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Explorations—Bloodstream Superhighway Grades 6–8 In This Guide • Notes to the Teacher How to use Explorations • Review with your students the schedule of your trip, curriculum connections, behavior expectations, activities to be completed at the museum or when you return to school. The circulatory system and healthy choices Before your visit About this topic: After your visit Explorations—Bloodstream Superhighway focuses on two main parts of the Human Body Gallery—the Circulatory System area (near the Big Bloodstream) and the Effects of Tobacco area (near the door to the ExhibitsStairway). The intent is to help students understand more about their own cardiovascular system, so they will be able to make healthy lifestyle choices and understand the damage that tobacco use can cause to their bodies. Lifestyle choices are affected by many things. This guide does not presume that this one activity will assure that students will make healthy choices about their bodies. Information alone will not stop most kids from using tobacco. It needs to be a community and family supported effort. More ideas and additional information are available from sources listed in the Resources section. Resources • Minnesota Preparatory Standards • Pre-visit Classroom Activity • Post-Visit Classroom Activity • At the Museum Activity • Chaperone Guide Page Notes to the Teacher How to use Explorations: • Give chaperones copies of Explorations At the Museum Activity and Chaperone Guide Page. • Componentsare not sequential. You can start anywhere in the exhibit. • If your time in the exhibits is limited, choose just a few stops. Don't try to rush your students to finish the Explorations suggestions. Some of the activities can be done in your classroom as follow-up activities. Some may leave students with more questions. Use these as the basis for after-trip discussions or group research. • Bring extra pencils and stiff cardboard for students to write on. • Although you can provide individual students with Explorations guides, we recommend that students work in small groups to share ideas. This self-guide will reinforce three main ideas. 1. The human circulatory system brings nutrients to and removes wastes from body tissues. 2.This system is present in all students! 3. Students can make healthy choices (especially in regard to tobacco use) which will preserve the optimum functioning of the circulatory system and many other body systems. • Visit the museum before your field trip. The Science Museum offers two free tickets to teachers to preview the museum. Call 1-800-221-9444 or (651) 221-9444. • Visit the museum’s web site to get an overview of the museum (www.smm.org). Share the floor plans (in the Chaperone Guide Page) with your students. 2000 Notes to the Teacher Circulatory system facts The circulatory system consists of the heart, blood vessels and blood. • The four-chambered heart is the pump which circulates the blood throughout the body. The human heart beats an average of about 70 times per minute. In a 70 year old person, it has pumped the equivalent of 25 railroad tank cars of blood. • Arteries are the blood vessels which carry blood away from the heart to all the body tissues. In most cases, this blood has already acquired oxygen from its journey into the lungs, and so appears bright red. Veins return oxygen-poor blood to the heart. This blood is dark red, and may appear blue when seen through the skin. (The only exceptions are the pulmonary (lung) blood vessels where oxygen-poor blood is pumped from the heart through the pulmonary artery into the lungs, and oxygen-rich blood returns to the heart through the pulmonary vein, and it is then pumped by the heart to the rest of the body.) • Blood is like a liquid conveyor belt. Red blood cells, white blood cells, and platelets make up 45% of the blood. They are suspended in the other 55% of the blood, a watery yellowish liquid called plasma. Plasma is 95% water and 5% nutrients, proteins, waste products and hormones. At any moment, three-fourths of your blood is in veins, one-fifth in arteries, and one-twentieth in capillaries. • Red blood cells are the only body cells without a nucleus. They contain hemoglobin, which transports oxygen and carbon dioxide. As blood passes through the lungs, oxygen molecules attach to the hemoglobin. When the blood passes through the body's tissues, the hemoglobin releases the oxygen to the cells. The hemoglobin molecules then bond with carbon dioxide in the tissues, and transport it back to the lungs where it is expelled by breathing. Explorations—Bloodstream Superhighway Grades 6–8 Healthy choices for cardiovascular health • There are several risk factors which seem to affect cardiovascular health. Factors such as gender, age, or family background are beyond our control. Healthy choices regarding diet, physical exercise, and use of substances such as tobacco are within our control and