain and the spinal cord would tend to use by answering true or false to so you won’t lose your mind! these questions. D. Pituitary Gland 4.__ If you think it or say it, it starts in this True False part of the brain. 1. I’d rather think of a theme for a E. Hypothalamus 5.__ Got rhythm? You’ve got this! party than actually plan one. ˜ ˜ 2. If I get lost, I’d rather have a map than a list of directions. ˜ ˜ Cerebrum 3. Don’t tell my teacher, but I do better on multiple-choice tests than writing essays. ˜ ˜ Cerebellum 4. When I’m studying for a test, I need music to get my brain in gear because Brain Stem silence is too “quiet.” ˜ ˜ 5. In a debate, it’s hard for me to accept Pituitary Gland the side of the issue I don’t agree with. ˜ ˜ Hypothalamus 6. I like to do my homework right away instead of waiting until it’s almost due. ˜ ˜ 7. When I lose something, I try to “see” Now see if you can fill in the correct functions of the lobes from where I was when I lost it. ˜ ˜ the clues provided below. The first one has been done for you. 8. I usually can tell what people are thinking. ˜ ˜ 1. Frontal Lobe—You need this to make things happen and to react to them when they do. This controls: planning, speech, Remember that—even though some things may be movement, problem-solving, emotions. easier for you depending on which side of the brain 2. Occipital Lobe—It may be 20/20 or 20/200. you favor—you couldn’t function as a “whole person” This controls: ____________________________________________________ without both sides! 3. Temporal Lobe—Listen and you’ll remember. This controls: ____________________________________________________ Add-on What if your brain were a computer? Activity Do some research to 4. Parietal Lobe—Ouch! That’s hot and it hurts! construct a display that shows the This controls: ____________________________________________________ parts of the brain that correspond to functions of the computer. © 2001 DCI/BBC 7
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■ Activity 4 The Brain Team Pre-viewing Student Objectives: To consider how learning happens and Activity to encourage students to consider how they learn best. Materials: None Part A. Lead a Teaching Tips class discussion First, provide your students about learning with this background styles (see activity information about the brain, sheet) and then have them label the parts preferences before on the drawing: The brain your students only weighs three or four complete the pounds—about the weight of learning preference an average textbook—but it is the most complex object in the survey. world. Neurons receive, process and relay all the specialized information needed to go about your daily life. But it isn’t the Profile of a neuron Part B. In number of neurons alone that makes this complex system preparation for the work—it’s the way they are organized and connected. activity, put 12 small objects in a box on your desk. Set a time for three subsequent viewings to test students’ recall—the first Structure of a neuron time at the end of the same class, the second time at either the beginning or end of class the following day, and the third time dendrites two days later. Each time the students view the box, they should write their new list on a new sheet of paper without referring to previous lists (have them keep their lists for later nucleus comparison). You can find additional information on this topic at http://faculty.washington.edu/chudler/neurok.html. cytoplasm Add-on Activities ■ Students might research the axon damage that can be done to the brain and various other organs— such as the liver, kidneys or lungs— synaptic by smoking cigarettes or using terminal alcohol or illegal substances to achieve a chemical high. ■ Students might create their own Brain cell dying neuron models using pipe cleaners or some other material of their choice. You can find directions for this activity at http://faculty.washington.edu/ chudler/chmodel.html. There are many different kinds of neurons, but they all have ■ Students might do some research to learn about the “natural some things in common. Like other cells, they all have a cell high” exercise can induce because of the body’s release into the body with a nucleus that contains the cell’s genes. The nucleus is brain of endorphins, which then are broken down to create a surrounded by cytoplasm—a liquid that contains all the short-lived feeling of euphoria. materials the neuron needs to function. But unlike other cells, neurons also have dendrites and axons. Dendrites are like an antenna system that receives signals from other neurons. An axon is the channel that sends signals from one neuron to another. The axon of one neuron is connected to the dendrites of the next neuron by a synaptic terminal. © 2001 DCI/BBC
