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Inventions to Improve our Insides Overview: In this inquiry activity, students will explore the various organ systems in the human body and how they interact. Through student-created models and investigations on body systems, they will explore how lifestyle choices can affect the health of the organ system and overall health of the human body. Communication skills will be developed through a debate-style discussion on the most important organ system and written tasks following investigations of the circulatory, respiratory, and musculoskeletal systems. They will identify a system they wish to improve, and create and test an invention to improve one component of the system. They will showcase learning with the creation of a media campaign for their invention detailing how it will improve their overall health. Grade Level: 5 Strand and Topic: Understanding Life Systems: Human Organ Systems Inquiry Focus: Using what you know about how lifestyle choices affect your organ systems and overall health, create a marketing campaign for an invention which will help improve the health of one organ system. The time required depends on students’ background knowledge, skills set, level of interest, and any additional time required for completion of student work. Big Ideas: Organ structure is linked to its function Organ systems are part of a larger system, the human body, and the different systems interact to meet our basic needs Lifestyle choices affect organ systems and overall health Overall Expectations: Science and Technology 1. analyze the impact of human activities and technological innovations on human health; 2. investigate the structure and function of the major organs of various human body systems; 3. demonstrate an understanding of the structure and function of human body systems and interactions within and between systems. Health and Physical Education C2. demonstrate the ability to apply health knowledge and living skills to make reasoned decisions and take appropriate actions relating to their personal health and well-being C3. demonstrate the ability to make connections that relate to health and well-being,how their choices and behaviours affect both themselves and others, and how factors in the world around them affect their own and others’ health and well-being Specific Expectations: Science and Technology 1.1 assess the effects of social and environmental factors on human health, and propose ways in which individuals can reduce the harmful effects of these factors and take advantage of those that are beneficial 1.2 evaluate the effects, both beneficial and harmful, of various technologies on human body systems, taking different perspectives into account 2.1 follow established safety procedures for physical activities 2.2 use scientific inquiry/experimentation skills to investigate changes in body systems as a result of physical activity 2.3 design and build a model to demonstrate how organs or components of body systems in the human body work and interact with other components 2.4 use appropriate science and technology vocabulary, including circulation, respiration, digestion, organs, and nutrients, in oral and written communication 2.5 use a variety of forms to communicate with different audiences and for a variety of purposes 3.1 identify major systems in the human body (e.g., musculoskeletal system, digestive system, nervous system, circulatory system) and describe their roles and interrelationships 3.2 describe the basic structure and function of major organs in the respiratory, circulatory, and digestive systems 3.3 identify interrelationships between body systems (e.g., the respiratory system provides oxygen and removes carbon dioxide for the circulatory system) 3.4 identify common diseases and the organs and/or body systems that they affect (e.g., epilepsy affects the brain [central nervous system]; appendicitis affects the appendix [digestive system]; asthma and emphysema affect the lungs [respiratory system]) Mathematics - - demonstrate an understanding of simple multiplicative relationships involving whole-number rates, through investigation using concrete materials and drawings estimate, measure, and represent time intervals to the nearest second collect data by conducting a survey or an experiment to do with themselves, their environment, issues in their school or community, or content from another subject, and record observations or measurements collect and organize discrete or continuous primary data and secondary data and display the data in charts, tables, and graphs that have appropriate titles, labels, and scales that suit the range and distribution of the data using a variety of tools - read, interpret, and draw conclusions from primary data and from secondary data presented in charts, tables, and graphs Language: Oral Communication 1.4 demonstrate an understanding of the information and ideas in oral texts by summarizing important ideas and citing a variety of supporting details 1.6 extend understanding of oral texts by connecting the ideas in them to their own knowledge, experience, and insights; to other texts, including print and visual texts; and to the world around them 2.3 communicate orally in a clear, coherent manner, presenting ideas, opinions, and information in a readily understandable form Language: Media Literacy 3.2 identify an appropriate form to suit the specific purpose and