can influence risks of damage to the heart and circulatory system. • A single cigarette speeds up the heartbeat, increases blood pressure, upsets the flow of blood and air in the lungs. Within one minute of starting to smoke, the heart rate begins to increase by as much as 30 percent. Smoking also raises blood pressure: blood vessels constrict, which forces the heart to work harder to deliver oxygen to the rest of the body. Carbon monoxide in tobacco smoke reduces the blood's ability to carry oxygen, by binding tightly to the hemoglobin in red blood cells. This blocks the oxygen from binding to hemoglobin. • Smoking tends to increase blood cholesterol levels. Cigarette smokers also have raised fibrinogen levels and platelet counts, which make the blood more sticky. These factors eventually lead to atherosclerosis ("hardening of the arteries"). • Why is it so hard to quit? Why be concerned with kids “experimenting” with tobacco? All tobacco products contain nicotine, a powerful drug which is extremely addictive. Nicotine is powerful because it reaches the brain quickly (6–10 seconds after the first puff) and stimulates brain functions which physiologically “reward” the activity that introduced the nicotine. The “reward” is then reinforced by hundreds of puffs from each cigarette. Continued tobacco use apparently generates additional nicotine receptor sites in the brain, causing more craving for nicotine. Nicotine also has other effects on the body, including increasing the heart rate and blood pressure and causing changes in skeletal muscle tension. • What are other health effects of tobacco use? Tobacco use has been strongly linked to lung cancer, cancers of the larynx, oral cavity, and esophagus. In addition, it is highly associated with bladder, kidney, pancreatic, and cervical cancers. Aging and drying of the skin, blocked blood flow to the legs, emphysema, discolored skin and teeth, and bad breath also are related to tobacco use. • Most young people who experiment with smokeless tobacco may not realize that the nicotine it contains is just as addictive as that found in cigarettes. Irritation of tissues in the mouth may also lead to cancers of the mouth and throat. 2000 Notes to the Teacher Before your visit: • Scan the museum activities for new words or skills – review if necessary. • Prepare students for the museum visit by introducing the schedule of the day, activities to complete while at the museum, behavior expectations, and your expectations for the visit. Explorations—Bloodstream Superhighway Grades 6–8 Students can make their own booklet to bring to the museum: distribute paper for the cover and insert a copy of At the Museum activities included in this Explorations guide. Add cardboard backing to make it easier to write or draw. • Do the Pulse of Life Pre-Visit Classroom Activity. • Call (800) 221-9444 for free tickets to preview the Human Body Gallery before your class visit. • Make copies of the Chaperone Guide Page and any student pages you use for your chaperones After your visit: • Review questions and answers from Student At the Museum Activity. • Discuss: Most of the 5 heart models or drawings in this area have red and blue sections. Does the picture of the circulatory system also use red and blue? Why? Is blood really blue? • Research the effects of tobacco on the body using the Resources list or other library materials. • Ask students to write a review of the most persuasive exhibit video warning about tobacco use, including a short summary and why it was so persuasive. Check publications with movie reviews for ideas and format. • See Make a Video Post-visit Classroom Activity. • Discuss: Smoking impairs oxygen transport and utilization. What happens to tissues deprived of oxygen? How would this affect body systems seen in other areas of the Human Body Gallery? • Chart and graph the whole class results for Check out your circulatory system in The Human Body Gallery! activity. Are there any patterns in the whole class results? What things might effect the outcomes? Choose one and describe what change, if any, would take place in the outcomes you observed in this activity at the museum. Use of tobacco would change: • amount of blood? • pattern of heart electrical impulses? • blood pressure? • size or shape of capillaries and/or red blood cells? Major support forthe Human Body Gallery and associated outreach programs has been provided by Blue Cross and Blue Shield of Minnesota to reduce tobacco use for a healthier Minnesota. 