Lesson Objective: Scholars begin to make sense of their prior knowledge on adaptations as they think about why organisms and/or populations look different from each other and over time within the lens of how humans might change over time to have superpowers. They are introduced to the term evolution and begin to think of questions that might help them understand the evidence needed to answer the Essential Question.
Materials Needed
Prep
What are scholars doing in this lesson?
Do Now
Launch
Activity
Discourse Debrief activity:
Make broader connections:
[Tip: Provide a vocabulary wall or a “parking lot” for questions so scholars can visually track their learning along the way.]
Introduce the Essential Question:
[Engagement Tip: If scholars ask questions that are not going to be answered in this unit, answer them to keep engagement high. If you know the answer to their question will be answered, will give something away, or will need the context of something that will be learned later, tell scholars to add that question to the “parking lot” and when they will get to come back to it to keep them intrigued.]
Accountability (Classwork)
Scoring Award points as follows:
Lesson Objective: Scholars learn how the fossil record can help scientists understand how species and environments have changed over time and when certain species became extinct. However, although the fossil record provides a compelling record of the past, scholars also begin to understand that it is an incomplete record, which they are unable to explain how until later lessons. Scholars question how useful the fossil record is as evidence toward the Essential Question.
Materials Needed
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[Engagement Tip: History teachers are simultaneously teaching content about historical artifacts consider cross-curricular collaborations!]
What are scholars doing in this lesson?
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Activity Adapted from The Great Fossil Findby Steve Randak and Michael Kimmel, © 1999 ENSI (Evolution & the Nature of Science Institutes)
[Materials Management Tip: Instruct scholars to unearth the “fossils” gently, as they are fragile!]
Discourse Debrief activity:
Make connections to the Essential Question:
Accountability (Lab Notebook)
1.State one conclusion that many scientists have made about Earth’s past by studying fossils. [1]
Possible Exemplars:
One conclusion scientists have drawn about Earth’s past by studying fossils is that many organisms that lived on Earth in the past are now extinct.
Scientists can conclude that the Earth’s environment might have changed from the past to now based on the types of fossils found there.
2. Identify one limitation of using fossil evidence to understand evolution. [1]
One limitation of using fossil evidence is that it usually is incomplete. Sometimes it is difficult or impossible to retrieve all fossils for a specific organism, producing an incomplete picture.
Scoring Award points as follows:
Note: This Exit Ticket is not representative of the ideas that will be assessed on the exam but it is a good model of the highlighted unit Science and Engineering Practices. Teachers should use this Exit Ticket to hold scholars accountable for constructing a strong claim based on the information they learned in class.
Do Now
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Activity Adapted from HASPI Medical Earth Science Core Labs, Lab 02: Geological Time, the Fossil Record, & Health. Revised June 2015
Discourse Debrief activity:
Make connections to the Essential Question:
Accountability (Exit Ticket) Many people enjoy eating a cool and refreshing dessert in the summer called the “crown jewel layer cake.” It is made by creating several layers of cake with different types of Jell-O inside.
1.How is the crown jewel layer cake similar to the fossil evidence analyzed by scientists to understand evolution? Explain by describing the two similarities between the cake and fossil evidence. [2]
Both the Earth and the crown jewel cake are composed of multiple layers. Additionally, certain types of Jell-O are only found in certain layers (it almost looks like the blue Jell-O went extinct!), and certain organisms are only found in certain layers of rock beneath the Earth’s surface.
2. After studying the picture of the crown jewel layer cake above, evaluate the following statement:
“If the Jell-O cubes represent fossils, then the blue Jell-O cubes were added to the cake after the orange Jell-O cubes because of their placement in the cake.”
Lilly and her friends were digging a hole at the park near her house when they came upon a fossil. After some research, Lilly discovered that it was a fossilized fern commonly found in the desert several hundred thousand years ago. Later Lilly learned that several fossilized fish were found buried underground at a nearby construction site. The fossils were estimated to be about 20 million years old and were intact (whole not broken into pieces).
3. Based on this fossil evidence, how could the environment in Lilly’s neighborhood have changed over time? [1]
Scoring Award points as follows:
Lesson Objective: Scholars have their first chance to define natural selection by studying and coming up with their own definitions of Lamarckian and Darwinian theories. Scholars must be able to define the four factors of natural selection (variation, overpopulation, competition, and selection) before moving on. Scholars begin to understand the Essential Question on a higher level by understanding these theories but may not yet connect them to evidence raised in the Engage.
Materials Needed
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[Extension Tip: If time allows, engage scholars in a discussion about more current political debates involving the Flat Earth Society, and be sure to relate back to the purpose of this unit through the lens of argumentation and/or how historical views help us shape our present-day scientific debates.]
Activity
Discourse Debrief activity:
[Tip Teacher Misconception: Although you should address the phrase, avoid habitually referring to Darwin’s theory as “survival of the fittest,” because it reinforces the anthropomorphic desire of the individual to want to change and strive to be better suited to its environment. You should still teach the words fit and fitness to describe an organism’s ability to survive and reproduce.]
Make broader connections:
Accountability (Exit Ticket)
1.Below are examples of the four factors that contribute to Darwin’s theory of evolution by natural selection. Match the letter of the term with the correct example. [2]
Overpopulation ___C___
Competition ___B___
Variation ___A___
Selection ___D___
2. Ancestors of the lizard population all had short legs. Use Darwin’s theory of natural selection to explain how the legs of lizards could have become longer over many generations. [2]
The lizard population must have had a mutation or natural variation that provided some lizards with longer legs. These long-legged lizards could have survived longer because they were able to run faster from predators. As the long-legged lizards reproduced and continued to survive because of their advantages in the environment, the population of long-legged lizards increased over time.