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The Brain Team Activity 4 T he body is made up of billions of cells. In the nervous system these cells are called neurons. They are specialized to carry “messages” to the brain, and Reproducible Master In the space below, list 10 things you have learned in your classes they connect to other neurons through branch-like during the last two days. Next to the item, describe how you structures called dendrites. learned each. We’ve given you one example to help you get started. Example Learning Style Every time you learn something new—a new word, how to A new Visual (if you read about it ride a bike or play the flute—your neurons develop new computer program in a manual) connections to other neurons. In fact, your brain eventually Auditory (if you listened to will form trillions of connections—that’s more connections a lecture about it) than there are stars in the entire universe! Kinesthetic (if you Review with your teacher these terms about neurons: performed tasks using it) ■ Cytoplasm—a liquid that surrounds the cell nucleus Things I Learned How I Learned Them ■ Axon—a channel that allows signals to pass between neurons ■ Synaptic terminal—allows the axon of one neuron to connect to the dendrites of another See if you can label the parts of a neuron on the drawing below. The more you practice what you have learned, the stronger these connections (dendrites) become. And the connections you form at this time in your life are the most important ones because they become the platforms you will build on to make even more complex connections later on. Part B. The more links the nucleus neurons in your brain create, the better your memory becomes. Try this exercise to see what cytoplasm happens as your neurons go to work. Look at the objects your teacher has placed in the box. Brain cell axon Then return to your seat and list as many of them as you can on the back of this paper. synaptic terminal How many items did you list? ________ Look at the objects again at the end of class. Then take a new sheet of paper and make a new list. How many objects are on your list? ________ Look at the objects the following day and make another new list. How many objects are on your list? ________ Now look at them one final time. How many objects did you list? ________ Part A. Have you ever stopped to think about how you Add-on Work in groups to create other exercises that learn? Some people (visual learners) learn best by looking at Activity demonstrate how things, or reading about them. Some people (auditory repetition increases memory. Then learners) learn best by hearing about things. And some people create graphs that illustrate what the (kinesthetic learners) learn best by actually doing things. exercises demonstrate. © 2001 DCI/BBC 9
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Post-Viewing Teaching Strategies 1. Lead students in a discussion of the film, encouraging 2. Ask students if what they think and know about having a them to share their impressions of both its content and healthy lifestyle has changed since viewing the film. the impact of the large-screen format on the presentation 3. Refer to Resources on page 24 for additional information of the content. and ideas. ■ Activity 5 It’s a Cell Call Post-viewing Activity Part B. Gauge how much your students already know about genetics Student Objectives: To learn how cells function and how much background information they will need. You might and to understand the structure of DNA. discuss Gregor Mendel’s research with dominant and recessive genes in Materials: Uncooked eggs, vinegar, distilled water, pea plants and explain that researchers have (golden) corn syrup, unbreakable containers, plastic known about DNA since Mendel’s time, but food-handling gloves, safety glasses it wasn’t until 1953 that two English scientists—James Watson and Francis Teaching Tips Crick—discovered how DNA is Part A. Have your students work in groups of 3-4 actually put together. DNA is students each for this activity. Each group should de- composed of building blocks called shell two uncooked eggs by soaking them in nucleotides. Nucleotides are made household vinegar for a day or two, until the shell up of deoxyribose sugar, a dissolves completely. After soaking, the eggs will be phosphate group and one of four very swollen, rather firm and easily broken. Caution nitrogen bases: adenine (A), thymine your students to handle the eggs carefully and to keep (T), guanine (G) and cytosine (C). a tray underneath them to contain spills. Note: Have Alternating deoxyribose sugar and Red blood cells students wear inexpensive plastic food-handling gloves phosphate molecules link together to so they do not touch the raw eggs directly. Because form something like the side supports on a ladder. Complementary pairs vinegar is an acid, students also should wear eye- of nitrogen bases form the rungs of the ladder. Adenine is always paired protection glasses. with thymine and guanine is always paired with cytosine. The technical term for the DNA ladder (see diagram on activity sheet) is a right-handed Tell students that water is one substance that can double helix, because the strands twist to the right. Everyone’s DNA has permeate the egg’s membrane, in the process called the same basic chemical structure, but the way its components are osmosis. When the egg is