audience for a media text they plan to create and explain why it is an appropriate choice 3.3 identify conventions and techniques appropriate to the form chosen for a media text they plan to create, and explain how they will use the conventions and techniques to help communicate their message 3.4 produce a variety of media texts for specific purposes and audiences, using appropriate forms, conventions, and techniques Health and Physical Education A1.3 identify factors that can either motivate or make it difficult for people to be physically active every day and describe ways of overcoming obstacles to staying active A2.2 identify the components of health-related fitness and the benefits associated with developing and maintaining each of them A2.3 assess a specific component of their health-related fitness by noting physical responses during various physical activities, and monitor changes over time C2.1 explain how to use nutrition facts tables and ingredient lists on food labels to make healthier personal food choices C3.1 identify ways of promoting healthier food choices in a variety of settings and situations The Arts: Drama and Dance 3.2 rehearse and perform small-group drama and dance presentations drawn from novels, poems, stories, plays, and other source materials 3.3 select words, visual images, and sounds from other subjects in the curriculum for interpretation and dramatization 4.5 solve problems in drama and dance individually and in groups and evaluate the solutions Social Studies A1.3 explain some of the ways in which interactions between and among First Nations and Europeans in New France are connected to issues in present-day Canada B2 use the social studies inquiry process to investigate Canadian social and/or environmental issues from various perspectives, including the perspective of the level (or levels) of government involved B3.7 describe some different ways in which citizens can take action to address social and environmental issues Key Concepts: Structure and function, energy and thermodynamics, system interactions and dependency, communicating to persuade Prior Skill Sets: - design of experiments use of inquiry tools: stopwatch/computer-based timer, ruler, sphygmomanometer (if used), stethoscope (if used) creation of graphs (using computer software or hand drawn) safe use of hand tools: mini glue gun, scissors, mini hacksaws, hand drills research skills - selecting the main idea from text, using non-text features of nonfiction material, interpreting graphs, summarizing investigations - Prior Knowledge: Science Grade 1 2.2 investigate and compare the basic needs of humans and other living things, including the need for air, water, food, warmth, and space, using a variety of methods and resources 2.5 investigate characteristics of parts of the human body, including the five sense organs, and explain how those characteristics help humans meet their needs and explore the world around them 3.3 identify the location and function of major parts of the human body, including sense organs Grade 4 3.3 identify factors (e.g., availability of water or food, amount of light, type of weather) that affect the ability of plants and animals to survive in a specific habitat Health and Physical Education Grade 1 A2.2 demonstrate an understanding of how being active helps them to be healthy A2.3 identify the physical signs of exertion during a variety of physical activities C1.1 explain why people need food to have healthy bodies C2.1 describe how the food groups in Canada’s Food Guide (i.e., vegetables and fruit, grain products, milk and alternatives, meat and alternatives) can be used to make healthy food choices C3.2 identify habits and behaviours (e.g., excessive screen time or video game usage, smoking) that can be detrimental to health, and explain how people can be encouraged to adopt healthier alternatives C2.2 demonstrate an understanding of how to make healthy food choices for meals and snacks, considering the factors they can and cannot control C3.2 describe methods that may be used instead of or in combination with medication to maintain good health and prevent or treat various health problems C1.1 demonstrate an understanding of how the origins of food (e.g., where the food is grown, how it is made) affect its nutritional value and environmental impact Grade 4 A2.3 assess their level of exertion during physical activity, using simple self-assessment techniques C1.1 identify the key nutrients (e.g., fat, carbohydrates, protein, vitamins, minerals) provided by foods and beverages, and describe their importance for growth, health, learning, and physical performance Materials and Equipment: projector and internet access Guiness World Record Books Canada’s Food Guide (available online here: http://www.hc-sc.gc.ca/fn-an/food-guidealiment/index-eng.php ) stopwatches or computer-based timers Model Making Equipment popsicles sticks basswood (jinx wood) dowels, brass fasteners card stock clay or plasticine glue Tools rulers junior hacksaws miter boxes c-clamps hand drills string safety glasses- Information on safe use of tools can be found on pages 64-68 of the STAO Safety resource http://stao.ca/res2/unifElemSafety/ Safety: Please consult the STAO Resource: Safety in Elementary Science and Technology http://stao.ca/res2/unifElemSafety/ Instructional Planning and Delivery: Engage -> Explore -> Explain -> Extend -> Evaluate Type Structured or Directed Guided Coupled