2000 Resources Explorations—Bloodstream Superhighway Grades 6–8 Resources: The American Heart Association has leaflets and brochures available for classroom use at a very reasonable cost. Call 952-2783626 for more information and a price list. Web sites: http://sln.fi.edu/biosci/heart.html An interactive, activity-based site about the circulatory system designed by the Franklin Institute Science Museum in Philadelphia. http://www.letsfindout.com/subjects/browse?body Short segments of factual information about the human body, for elementary and middle school students http://www.cdc.gov/tobacco/ An excellent comprehensive site about tobacco use and health by the Center for Disease Control. Contains links to many other tobacco-related sites and sections for young people. Book: Eyewitness Books: Human Body, Steve Parker, Dorling Kindersley; ISBN: 0789448831 An engaging, beautifully illustrated guide to the systems of the body. Reading level: Ages 9 and up. We welcome your mailed, faxed (651) 221-4528, or e-mailed ([email protected]) student letters, a sample of completed Explorations or comments about your trip to the museum. 2000 Minnesota Preparatory Standards Minnesota Preparatory Standards Although each museum exhibit hall has exhibits and activities which will enrich students’ experiences in the standards below, using the Explorations—Bloodstream Superhighway! will facilitate direct application of the standards in bold. Supplementing the museum activities with appropriate pre- and post-trip activities will enhance additional experiences in the standards below. APPLIED SCIENTIFIC METHODS Middle-level Content Standards Living Systems A student shall demonstrate knowledge of interactions and interdependence of living systems by understanding the human body, including heredity, reproduction, and regulation and behavior; plants, animals, and microorganisms including diversity and adaptation of organisms, and populations and ecosystems; and the dynamic effect of humans interacting with the environment by: 1. formulating questions to be answered based on systematic observation Explorations—Bloodstream Superhighway Grades 6–8 2.direct observations, interviews, or surveys, including framing a question; collecting data through observation, interviews, or surveys; recording and organizing information; and evaluating the question based on findings. DECISION MAKING Middle-level ContentStandards Personal Health A student shall demonstrate understanding of the impact of nutrition, food selection, safety, and eating patterns on health; how to recognize abusive or harassing behaviors; the consequences of using tobacco, alcohol, and other drugs; strategies for preventing accidents and environmental hazards; what to do in case of sudden illness or injury; signs and symptomsof health problems that affect adolescents; sexual responsibility; how to prevent communicable diseases, HIV and sexually transmitted disease infections, and pregnancy; and basic structures and systems of the human body by: 1.analyzing the relationship of physical, social, and mental health; 2.designing and conducting investigations and field studies 2.applying a decision-making process to analyze health issues and attain personal goals; 3.analyzing data to support or refute hypotheses by identifying patterns in data; and comparing results to known scientific theories, current models, or personal experience; and considering multiple interpretations of data 3.an alyzing how health-related decisions are influenced by internal and external factors; 4.demonstrating communication skills to express needs and enhance health 4.describing how a premise is supported by scientific concepts, principles, theories, or laws; and 5. creating a model to illustrate a contemporary or historical concept, principle, theory, or law INQUIRY. Middle-level Content Standards Direct Observation A stu d e n ts hall demonstrate the ability to gather information to answer a scientific or social science question through: 1.direct observations, including framing a question, collecting and recording data, displaying data in appropriate format, looking for patterns in observable data, relating findings to new situations or large group findings, answering a question or presenting a position using data, and identifying areas for further investigation; and 2000 Pre-Visit Classroom Activity Explorations—Bloodstream Superhighway Grades 6–8 Pulse of Life Compare heart rates of students. Are they the same or different? What is a pulse? What information can we get from measuring our pulse? What is the average heart rate of all students? Materials: Clock or watch with second hand or digital seconds reading How does activity affect the heart rate? Is this the same for all students? Optional Research: How does smoking affect heart rate? FYI: Activities: Help the students locate their pulse points either on their wrists or necks. On the wrist, the pulse point is located on the thumb side of the wrist (the palm face up). Ask students to place their right index and middle finger on the palm side of their left wrist. On the neck, the pulse point is located beneath the ear and jawbone. Count the number of beats in 15 seconds. Multiply this by four to get the number of beats in one minute. Rates will vary between 60 to 110; adult rates are often lower. Ask students to brainstorm what may change the rate of their pulse (heart rate). What