soaked in a solution in which arranged differs from person to person. Each person’s DNA is unique to the concentration of water is lower than that inside the him or herself. (Identical twins, however, have identical DNA, although egg (corn syrup), the liquid inside the egg passes their fingerprints are different.) Information on building DNA models through the membrane into the solution and the egg can be found here: http://biology.about.com/science/biology/library/ looks like a flabby bag. When an egg is soaked in a howto/htcandydna.htm. solution where the concentration of water outside the egg is higher (distilled water), the water tries to reach Add-on Activities equilibrium by passing through the membrane into ■ Many people have concerns about the possibility of manipulating the egg, and the egg becomes larger and firmer. DNA as a way to genetically engineer humans. Older students might develop position papers on genetic engineering or hold a debate on the Results of Experiment ethics and/or possible consequences of such practices. ■ Students might research news articles about the use of DNA to solve crimes to learn the arguments for and against this technology, then develop their own positions on this issue. For example, should there be limits on how and where it is collected, or Egg 1–Corn Syrup Egg 2–Distilled Water how it is used? © 2001 DCI/BBC
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Activity Y ou can’t see them, but they’re everywhere. In fact, every single living thing on this planet is made up of It’s a 5 them. Cells may be tiny, but they play a big role in the human body! In fact, in The Human Body, we see the cells of the mother’s unborn baby grow and change. Cell Call Reproducible Master Use the chart below to record what happens to your eggs Part A. Healthy cells are essential for a healthy body. Just during a 24-hour period. like other living things, cells need to take in oxygen and nutrients and get rid of waste products. Every human cell is Why do you think each egg changed the way it did? surrounded by a cell membrane that controls what the cell takes in and what it lets out. What’s really amazing is that it allows in and out only the things it’s supposed to! Be sure to handle the de-shelled eggs carefully (the membrane Describe the egg at the Describe the egg at the can tear easily). The membrane beginning of the experiment. end of the experiment. on your de-shelled eggs is very similar to the membrane that Egg 1 surrounds a human cell. (corn syrup) Egg 2 Cover egg 1 with corn syrup. (distilled water) Cover egg 2 with distilled water. Part B. The cell is the smallest living unit in our bodies, and has a language and Names and Words structure all its own. An entire world exists inside the cell: to Know ■ power houses to create energy ■ Adenine, thymine, guanine, ■ places to store energy cytosine: The chemicals, or nitro- ■ places where energy is used gen bases, that are found in DNA. ■ a place where things (like proteins) are made ■ DNA (deoxyribonucleic ■ a place where our physical characteristics are stored (genes) acid): The genetic material that is ■ a place where all of these processes are controlled (the nucleus) contained in every cell in the human body. Every person’s DNA Let’s build a model to help explain what is going on, starting with is unique, except for that of the nucleus. Inside the nucleus we will find DNA. DNA is the reason identical twins. you look the way you do—your hair, eyes, height, skin type, skin ■ Double helix: The structure of color, and so on. DNA is found in genes, and genes are responsible DNA. A double helix looks for how similar you look to your parents in some ways or like your something like a twisted ladder. grandparents in others and even like your brothers and sisters. If ■ Human Genome Project: A we opened up a gene, took out the DNA, and gently stretched it project that identified every gene out, we would find that it is shaped like a spiral. Scientists call that present in human DNA. a double helix. There are two strands of DNA wound around and attached to ■ Mendel: The Augustinian monk each other by units called bases, named adenine (A), thymine (T), guanine (G), whose work formed the foundation and cytosine (C). The strands are made up of a sugar (deoxyribose) and a for the science of genetics. phosphate molecule. ■ Watson & Crick: The English scientists who discovered how DNA The DNA strands join together as follows: A on one strand will always pair with T is put together. on the other, and G will always pair with C. It looks something like this: C T C A C A G C G T A C C G A G T G T C G C A T G G Do an Internet search to Add-on learn about the Human Activity Genome Project, the The bases form the ladder, and the sugar-phosphate molecules form the outside spiral form. Follow your teacher’s progress it has made and why it is instructions to make your own DNA strand. so important. © 2001 DCI/BBC 11