Open or Full Participant Teacher Initiated and Performed Teacher Initiated, Students Performed Teacher Initiated Student Initiated Teacher Directed Student Directed Path to Inquiry Engage (I SEE) Activity 1 Ideas for a gathering interest: High technology: Play a short clip of https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=FPbz5TDy6fs (Alone in the Wild) which shows a man struggling to survive in the Canadian wilderness. Lower technology: Read the first chapter of the novel, Hatchet (Gary Paulson http://scotland.k12.mo.us/view/637.pdf ) which talks about a pilot of a prop plane having a heart attack while flying over Northern Ontario and crashing into a lake. Get outside: Take a walk to a woodlot or other naturalized space. For tips on outdoor learning, please consult the STAO resource, “Connecting with the Natural World” http://stao.ca/cms/gr4-5-6-environmental-ed/1062-general-overview Talk the students through a scenario in which they have arrived in this space and there are no buildings, roads, stores, or other civilized structures. What needs would you have? Look and listen. What ways might you have to meet these needs? What would you need to stay healthy? As a class, begin a discussion on survival and the human body. What is needed to survive? What does your body need you to give it? What does your body use up? What might happen if needs are not met? Begin a brainstorm list on the whiteboard (or on the blacktop with chalk. )Take a picture of it and save it for later. In groups, have students decide on what is necessary for a healthy body. Once they have decided on necessities, lead a discussion about the lists and guide it into healthy living choices: clean air, water, food low in sugar, salt, and fats, exercise. They may remember from previous years the macronutrients, carbohydrates, protein, fat, vitamins, and minerals. Leave the lists up for the inquiry questions next class. Activity 2 Teacher Tip: the previous activity was to retrieve previous knowledge. Today’s work will be new to the students. It may be helpful to have vocabulary words ready for the word wall which can be defined by students and posted on the bulletin board as they are discussed. Vocabulary: organ, organ system, heart, circulation, blood, lymph node, lymphatic system, spleen, respiration, oxygen, carbon dioxide, glucose, lungs, trachea, alveoli, bronchi, stomach, liver, gallbladder, small intestine, large intestine, pancreas, colon, spinal cord, neuron, dendrite, bladder, kidneys, skeleton, bone marrow, endocrine system, enzyme Teacher Tip: this unit works well if your school has “Science buddies”. The grade eight students also have a human body systems unit which builds on the grade five concepts. Movie hooks: Osmosis Jones (preview: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=tbKlcoss6LA) Introduce the activity today by watching a video about organ systems. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=nnjmrrQ6xOs is a nice one, but there is a longer, more academic video here: http://accesslearning.com/videodetail.cfm?asset_guid=820B3E5A-9EA2-4738-8569DE406EDA2278 In a knowledge circle, ask the students to discuss what they know already. Use hand gestures to mine some of the process as they go and have the students mirror you. As points are raised, ask the student to write or draw what they know already with their initials on separate post-it notes (or use “good on one side” (GOOS) paper split into quarters). Organize the post-its in organ system groupings for now. One of the ways to do this would be to use a chart or to project a picture of yourself from the thighs up and trace it with a marker onto chart paper or the white board (Sharpie brand pens can be removed from the white board by drawing over it with a white board marker and then using a dry eraser). Provide a space for students to write down questions they have over the next few days. Questions with answers that would fit on the post-it note can be given to students who have finished work early. Questions with longer, research, design, or experiment based answers can be added to the questions in the next phase of the unit. Visual aid: inner body http://www.innerbody.com/ Activity 3 Relate the organ systems together through group dramatization. Use your hands and arms to help describe the process of respiration. Be overly dramatic with your voice and have the students mirror hand gestures. For example: “Oxygen is in the air all around us.” (Pretend to be grabbing invisible balls of oxygen around your head.) “When your blood is LOW in oxygen..” (deep voice and slower. Position your hands in the shape of an upside down “v” and move them downwards from shoulder level to diaphragm.) “your diaphragm contracts,”(flatten the “v” your hands are making until both hands are horizontal), “your lungs expand..”