Title: Biology: The Study of Life
1Biology The Study of Life
2Biology The Study of LifeChapter 1
- The BIG Picture
- Nature of Biology
- Characteristics of Living Things
- Scientific Method
- Ethics in Biology
- Safety
- Measurement
3What do Biologist Study Why?
- Interactions of living things
- Interactions of living things their environment
- Small (cells, DNA, viruses, prions) to large
(biosphere) - Many divisions Ex medicine, histology,
icthyology, genetics, ecology - Why To understand life and propose solutions to
problems
4What is Life?
- What makes something Alive?
Is this alive?
Does it have any life characteristics?
What does it have in common with this?
5Is it Alive?
- What 8 characteristics do YOU think all living
things share? - Brainstorm in your groups list
6Characteristics of Living ThingsThe Rules of the
Living Game
- 1. Made up of units called cells - organized
- 2. Reproduce like organisms
- 3. Have DNA
- 4. Grow and develop
- 5. Obtain and use materials and energy
- 6. Respond to stimulus/environment
- 7. Homeostasis
- 8. Evolve
7 Scientific Method Skills
8Experiments
- AKA studies, tests, case studies, field studies
controlled experiments - Depends on subjects, variables, ethics
- Controlled experiment is most precise
9Draw samples from some aspect of nature
CONTROL GROUP The variable being tested is absent
EXPERIMENTAL GROUP The variable being tested is
present
Compile results
Compile results
Compare and analyze the test results
Report on experimental design, test results, and
conclusions drawn from results
CONTROL GROUP VS. EXPERIMENTAL GROUP
10Variables
- Independent
- The condition in an experiment that is changed
- Dependent
- A condition that the scientist observes or
measures b/c of the change in the independent
variable
NOTE They are sometimes called different
names Independent manipulated,
explanatory, Dependent observed, resulting,
11You Try!
- Two agar plates (A and B) with 1,000
streptococcus bacteria are incubated in identical
10g nutrient medium at 37 C for 24 hours. Plate A
has 10mg antibiotic X added, Plate B has a 10mg
placebo added. After 24 hours, the number of
bacteria remaining are counted. - IV Antibiotic X
- DV bacteria after 24 hours
- How are conditions controlled between the two
groups? - Hypothesis Grass will grow taller if fertilizer
is added. - IV Fertilizer
- DV Change in length of grass (metric)
12You Try Independent vs. Dependant Variable WS
- 1. More bushels of potatoes will be produced if
the fertilizer in the soil is increased. - IV fertilizer
- DV bushels of potatoes
13CONTROLED CONDITIONS
- VERY IMPORTANT!!!
- Conditions that remain constant in both the test
group and the control group - The control group does NOT change its independent
variable
14Scientific Method at Work Aristotle (384 322
BC)
- Proposed the theory of spontaneous generation
- Idea that living things can arise from nonliving
matter - Idea lasted almost 2000 years
15Disproving Spontaneous Generation
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17GRAPHING - An Important Skill
- The 3 well use most are
- Line, Bar, Pie
- Whats the difference?
18The Scientific Method
- You might see it expressed different ways, but
it is still the same process
19The Scientific Method is a logical, step-by-step
process to solve a problem
- No matter how you say it!
20The Nature of BiologySection 1.3
- Science Society
- Ethics Example Pharmaceutical Studies, animal
testing, stem cell, genetic engineering
- Science vs. Technology
- --Whats the difference?
21Limits of Science
- Scientific approach cannot provide answers to
subjective questions - Which color is best?
- Cannot provide moral, aesthetic, or philosophical
standards
22Theories vs. Laws
- Theory explanation of a natural phenomenon
supported by a large body of scientific evidence - Law Description of events that occur in the
natural world fact
23Glowing Mice ethical?
24The History of Measurement
25The Metric System
26Weight vs. MassWhats the difference?
27Converting Units in the Metric System - Length
28Accuracy vs. Precision
29Lets Make a Deal
- A classmate bets you 20 that you cant jump a
fence that is 110 decimeters tall assume you are
2.1 meters tall - Do you take the bet?
30BE CAREFUL
- How is this scale different from the one in the
video clip? - What does this mean for your conversions?
31Can you do this?
32Converting Units in the Metric System - Volume
33Other Prefixes Their Powers Of Ten
34Lab Safety Introduction
35Whats wrong with this picture
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