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■ Activity 6 A World Part B. Talk with your students about the three different parts of the ear. Explain that the outer ear is the part you Post-viewing of Sense can see. It collects the sound waves. The sound waves travel through the outer ear canal to the middle ear, where Activity Student they strike the eardrum. The eardrum begins to vibrate, and the vibrations Objectives: To pass through three tiny bones—the hammer, the anvil and the stirrup— consider how the eye which transfer the vibrations to the inner ear. There they enter a small curled and ear work and to tube known as the cochlea, where they are turned into nerve signals that learn about visual allow the brain to understand the sound. perspective and sound waves. Tuning-fork experiment: Strike a tuning fork so the students can hear Materials: Tuning The human eye the sound. Explain that the sound was caused by vibrations. Then, have fork, broad plastic bowl students take turns dipping the tuning fork in a broad or other unbreakable container, empty shoe boxes plastic dish or bowl or other unbreakable or other similar containers, various sizes and container of water. The vibrating fork sets up widths of rubber bands little waves in the water, just as it sets up waves of molecules in the air. Teaching Tips Talk with your students about the different parts Rubber-band experiment: Have of the eye and how they work together. The optic students stretch several different widths of nerve in the back of the eye sends what the eye rubber bands over an empty box, in the sees to the brain. When the light passes through order of thickness, then pluck each one with the eye’s lens and the image hits the retina, the their finger. (Be sure that they protect their image is upside down. Therefore, the image that eyes in case the band snaps.) Have students describe the sounds the bands made and rate their Ear cochlea travels through the optic nerve to the brain also is upside down. The brain has to flip the image over comparative pitch (highness or lowness of the sound). They will see that the so it’s the right way up and makes sense. thinner rubber bands vibrate faster than the thick ones, causing them to have a higher pitch. Now have students pluck one rubber band, immediately touch it You might want to have your students make a with their finger, and listen to the sound. When they touch the vibrating pinhole camera (camera obscura)—showing what rubber bands, the vibrations stop and the sound stops. an image looks like when it reaches the retina of the eye—then sketch the images they see through Add-on Activities it. For directions on how to make a very simple ■ Students could do a simple experiment that allows them to “find” their blind pinhole viewer, go to http://www.exploratorium. spot, the area on the retina that has no receptors. For directions on how to edu/IFI/activities/pinholeinquiry/viewer.html. conduct this activity, visit http://faculty.washington.edu/chudler/chvision.html. For information about making an actual pinhole ■ Students might work in teams to prepare presentations about vision— camera that can take pictures, go to beginning with the eye patterns of a newborn who is learning how to see. http://www.kodak.com/global/ ■ Students can try this experiment to experience the direction of sound: One en/consumer/education/lessonPlans/ student stands at arm’s length behind a blindfolded classmate and snaps his or pinholeCamera/pinholeCanBox.shtml. her fingers in various directions. The blindfolded student points in the direction the sound is coming from. Next, the experiment is repeated with the Part A. Here are some Web sites that contain blindfolded student wearing a pair of earmuffs. Finally, with the blindfold still additional examples of optical illusions: in place, the student removes the earmuffs and places a cardboard tube from a http://www.justriddlesandmore.com/illusion.html roll of paper towels over one ear before the finger-snapping exercise is http://www.aoanet.org/jfk-optical-illusions.html repeated. Students should be able to detect the direction of the sound with their ears uncovered. It will be more difficult to determine the direction when the sound is muffled by the earmuffs. Putting the cardboard tube over one ear causes the sound to travel a greater distance to reach that ear, so the student will perceive the sound as coming from the opposite direction. ■ Students might work in teams to research and report back to class the causes of earaches and ear wax, how cold germs can be spread to the ear, and how the ear controls balance. © 2001 DCI/BBC