(stretch your arms wide) “and air enters your lungs”(bring your arms to the centre of your body, interlace your fingers, and bend your elbows so your fingers go towards your mouth) “through your trachea” (separate your fingers and move both hands down your throat) “and your bronchi.” (part your hands and move them across the top of your chest towards your shoulders) “The oxygen in the air….” (pretend to be grabbing oxygen molecules again) “goes to your blood cells and all around your body.” (make wide circles with your hands) “The oxygen is used to make carbon dioxide which comes back to your lungs,” (At the end of this sentence, one of the wide circles you are making with your hands ends at the top of your chest. Flatten your hands and push them to the diaphragm area again.) “your diaphragm relaxes,”(turn the flattened hands into an upside down “v”) “your lungs contract,”(push your hands together near the centre of your chest) “and the air moves out of your lungs”(move hands upward) “through your bronchi and trachea”(both hands move up your throat) “and out your mouth or nose.” (blow on your hands) Students may want to act this out a few times (in my experience, students tend to want to put a tune to the words or march as well. The term “focused movement” (as opposed to “silly movement”) is what you’re aiming for. Working in groups and using text-based resources, text printed from the websites below, or videos, students prepare a similar story for the circulatory or digestive system. Posting the summarized steps on chart paper or adding it to the body outline on the whiteboard will help visual learners remember the steps and provide anchor charts for later inquiry. Digestive: http://healthyeating.sfgate.com/tracing-digestion-cookie-6170.html https://prezi.com/qkccx9bd1ro8/the-digestive-system-a-graham-crackers-journey/ http://oklahoma4h.okstate.edu/health/digest.pdf (first two pages) Circulatory: http://www.storyjumper.com/book/index/10123642/The-Circulatory-System-#page/11 http://kidshealth.org/PageManager.jsp?dn=KidsHealth&lic=1&ps=307&cat_id=20607&article_set=5403 6 http://discoverykids.com/articles/your-cardiovascular-system/ Respiratory/circulatory linked: http://www.booksie.com/non-fiction/short_story/chrispai/life-as-an-oxygen-molecule Circulatory/digestive linked: https://prezi.com/b4ugwryllkyy/a-story-of-a-red-blood-cell/ Present the dramatizations and use big hand/arm gestures. Activating the motor cortex (the part of the brain involved with movement) has been shown to help memory. First Nations Link: Elder-directed, outside learning If your school has a connection to a local Knowledge Keeper or Elder, consider inviting him/her to bring the students on a walk through a woodlot to look at natural medicines which can control blood pressure, skin health, arthritis, and other body ailments. As parts of the body are mentioned, have students touch or gesture toward that part of the body. Be sure to give thanks to the elder or Knowledge Keeper for their time. First Nations Link: Teacher-directed, indoor learning Use the story found on page ten of http://www.umanitoba.ca/outreach/crystal/YukonResources/Human%20Body%20Systems%20for%20St udents.pdf in which an elder discusses diseases which were not prevalent during her childhood. On page 11 of the document, there is a human body outline for students to diagram which body systems or organs are mentioned. Community Link: Grocery store trip The meat department or local butcher can be a catalyst for inquiry questions. Internal organs, such as liver and heart, as well as skeletal elements, such as pigs’ feet, can help give a better impression of the size and scale of the parts of the body. How heavy is a liver? How many different parts of the animal are used? How much bigger is a cow heart compared to a pig heart? Pig hearts, in particular, are valued for a potential future use as human transplants and the valves in pig hearts, as well as the insulin potential of pig pancreases, have already been used in medicine. Note: keep the culture of the students in mind. You may need to select a Halal or Kosher grocery store to respect the faith-based needs of the students. Questioning (I WONDER) The overall design task is to create a media campaign for an invention which would make an organ system healthier. Before we tackle that, we need to know a bit more about a healthy organ system. Using a placemat brainstorming sheet, ask students to think of questions to answer in this unit. The focus is on rich questions. The definition of a “rich” question may change depending on the students’ experience with inquiry. As a start, we define rich questions as questions which will require combining information from more than one source and which help us to understand the topic. Teacher-led Student-led How is heart rate and respiration affected by activity? How does our body use the food we eat? How do the heart and lungs work together? What happens to our bodies when we eat a diet high in fat and sugar? What are the parts of Canada’s food guide? How does Canada’s food guide support different cultures and dietary restrictions? How could we model organ systems and how they relate to each other? How does diabetes affect how the body works? How does asthma affect how the body works? How does cholesterol affect the body? How are vitamins and minerals used by the body? How does the brain control organ systems? How does air pollution or smog affect respiration? How does fast food affect your body? What is the effect of caffeine on your body? How does my heart rate change during my daily activities? What are the effects of processed foods on our bodies? How could we make it easier to eat a healthy diet? How much exercise do we need to stay healthy? What kinds of exercise do we need? How big are the different organs? How heavy are the different organs? How long does it take before food is totally digested? Is a multivitamin needed? Explore / Inquiry activity: (I DO) Inquiry Design Activity, Part One - Modelling an Organ System Hook: How long is the average digestive system? Using coloured string or yarn, have students contribute to the body outline. 