change would they anticipate if they were to exercise? Do some exercise such as running in place, jumping jacks, or other exercise for one minute. Stop and calculate pulse for 15 seconds. Use the chart below (or a similar chart or graph paper) to have students graph their results. Pulse Rate for one minute 200 150 100 • During each heartbeat, the muscles of the heart contract causing a wave of pressure which forces blood through the arteries. This wave of pressure is known as a pulse, one for each heartbeat. The pulse can be felt at points of the body where the arteries are just under the skin, temples, neck, crookof the elbow, wrist, groin, back of the knee, inside back of the ankle. Normal pulse rate varies with age. • With exercise or physical activity, the heart rate increases to supplythe muscles with more oxygen to produce extra energy. The heart can beat up to 200 times per minute with extreme exercise. The brain sends a signal to the heart to control the rate. The body also produces chemical hormones, such as adrenaline, which can change the heart rate. When we are excited, scared, or anxious our heart getsa signal to beat faster. A trained athlete’s heart can pump more blood with each beat so his or her heart rate is slower. There are two ways the heart can meet the body’s need for oxygen. It can beat faster or it can beat harder, moving more blood per pump. The heart can easily beat faster or slower. But it can onlybeat harder if it has been strengthened through regular exercise. 50 0 Resting Walking Running in place Jumping jacks 2000 Post-Visit Classroom Activity Make a Video Materials: Paper for storyboard Sound effects equipment Photography equipment Videotape/camcorder VCR Discuss the videos done by the teen QUITS team at the Science Museum of Minnesota in the tobacco section of the Human Body Gallery. What was effective? What did not work so well? Which ones were the favorites of the students? Why? Where were the videos filmed? Outdoors? Indoors? What kinds of settings? Were there any props? Sound effects or music? What special effects did students notice? Using the decision-making model below as a guide, ask students to develop some ideas for their own video to assist other young people in making a decision about tobacco use. Review the basic steps in planning, then divide the class into groups to complete the activity. Develop a script. What will the story be? Whose point of view? A strong script is the key to an effective presentation. Explorations—Bloodstream Superhighway Grades 6–8 Create a storyboard using photos and/or drawings to create a visual sequence of the final video. This will help the group keep to filming sequence and with the finalediting. If you will be actually completing the video, continue with the following steps: Begin taping the video. Tape all the main character scenes at the same time. Try a variety of set ups, filming the same scene as a close up, medium, and long shot. When editing is done, use a variety of shots. Videotape extras—scene changes, commercials, narrator, or news anchor. Edit the program following the written script. Two VCRs can be used to edit. Check local cable companies—sometimes they are open for public use. Check other local schools (especially high schools) for studio editing equipment. Decision-making model: (based on Marzano 1992) Identify decision to be made and state as a question Identify and describe options and choices Identify criteria for making decisions Investigate visual options, live action or dramatic sequences, or the use of still photographs. External influences (media, culture, technological or medical advances) Conduct interviews with family, friends, community resources. (Some may be willing to be interviewed on camera for the final production.) Internal influences (interests, values, desires, curiosity, fears, likes/dislikes, personal problems, selfesteem) Discuss props, scenery, and costumes. Interpersonal communication and relationships (family, friends, peers, co-workers, teachers, etc.) Select music or other sounds. Discuss visual cues (close-up, medium, long shot) Discuss the following production roles and ask students to decide on group and individual roles. Ask students to look up unusual terms and share their functions in class. Technical Crew: Grip Talent: Actors Gopher Narrator Script consultant Musical performers Floor director Gaffer Weigh each option and choice against criteria (benefits and consequences of each option) Make decision and explain reasoning Thanks to Candace Gruman, Mounds View High School, for suggestions regarding the decision-making model. Video 101 with Professor Monkey is a very thorough web site guide to producing a video and all of its components. http://www.sotherden.com/video101/ Editor Director 2000 At the Museum Activity Explorations—Bloodstream Superhighway Grades 6–8 Follow the Bloodstream Superhighway! This exhibit is about your heart, blood, arteries, and veins. Your