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Activity A World of Sense 6 Reproducible Master T he eyes may be the windows to your soul, but it takes both your eyes and ears for you to sense your world each day. Together, they allow you to see a ears, your brain wouldn’t have anything to interpret and you wouldn’t be able to hear or dance to music! Next time you’re enjoying your favorite CD, take a moment to thank friend’s face or hear your favorite music. those hairs in your ears. They are part of a built-in amplifying system that’s better than anything you can find Your Eyes. When you first open your eyes, your top in your local electronics store. layer of sense cells is actually scorched away by the bright light. But, happily, beneath them, a fresh layer is revealed—new sensors with which you’ll see the new day. Let’s learn how your eye works, and how it can fool you— because seeing isn’t as simple as it looks. Your cornea focuses light, and the iris controls just how much light passes through the pupil. The lens helps focus this light on the retina, which contains a layer of light- sensitive cells. If your eyeball is too long or your cornea is too curved, you will be nearsighted (objects that are close to you are clear but those in the distance are blurry). If your eyeball is too short or your cornea isn’t curved enough, you will be farsighted. This means you can see distant objects clearly but things that are close are blurry. Hammer, anvil and stirrup Part A. Sometimes, your brain makes you see things that Part B. Sound is produced by vibration. Try this: Feel your aren’t really there. For example, if you look down a long throat as you place your fingers lightly on it and say, “My straight roadway, the sides of the road seem to come name is _______.” Do you feel the vibrations? Vibrations that together in the distance. This is because of perspective— come from the sources of sound cause air molecules to move, the way two objects appear in relation to each other. Try setting up sound waves. Your ears contain the three tiniest this optical illusion. Which flower has the bigger center? and most delicate bones in your entire body. They’re located right behind your eardrum, and they’re called the hammer, the anvil and the stirrup. Their job is to transfer sound vibrations that reach your outer ear into your inner ear. Now, follow your teacher’s instructions as you experiment with a tuning fork, a bowl of water, and some rubber bands, to see what a sound wave looks like and why some sounds are high and some low. Add-on Look at this If you picked the flower on the left, you’re wrong! Actually, illustration at right. both centers are the same size. (Measure them with a ruler Activity What do you think to make sure.) You can fool your brain into thinking that an you see? Take a class poll on object is bigger or smaller by placing it next to objects of the results. different sizes. Your eyes may fool you, but Your Ears. If you’ve ever been to a very loud rock you can’t fool your ears—if you concert, you may have experienced a ringing in your ears damage them when you are young, afterward. Your ears are sensitive to sound and can be your hearing will get worse as you easily—and permanently—damaged if you expose them get older. Research the harmful to loud noises like this without protection. Your ears are in effects of loud sounds and where charge of collecting sounds and turning them into nerve you might find them in your signals that your brain interprets for you. Without your everyday life. © 2001 DCI/BBC 13
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■ Activity 7 Tasty Aromas Part B. Prepare small glasses that contain solutions of (1) sugary water (sweet), (2) lemon Post-viewing juice (sour), (3) salty water (salty), and (4) tonic Activity Student Objectives: To learn about the sense of smell, the water or onion juice (bitter). Have students dip relationship between taste and smell, and the “taste centers” on clean toothpicks into each solution. Then, they should lightly the tongue. touch different parts of the tongue and record what they taste Materials: Part A—small paper bags; small cups of water; on their chart. Be sure to have students use a clean toothpick odorants such as cinnamon, garlic, ginger, onions, vanilla each time they dip and take a drink of water each time they extract, chocolate, rosemary, mouthwash, orange peel; small change taste categories. They also may want to nibble a piece of containers such as empty film canisters; lemon, grape and bread in between the taste tests. cherry mini-jelly beans. Part B—small glass containers, sugar, lemon juice, salt, tonic water or onion juice, toothpicks, water Explain to your students that their taste buds are located on the papillae, the little bumps they can feel on their tongue. Each Teaching Tips papillae contains between 1 and 15 taste buds. Each of the taste Part A. The materials to be smelled (see list above) should be buds is made up of a cluster of between 80 and 100 cells, placed in containers that students can’t see through (35mm film including receptor cells that are attached to nerves. Different canisters with holes in the lids or clear containers that have receptors are sensitive to different tastes. (This experiment also been covered with tape, etc). Containers should be numbered could be done as a take-home activity.) from 1 to 10. Keep a log of what is in each container. Select four odorants and put some of each in two different Add-on Activities containers. Put some of two additional odorants in one ■ Lead a discussion on eating disorders and poor container each. nutrition, based on student findings in researching the USDA