1. Mark off 7 cm of string to represent the mouth. 2. Add 25 cm for the esophagus. 3. Add 15 cm for the stomach. 4. Add 5.5 m for the small intestine. (Look on the label of a ball of wool...most are about 5 metres.) 5. Add 1.5 m more for the large intestine. How long is your teacher’s digestive system? (from http://oklahoma4h.okstate.edu/health/digest.pdf) Option 1 Use large chart paper, mural paper, or permanent marker on the whiteboard to make an outline of a classmate. Students use class resources and work in groups of three or four to create models of the organs in a system and attach them to the model. Use coloured chips to show inputs, change, and waste (outputs) in the system. An example of the circulatory system can be found here: (http://www.msichicago.org/online-science/activities/activity-detail/activities/what-goes-aroundcomes-around-1/) Option 2 Working in partners or small groups, students use card stock to create a popup story for one of these scenarios: Outline the path a molecule in food, such as a sugar molecule in a carrot, will take through a body and the organs it will encounter along the way. How long will the journey take? What happens to the rest of the food? Why do we need to eat diets low in saturated fat? What happens to our body when we eat too much saturated fat? Why is some fat good to eat? How is fat in food digested? What would a virus’ or bacteria’s story be like once it enters the body? What other bacteria are normally residents of our body’s systems? How would our immune system find it, identify it, and attack it? How would the other body systems, such as the lymphatic system and the circulatory system, react? Option 3 Students are asked to make a model of an organ system using plasticine, cardboard, or air-dry clay inside a shoebox, basswood frame, or 2L soda bottle. The scale of the system will be challenging as students will need to use a ratio to get all the organs to fit the container. Provide an example of the math involved and calculators to help with the multiplication. Students use the Technological Design Process (p.13-15, Ontario Curriculum Science and Technology 2007 document) to choose and draw in their lab book their first original design. As they create their model, they should document any challenges and make adjustments to their design. Once the model has been prepared, they are to add labels showing the major parts, discussing the stages of the system as well as diseases that could affect the organs involved. To make the model interactive, they could use pop-up tabs for the labels which make use of levers or electrical circuits which light up sections along the path to highlight key sections. Teacher Tip: have a display with pop-up book mechanisms mounted on coroplast for the students to reference. Possibilities include using a tab to lift a flap, raise a sign (or lift the front off the stomach to look inside), or rotate an arrow. Experimental Inquiry Activity Teacher Tip: This is also part of the Health and Physical Education Curriculum so use the gymnasium space for added safety and a larger variety of equipment. Use an experiment to test how the circulatory, musculoskeletal, respiratory, or nervous system react to exercise or food. Option 1 Circulatory/nervous/respiratory systems Have students record their partner’s pulse, breaths per minute, or reaction time before exercise and record it on the class chart. (For reaction time, hold a ruler above a student’s hand with the 0 cm mark lined up with the top of the student’s index finger. The student catches the ruler between the thumb and index finger when the ruler is dropped. Record the number of centimetres showing above the index finger. Take the lowest measurement after three trials.) Complete a standard exercise such as one minute of jumping jacks, and repeat the measurement. Record values on a class chart. Rest until the heart rate has slowed down to resting rate. Complete five minutes of a standard exercise and repeat the measurement. Record the value on a class chart. Muscular/skeletal: Set up stations exploring different muscle groups. Instructions can be found on pages 42-44 of http://www.umanitoba.ca/outreach/crystal/YukonResources/Human%20Body%20Systems%20f or%20Students.pdf Option 2 Teacher asks the questions and the class designs the experiments together based on their interest. Guiding questions: Which system would you like to test? What activities are possible and safe to do in this space? How could we measure the system quantitatively? How could we measure the system qualitatively? What do you anticipate will happen? How can we make the test fair? Examples of Experiments How does activity affect pulse? How does activity affect rate of respiration? How does food intake affect endurance? How does stretching affect endurance/pulse? How does general activity level (involvement in sport teams, daily exercises programs) affect pulse/respiration rate? Option 3 Student-led. The students are given the question, “How could you test the effect of exercise or food intake on your circulatory, respiratory, or nervous system?