name ____________________________________________________________ Watch the Bloodstream Superhighway (the big bloodstream) for two minutes. List everything you notice about it. Observations: With two or three other students, make up six questions that you have about the Bloodstream Superhighway ( the big bloodstream) 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. Choose one of your questions and find the answer to it in the exhibit. Most of the five heart models or drawings in this area have red and blue sections. Sit in the red blood cell chair and think about why they are colored this way. Does the picture of the circulatory system also use red and blue? 2000 At the Museum Activity Explorations—Bloodstream Superhighway Grades 6–8 Put your hands on the Bloodstream Superhighway (the Big Bloodstream). Why does the right hand feel different than the left? (Check your answer by reading the label and asking one of your classmates.) ______________________________________________________ ___________________________________________________________________________________________ Check your own pulse. How is it like the Bloodstream Superhighway? ____________________ ___________________________________________________________________________________________ How is it different? ________________________________________________________________________ ___________________________________________________________________________________________ What are some other differences between the Bloodstream Superhighway model and your own circulatory system? ___________________________________________________________________ ___________________________________________________________________________________________ Check out your own circulatory system in the Human Body Gallery. Try these exhibits and keep track of your results. Exhibit Name Your results How many pints are you circulating? Measure your blood supply: _____ pints Electrocardiograph Draw your pattern. Circle the heart beat. Blood Pressure Cuff ________ Systolic pressure ________ Diastolic pressure Take a look at the red blood cells and capillaries in your eye. Draw or describe what you see. 2000 At the Museum Activity Explorations—Bloodstream Superhighway Grades 6–8 Compare your results with two others from your group: Exhibit Name Results: person 1 Results: person 2 How many pints are you circulating? _________pints _________pints _________Systol i cp ressure _________Systol i cp ressure _________Diastol i cp ressure _________Diastol i cp ressure Electrocardiograph Blood Pressure Cuff Take a lookat the red blood cells and capillaries in your eye. Choose the results from one of the above and compare the data from all three. Are they all alike? Do you see any patterns in the comparisons? Explain why there were similarities or differences in the three results. Propose a way to test your explanation: 2000 At the Museum Activity Explorations—Bloodstream Superhighway Grades 6–8 Keep your own Bloodstream Superhighway happy and healthy. Know about some of the dangers. Describe one harmful affect of tobacco on the cardiovascular system. How does tobacco affect your (write your answers below): Blood vessels Blood Heart 2000 At the Museum Activity Explorations—Bloodstream Superhighway Grades 6–8 What are other ways tobacco affects you? Find exhibits in this area that will help you answer this question. Label the areas ofthe body affected by tobacco and describe one way tobacco can affect you. _______________________________________ _______________________________________ _______________________________________ Making choices Watch all 4 videos in the tobacco section. Which one do you like best? What did the teens who made these videos use to try to convince you not to smoke? Which one is most convincing? What would you include if you made a video for other students your age? 2000 Explorations—Bloodstream Superhighway Grades 6–8 Chaperone Guide Page The Explorations—Bloodstream Superhighway self-guide is used in areas A and B on the map: Tips: • Share the excitement of the field trip by talking with your group about the exhibits. Don’t worry about understanding all the exhibit messages. Other topics and areas in the Human Body Gallery 1 Body Image—Every body is not the same. 2 Genetics—genes, chromosomes, genetic disease 3 Senses and Perception—light, sight, smell, ear vibrations, illusions 4 Perception Theater—18-minute multimedia presentation for 25–30 students 5 The Brain—memory, brain surgery, Alzheimer’s Disease 6 The Sneezer 7 Cell Lab—10–20 minute cell experiments, first-come, first-served, for up to 12 students/time slot, ages 8+ A Bloodstream Superhighway • Science Museum Staff in blue vests, aprons or shirts can help you with questions and find exhibits. 1 7 2 A 6 B 3 5 B • If your group has selfguide questions, help them find the appropriate exhibits and compose their own personalized answers. 4 Tobacco and Health Human Body Gallery—Level 4 2000