food pyramid Students should pick up each container and sniff recommendations. it. What odors were most easily identified? Most ■ As people age their sense of smell gets difficult to identify? How many students identified worse. Students might conduct “smell tests” to all the odors? How many were able to match all identify differences in the ability to smell four odors and identify the two that did not have a among family members, older neighbors and pair? How well did the boys do compared to the friends, etc. girls? You might ask your students to create graphs ■ Students might create their own “odor charts,” that illustrate the results of the smell test. Note: Be The nose identifying as many different kinds of odors as sure to ask about allergies before having your they can, and categorizing them by type (sweet, students participate in this activity. Discard all foods assembled minty, sour, etc.). in this unit after they have been used in classroom testing. ■ Heat and climate affect the diffusion of gas molecules that cause odors. Students could research why odors are different in Smell-taste activity: You will need six small paper bags and intensity in the summer than in the winter, and why odors are scoops of lemon, grape and cherry mini-jelly beans. (If students so readily associated with tropical climates. work in groups, use one set of bags per group.) Label the bags: ■ Younger students might create taste charts by cutting pictures #1 taste, #1 smell, #2 taste, #2 smell, #3 taste, #3 smell. Put of food out of magazines and organizing them according to several crushed jelly beans in each of the “smell” bags. Put the taste categories. remainder of the jelly beans in the “taste” bags. Be sure that the ■ Just as in other areas of biological science, what we know same flavor jelly beans are placed in the bags with the same about taste changes as researchers make new discoveries (for number (i.e., #1 bags contain the lemon jelly beans, etc.). example, researchers recently discovered a fifth basic taste called Umami. This taste occurs when foods that contain Students should close their eyes, hold their noses and chew a glutamate—like the MSG used in much Oriental food—are jelly bean from each taste bag. Tell them to take a small sip of eaten). Students could do some research water between each test, then record the tastes on the chart. to learn more about glutamate and why it Next, have students close their eyes and sniff each of the “smell” is used predominantly in certain cuisines. bags, recording their findings on the chart. Finally, have them ■ Students might construct a model of repeat the taste test, but this time without holding their noses. the digestive system. Discuss the findings as a class. © 2001 DCI/BBC
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W hat do the aroma of pizza when you enter the school cafeteria and the stench of sweaty socks in the locker room have in common? It’s your nose, of course! Part B. All tastes come from different combinations of four basic tastes: sweet, sour, salty and bitter. Different taste buds interpret these Activity 7 Everything you need to smell with is inside your nose. It tastes. Follow your teacher’s directions to find the Reproducible Master alerts you to those socks and tempts you with that aroma— different “taste centers” on your tongue. Record then it even helps you enjoy the taste of the pizza! your findings below as “3” if it is a strong taste, “2” if it is neither strong nor weak, or “1” if it is weak. Tasty Part of Tongue Sweet Sour Salty Bitter Aromas Tip Middle As you breathe in, odor molecules in the air enter through Left side your nostrils, pass into the nasal cavity, and then go to the Right side olfactory bulb. That’s where special nerve cells (receptors) determine just what the odor is. The nerve cells send signals Now, use the information above to draw a “taste map” of your to the brain, which lets you know what you’re smelling. tongue, using a different color for each type of taste and shading to show how strong the tastes are in each area. How Part A. Some people have a better sense of smell than does your taste map compare with those of your classmates? others. Although the average person can identify between 3,000 and 10,000 different odors, some people who have a condition called anosmia have no sense of smell at all. Add-on Everything our body does for us takes fuel. Getting the food to fuel our bodies into our Activity mouths, as we see in The Follow your teacher’s directions to identify the odorants in Human Body, is one thing. What the containers prepared for you. Hold the container in front happens next is not quite as tidy. of your face and waft your hand over it toward your nose to Biting into that great-tasting pizza is get the best whiff. the first step on an amazing journey through your digestive system. Which containers are the same? Identify them on the third After your molars grind it up, line below each pair: chemicals in your saliva begin to break down the # ____ # ____ pizza as your tongue pushes it to the back of your