“, plus a list of available supplies, location, and time limit. Students use scrap paper to note which research topic they would like to join and a general outline of the procedure they wish to undertake. They submit their papers to the teacher. The teacher, acting as research coordinator, approves experiments and places students into teams. Each research team meets to determine the procedure and which variables will be controlled. Experiment procedures are written on chart paper and posted. The teacher then approves the experiment design and data recording chart so that the experiment can begin. Provide an open area for those students choosing the exercise option. Those students choosing the food intake option may need to conduct their experiment during or following a nutrition break and can act as test subjects for the other experiments. Students then conduct the research and present their findings. Note: Of the two choices, exercise is the easiest to measure when observing the effects on the system. As you would expect, cardiovascular exercise increases pulse and respiration rate and occasionally increases reaction time depending on the number of repetitions of an event. The increase in rate is less marked in those students who are generally more fit. Eating generally increases heart rate as digestion increases the energy needed by the system. The increase in rate can depend on the type of food consumed, the size of the meal, and the time since eating. As circulation is linked to digestion, some students may also experience a need to breathe deeper or refrain from exercise following a meal. A layman explanation can be found here: http://www.livestrong.com/article/504064-will-your-pulse-go-up-after-eating/ After some time, unless the student has eaten a large meal, the nervous system will take over and the breathing and pulse rate will return to normal. Inquiry Design Activity, Part Two - An Invention to Improve our Insides Option 1: Teacher-Directed, Low Technology Students are given either diabetes or heart disease and research risk factors, and current treatment options. Using the body models already created, they create an infomercial aimed at educating 8-10 year olds on how the disease works and how to prevent it using lifestyle choices. Option 2: Teacher-Directed, Medium Technology Students choose from a list of inquiry questions and create a product which would aid in prevention of the disease or in treatment of the symptoms. The invention could be a product, such as the bungeecord desk exerciser, Bouncy Bands (https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=EEK7Sj0IoRc), or a program such as “Chew or Die” (https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=euDtDPGpH2o#t=45). They will then create a commercial showing the benefits of the product they designed. Possible questions: How can Type 2 diabetes be prevented? What are the causes of heart disease? How does the allergic response work for students allergic to grass pollen? How can we promote a healthier diet for low income families? What affect does daily activity have on our organ systems? How do cultural diets match Canada’s Food Guide? Option 3: Student-Directed, Medium/High Technology Students create inquiry questions around the topic of “Inventions to improve our insides” to inquire about inventions which already exist or design an invention of their own. As with any open-ended inquiry, the procedure will depend on the skill level of the student and the question explored. Revisit the overall expectation: create a media campaign for an invention which would make an organ system healthier. Students will select a disease, disability, or healthy living objective to focus the inquiry. Following a period of research, students use the Technological Design Process (p.13-15, Curriculum document) to choose and draw in their lab books their first original design or to replicate a model of an existing design. They may create a physical model or computerized simulation using a program such as www.tinkercad.com. Provide time for model construction and testing. As part of the design process, students document the progress in their lab notebooks, blogs, or video diaries including a reflection on how the design could be improved. Note: This would be a good option to use a Pecha Kucha presentation style. Presentations in this style use a picture-based slide series which automatically advances every twenty seconds. Information on this type of presentation can be found here: http://www.pechakucha.org/faq . Explain From their experiences, students explain their observations about organ systems. The knowledge can be collaboratively built using a knowledge circle, or an online forum, class-wiki, collaborative website, or on chart paper in the classroom. Special attention can be given to different learning styles, as different concepts can be recorded orally and uploaded to a site, video recorded for kinesthetic demonstrations, or drawn by students. Student Support Resources: Scholastic Scavenger Hunt: Go to each website, read about a different organ system, and use information on the website to solve a math question about the human body: http://teacher.scholastic.com/mathhunt/PlayGame.asp# Skype in the classroom lesson: Skype is a free program which allows students to communicate with other classrooms and with experts for free. The link below is to a High School Biology classroom with students who wish to teach organ systems to junior level students. https://education.skype.com/projects/4112-over-the-back-fenceweekly-health-and-safety-lessonstaught-by-high-school-students-skyped-to-your-classroom Game for creating organ systems which work together: