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Rock Around the Clock Genetics ✥ Learning the Strategy The Rock Around the Clock strategy will help you focus on the main idea, significant points, new insights, and important words or terms in a reading selection. You will work in teams to record key points from your reading; then prepare a presentation. You’ll increase your reading comprehension and vocabulary, and you’ll improve your team and presentation skills — requirements for real life on the job. ❂ Practicing the Strategy 1. Working with your group, write down all of the things you already know about your reading topic. 2. Read the article or textbook section your teacher assigns to the group (silently or aloud). 3. While you are reading, highlight or mark the text to identify • • • • • Main idea Key words and their meanings Important points Ah-ha’s (insights) Unanswered questions 4. As a group, discuss the selection and notes you have made. Together, determine the main idea, important points, key terms and meanings, ah-ha’s, and unanswered questions. 5. As a team, design a presentation to help the class understand your section of the text. Your presentation should • • • • Include the main idea, important points, key terms and meanings, ah-ha’s, and unanswered questions from your reading. Incorporate a variety of visual aids. Be between two and five minutes in length. Feature a designated presenter or presenters. International Center for Leadership in Education Genetics Twins may or may not look alike. A baby looks like its mother or father or both. A flower is pink the first year and red the next. These and other mysteries of heredity have been unraveled through the study of genetics. In the past ten years, scientists have made advances by leaps and bounds compared to those in earlier centuries. Before 1850 they thought heredity was controlled by something in the blood or the sap in a tree. Believing that hereditary traits were blended, they concluded that a black cat mating with a white cat would produce only gray cats. Tall men who married short women would bear medium-sized children. Then an Austrian monk, Gregor Mendel (18231884), began experimenting with reproducing plants. His findings in the basic principles of genetics are still standing today. Mendel discovered that traits are inherited in separate factors (now called genes), and that the genes did not combine in reproduction. Instead, some genes are more dominant than others. Mendel bred pea plants that bloomed in white with peas that bloomed in purple. He wanted to determine if the blending theory was correct. But he instead discovered that in the first generation (F1), the white trait disappeared altogether. No light purple or purplish-white flowers were evident. Because the pea plants are self-fertile, he allowed the first generation to self-pollinate. This time he found that three plants were purple and one was white. The ratio was 3:1. But where was this white plant hiding in the first generation? Mendel began repeating the experiment but expanded it to cover 22 different strains of peas, studying seven different traits. Every time the second generation (F2) had the same 3:1 ratio. He hypothesized that every trait is controlled by two factors that are capable of being inherited. (See Punnett Square.) He believed that if the factors are different, one is dominant and one is recessive, and that dominant factor will mask or hide the recessive. He went on to apply the mathematical laws of probability to the combinations of factors, thus laying the groundwork for the next 150 years of science studies in genetics. In the mid-1890s, Mr. Reginald Punnett studied science at Clifton College. He was mostly interested in confirming Mendel’s findings from forty years before. Punnett invented the Punnett Square used by scientists and students today to display the results of a genetic cross. In a Punnett Square, the traits are mapped to show the frequency of the factor for a specific trait. Each trait has two parts. The combination of parts makes that trait either homozygous (the same, either dominant or recessive) or heterozygous (mixed — both dominant and recessive). Using the same letter with lower and upper cases, (Tt) the Punnett Square is a visual representation of the combination of genes that is useful in determining how many times the dominant and recessive genes will show up in the next generation. International Center for Leadership in Education T T Hybrid plus Hybrid Mendel’s Second Generation: t t Purple Pea Purple Pea Purple Pea White Pea Hybrid plant that was result of white pea bred with purple pea. The resulting purple plant (hybrid) was allowed to self pollinate (hybrid). This resulted in a 3:1 ratio or 75% dominant (purple) and 25% recessive (white). If the Parent Genotypes are: the next generation will have: Pure, dominant Hybrid plus homozygous recessive Hybrid plus hybrid Homozygous recessive plus homozygous recessive ☛ 100% of offspring with that dominant trait ☛50% dominant trait, 50% recessive trait ☛ 75% dominant trait, 25% recessive trait ☛ 100% recessive trait International Center for Leadership in Education Rock Around the Clock Sample Solution Main Idea Key Words and Meanings Early discoveries in genetics unraveled the mystery of living beings’ trait heredity. Punnett Square – a mapping tool to show the frequency of the factor for a specific trait Homozygous – the same, either dominant or recessive Heterozygous – mixed, both dominant and recessive Important Points Mendel discovered that traits are inherited in separate factors (genes) and that genes did not combine in reproduction. Some genes are more dominant than others. In the Punnett Square, the traits are mapped to show the frequency of the factor of a specific trait. Each trait has 2 parts. The combination of parts makes that trait either homozygous or heterozygous. The Punnett Square allows us to represent the combination of genes that is useful in determining how many times the dominant and recessive genes will show up in the next generation. Parent Genotypes next generation Pure, dominant 100% with that dominant trait Hybrid plus homozygous recessive 50% dominant, 50% recessive Hybrid plus hybrid 75% dominant, 25% recessive Homozygous recessive plus homozygous recessive 100% recessive Ah-ha’s (Insights) Unanswered Questions Mathematic laws of probability are applied to combinations of factors How is this research being applied in genetic engineering today? International Center for Leadership in Education Rock Around the Clock Main Idea Key Words and Meanings Important Points Ah-ha’s (Insights) Unanswered Questions International Center for Leadership in Education