throat. # ____ # ____ Like squeezing a tube of toothpaste, your muscles squeeze it _______________________ ________________________ down your esophagus and into your stomach. That’s where some serious action takes place. The mushy stuff that used to # ____ # ____ look like pizza is mixed with acid and digestive chemicals # ____ # ____ until it is broken down into tiny bits, which move into the small intestine. There, chemicals and liquids continue the _______________________ ________________________ process, until all the nutrients are absorbed. Which containers are not the same? Identify them below: The final stage of your pizza’s journey takes place in the large # ____ is ___________________________________ and intestine, which is a kind of drying chamber. The liquid is # ____ is ____________________________________. removed from the leftovers and absorbed back into the body. All that’s left now is the stuff you don’t need. And you know When you have a bad cold, does everything “taste the same”? what happens to it! Your body’s “team” approach to this That’s because you’ve lost the ability to smell what you’re process should make it a little easier to understand the eating! Use the chart below to record the results of a test that problems that can occur when you don’t get enough to eat or will show you how important that smell/taste partnership is. eat the wrong kind of food. Use resources to check out the USDA’s Smell Only Taste Only Smell & Taste food pyramid and compare what you Bag 1 usually eat with what it recommends. Where can you improve your diet? Bag 2 Bag 3 © 2001 DCI/BBC 15
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■ Activity 8 Bone Basics Add-on Activities ■ Just as good nutrition is important to good health, Post-viewing Activity environmental factors can affect our health, too—even Student Objectives: To learn about bones—how that of unborn babies. to build healthy bones and how to protect our bones. Students might investigate Materials: None environmental hazards such as smoking and discuss Teaching Tips solutions to deal with them. Part A. Provide this background information for ■ Students might explore students: The spine (also known as the spinal column how the shapes of different or backbone) is a collection of 33 bones known as bones relate to the amount vertebrae that are stacked up and held together by of force they must connective tissues called ligaments. The spine is what withstand. allows us to stand upright and to be flexible—to twist ■ Students might explore the and turn and bend. The spine also provides amazing “engineering” that protection for the spinal cord—the group of nerves allows the spine to support that helps to send information from the brain to the human body. For other parts of the body. Moving joints allow for example, they might flexibility, too. experiment with a ball of modeling clay and four X-ray of a skeleton If students are having difficulty finding examples of coffee-stirrer straws placed hinge joints and ball-and-socket joints, you might vertically to see how the head sits on the little vertebrae in the neck. want to provide them with a few examples. (Hinge ■ Students might do research to see how the skeletal systems of other joints could include the hinges on a door or a lift-top animals are designed to provide different kinds of mobility. desk; many swivel desk lamps have ball-and-socket ■ Students might do observational research to see how different types joints. Students might relate best to the example of a of shoes affect posture and balance. Why are high heels so bad for the computer joystick.) female foot? ■ Students can make a “rubber Part B. Examples of protective equipment used in bone” by soaking a chicken sports include: bicycle helmets, batting helmets for bone in vinegar for several baseball and softball, helmets for riding scooters, knee days. Because vinegar is an and elbow pads for inline skating, and skateboarding. acid, it dissolves the calcium, This activity provides an excellent introduction to a leaving the bone thinner and discussion of sports safety in general. vulnerable to breaking, much as it would be if it were diseased Use the activity about calcium in food as the basis for from osteoporosis due to a a discussion about good nutrition. To extend the loss of calcium. Refer to discussion, you might want to have students plan a www.flinnsci.com/homepage/ week’s worth of lunches that are well balanced and bio/rubbone.html. supply significant amounts of calcium. Explain that ■ Have students investigate the body’s need for calcium changes with age. For Hand bones other uses for thermal example, the National Academy of Sciences imaging, the technology that recommends that adults under age 50 should have showed Luke’s image in the film (for example, fire fighters can locate 1,000 mg of calcium daily, while people over 50 victims overcome by smoke who have hidden in a burning house by should have 1,200 mg daily. pointing a thermal imaging camera at the house). Can students think of how this technology might be medically useful? © 2001 DCI/BBC