https://www.brainpop.com/games/gutsandbolts/ Code Fred: survival mode (body system game): http://www.msichicago.org/online-science/games-andapps/code-fred/activities/code-fred-survival-mode/ Video on human organ systems: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=nnjmrrQ6xOs Animated gif of different respiratory systems: http://tabletopwhale.com/img/posts/10-24-14.gif X-rays of moving joints: http://weissortho.com/content/x-ray-gifs/ MRI of a beating heart: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=G4dFVeP9Vdo&app=desktop Viral attack: comic about the immune system: https://askabiologist.asu.edu/sites/default/files/resources/activities/body_depot/viral_attack/viral_atta ck.pdf Circulatory system photos and facts: http://www.myscience8.com/human_biology/circulatory_system_lab.pdf Computer simulation of the heart: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=2LPboySOSvo What happens during a heart attack: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=H_VsHmoRQKk Daily Planet in the classroom: video showing answers to body questions such as “Why are yawns contagious?” http://accesslearning.com/videodetail.cfm?asset_guid=F663E26F-F3DD-419F-BED513A585DA2BA8 and http://accesslearning.com/videodetail.cfm?asset_guid=BEDB7DA2-1F8B-40918C72-41D5A9CF6412 Brain Pop – Health < Body Systems Video: http://www.brainpop.com/health/bodysystems/ Brain Pop – Heath < Fitness: http://www.brainpop.com/health/personalhealth/fitness/preview.weml Brain Pop – Health < Nutrition: http://www.brainpop.com/health/nutrition/nutrition/ Kids Health: http://kidshealth.org/kid/ Freezeray.com: http://www.freezeray.com/biology.htm Get Body Smart: http://www.getbodysmart.com/ National Geographic video on the digestive system: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=_QYwscALNng Health Canada: Make Your Own Food Guide: http://www.hc-sc.gc.ca/fn-an/food-guidealiment/myguide-monguide/index-eng.php Nutrition Café: http://exhibits.pacsci.org/nutrition/nutrition_cafe.html World Book On-line: http://www.worldbookonline.com/wbdiscover/home?subacct=CD27621 Body Break: http://www.bodybreak.com/ Body Break Video Index: http://www.bodybreak.com/News_BookHal_Video_Index.php Diabetes made simple: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=MGL6km1NBWE Preventing prediabetes in children: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=LTmJ0hGohBQ All Systems are Go!: http://www.sciencenetlinks.com/interactives/systems.html Prezi about the respiratory system (and a song about respiration): https://prezi.com/9uqpc_zz4x1l/oxythe-oxygen-molecules-journey-through-the-respiratory-system/ Would you eat that? (a game about additives in processed food): http://www.msichicago.org/whatshere/exhibits/you/the-exhibit/your-appetite/would-you-eat-that/game/ Keeping Healthy (mainly food, but also oral health and exercise): http://www.theschoolrun.com/homework-help/keeping-healthy NASA experiments on the human body in space: http://www.nasa.gov/exploration/humanresearch/areas_study/physiology/#.VZxWG1dgJ8E Canadian Space Agency: living in space: http://www.asc-csa.gc.ca/eng/astronauts/living.asp Related Background Resources and/or Links: OPHEA for teachers as resources for health aspects: http://ophea.net Growing Healthier & Stronger Together: http://www.ophea.net/article/growing-healthier-strongertogether#.Vav5_PnN5kk OPHEA’s Provincial Healthy Schools Initiative: https://www.ophea.net/healthy-schoolscommunities/ophea%E2%80%99s-provincial-healthy-schools-initiative Extend / Redesign Option 1: Native Perspective Explore the challenges facing First Nations, Inuit, and Metis populations as they relate to maintaining a healthy lifestyle with high food prices, hunting restrictions, and native foods and medicines. The students have a real interest in learning about this important sector of the population, and pictures of high food prices in Nunavut or the prevalence of diabetes in native populations can make a link to the Social Studies curriculum as well. http://www.umanitoba.ca/outreach/crystal/YukonResources/Human%20Body%20Systems%20for%20St udents.pdf (Narratives given by representative Elders begin on page ten.) Diabetes in native populations: http://guidelines.diabetes.ca/browse/chapter38 First Nations, Inuit, and Metis Food Guide: http://www.hc-sc.gc.ca/fn-an/food-guide-aliment/fnimpnim/index-eng.php First Nations Health Authority: http://www.fnha.ca/wellness Option 2: Healthy Living and Ecology Explore the amount of garbage created by a diet which contains a large amount of processed food. How does the choice to play a game of soccer at recess rather than play a video game show both environmental stewardship and healthy living? How does choosing natural remedies, such as fresh air, exercise, or rest, instead of medicines, such as pain relievers, help both your body systems and the environment? As a class, explore the link to environmental stewardship by promoting lunches containing natural, fresh foods and activities which get them outside rather than behind a screen. Challenge the class to a few days without power and have them design healthy ways to spend leisure time. Community perspectives to extend or support learning: Doctors or nurses to demonstrate the use of medical measuring devices such as sphygmometers Dentists or dental hygienists to talk about how gum/teeth health can be an indication of other diseases Public health departments often have resources for classroom use Skype in education has many experts who will virtually visit your classroom for free to answer questions. Experts change seasonally. In winter 2015, there was an arctic explorer talking about nutritional needs and cardiovascular training for the high arctic as well as a biometric lab talking to students about 3D organs. Check out https://education.skype.com to search. The Canadian Space Agency will book Skype calls to classrooms during which astronauts will discuss how the human body reacts to space travel http://www.asccsa.gc.ca/eng/astronauts/speaker.asp Evaluate (I REMEMBER) Students present their personal inquiries and media productions promoting healthy living. Things to look for in assessment pieces: can the student use the vocabulary appropriately? does the technological-design process show signs that new knowledge was used to improve on the design? can the student explain how the design will improve the health of the user? can the student identify the parts of the organ system and how they relate to the overall health of the body? Possibilities for Assessment As/For/Of Learning: Assessment As Learning: Use anecdotals during knowledge circle to find common misconceptions and frame inquiries during the “I Explore” phase to dispel the misconceptions and build new understandings. Common misconceptions include: exercise makes energy, sugar is the only way to eat “calories”, only older people get diabetes or cancer, and one has to eat meat at every meal. Young people generally have a feeling of immortality, yet grade five is often the time when grandparents become frailer with health complications. The discussions around health issues need to be flexible to the understandings and anxieties of the students as many have family health issues which can get uncovered during conversations. Take the time to review tool safety and proper measurement before the inquiry part of the process. A quick safety assessment at the beginning is a good review and often a confidence builder for junior scientists. Assessment For Learning: Exit passes, lab notes, graffiti wall, and daily physical quizzes Examples of daily physical quizzes: True/False run: have one side of the class be “true”, the other be “false”. Call out statements; students walk quickly to the correct side. Quick spell: ask a question with a one-word answer. Students mime jumping rope as they spell the answer. I have/who has Matchup: have students create a set of flashcards with vocabulary words and a definition of a different vocabulary word on each, similar to dominoes in that (when matched up correctly) the definitions and vocabulary will make a continuous chain. Give each student a card. Start with “start” and ask the student holding that card to stand up and read the card (for example, “ I have start. Who has the organ which pumps blood?”). The student who has the next card in the chain stands up and reads their card (“ I have “heart”. Who has the organ which absorbs water from digested food?”) and so on. Assessment Of Learning: Use Co-created success criteria to assess student projects. Consider inviting community members, parents, or other grades to see the final projects. A mailbox for each student will provide a way for the students to get supportive feedback on their learning. Sample assessment tool: expectation-based feedback form. The expectations would be selected by the class, with the exception of the last row which is completed by the student to reflect his/her personal inquiry. Once the student has selected the expectation and filled in the mastery criteria, the teacher initials the box to state it has been approved (and hasn’t already been mastered on a previous assignment.) Once the final inquiry project has been showcased, the teacher writes positive feedback in the “working at it” or “mastered” columns for each expectation. The student and/or the teacher add comments to the extensions/next steps. This last column allows for reflection on learning, connecting science concepts to other subjects, and an overall expectation that learning is continuous. Expectation Working at It Mastered I can identify major systems in the human body (highlight the systems explained) musculoskeletal system, digestive system, nervous system, circulatory system Parts are correctly communicated Size, shape, location, and function are accurately discussed I can describe the tasks the body systems perform and how the systems are related to each other Connection between different organ systems are correctly discussed The function of all organs/parts are described in order from input through output There is a clear link shown between the main body system explored and other minor body systems I can identify common diseases and the organs and/or body systems that they affect (list the disease(s) below) Organs affected by at least one short term and one long term disease are discussed Symptoms and treatment (if available) Extensions/Next Steps are explored Tips to avoid and/or manage the long term disease are listed Inquiry specific expectation How will you show mastery? Teacher initials: ______ Technology Possibilities use of traditional woodworking equipment, e.g., handsaws, drills, screws, wood glue 3D modelling software, e.g., 123D Design for iPad, www.tinkercad.com for PC creation of an online game with software such as flowlab.io use of pneumatics to create moving models 3D printing PowerPoint and other presentation tools