3. Evaluate the following statement:
“Only groups of organisms evolve; individuals never evolve.”
Scoring Award points as follows:
2. Award one point for each of the following:
3. Award one point for selecting answer A.
Lesson Objective: Scholars explain the role of the environment in creating competition in Darwinian evolution. Scholars also understand the concept of fitness and how heritable differences in fitness result in natural selection over generations. They recognize how adaptations and a changing environment play a role in the evidence towards the Essential Question.
Materials Needed
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Experiment Adapted from Seimens STEM Day Activity: Birds of a Feather
Discourse Debrief experiment:
Make connections to the Essential Question:
Accountability (Exit Ticket) Infections caused by bacteria are often treated by medications called antibiotics. Antibiotics are designed to kill bacteria so they cannot reproduce, ending the infection and healing the sick person.
Due to natural variation in bacteria populations, some bacteria have a mutation that makes them resistant to antibiotics. This means that antibiotics often do not kill them, and they can go on to reproduce. An example of this is shown below.
1.After the antibiotic was applied, were the bacteria represented by the purple or orange symbols most fit? Explain your response using evidence from the diagram. [2]
The bacteria represented by the orange symbols were most fit because they were able to survive at higher rates after the antibiotic was applied. In the diagrams, you can see that although most of the purple bacteria died, the orange ones were able to survive and continue to reproduce because they were resistant to the medication.
2. Would it be accurate to say that the bacteria evolved because they wanted to survive? Why or why not? [2]
It would be inaccurate because the bacteria population is not changing because of a desire to change. Individual bacteria are reproducing as they normally would, but those with favorable traits are surviving longer and therefore are able to reproduce more and pass their traits along to more offspring.
Scoring Award points as follows:
1.Award one point for each of the following:
2. Award one point for each of the following:
Lesson Objective: Scholars revisit how variation in organisms results from a combination of sexual reproduction and genetic mutations in order to understand how variation acts as a factor on natural selection. With a deeper understanding of variation, scholars have stronger evidence for the Essential Question because sexual reproduction and genetic mutations are constantly recurring yet somewhat unpredictable processes.
Materials Needed
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Activity Adapted from Natural Selection by PhET Interactive Simulations, University of Colorado Boulder
Discourse Debrief activity:
Make broader connections:
Make connections to the Essential Question:
Accountability (Exit Ticket) Eyes are complex structures with multiple parts that work together so we can see the world around us. Octopus eyes have:
In a population of octopuses, most of the octopuses have the genotype (ii), which results in a lens that produces fuzzy images. A few of the octopuses have a new allele (I) that results in a better lens that produces sharper, clearer images. (Assume that the I allele is dominant relative to the i allele.) A scientist who observed this predicted:
“The new allele (I) will become more common in this octopus population over many future generations.”
1.Evaluate the accuracy of the scientists’ statement. Use your knowledge of variation and natural selection to support your response. [3]
This statement is accurate because the new allele will become more common over time in the octopus population. The new allele will help the octopuses born with it survive in their environment. Better eyesight will likely allow them to catch more food and avoid predators, and in turn, they will live longer and reproduce more. As more and more offspring carry the trait, they will beat out those without it as they compete for resources, gradually changing the makeup of the larger population.
Scoring Award points as follows:
1. Award one point for each of the following:
Lesson Objective: Scholars learn that throughout time, most organisms experience speciation, which creates the diversity we see in the tree of life today. They will understand how scientists organize information about lines of evolutionary descent using a phylogenetic tree and how extinctions throughout time can help scientists understand the evolution of organisms.
Materials Needed
Prep
[Tip: Consider reinforcing concepts from all Explore lessons by using this HHMI biointeractive on a real- life example of natural selection and speciation with lizards in the Caribbean.]
What are scholars doing in this lesson?
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Activity Originally developed by Mike Webster, Mike Alfaro, and Louise Meed; it was modified with permission by the Concord Consortium.
Discourse Debrief activity:
Make broader connections:
[Tip: To better understand how a new species forms, consider showing the Formation of New Species by Speciation video from FuseSchool.]
[Tip: Show scholars this HHMI biointeractive to learn more about what caused these extinctions to occur in history and what scientists predict might cause the next extinction!]
[Tip: Avoid the common misconception that humans are the natural culmination of evolution.]
Extend
Accountability (Exit Ticket) The table below shows three traits that are present in three related tree species.
Table 1: Comparison of Three Traits in Trees
Tree Species | Bark Texture | Leaf Type | Root Depth |
---|---|---|---|
Species A |
Smooth |
Compound |
Shallow |
Species B |
Furrowed |
Simple |
Moderately deep |
Species C |
Smooth |
Compound |
Shallow |
The phylogenetic tree diagrams below show two possible evolutionary relationships between the three species.
Question and figures adapted from the New York State Education Department. Science Regents Examinations: Living Environment, August 2016. https://www.nysedregents.org/livingenvironment
1.Which phylogenetic tree diagram shows the most probable evolutionary relationship between the three species? Use evidence from the data table and your knowledge of science to support your response. [3]
Tree 2 shows the most probable evolutionary relationship between the three species. In Table 1, Species A and C have the same traits for bark texture, leaf type, and root depth, whereas Species B has different traits. Because Species A and C are more similar, they must be more closely related than Species B, which Tree 2 shows.
2. On the Tree 1 diagram above, label the part of the phylogenetic tree that represents a common ancestor between all species (A, B, and C) with a ★. [1]
3. Evaluate the scientific accuracy of each statement by circling true or false. If the statement is false, rewrite it on the lines below to make it true. [2]
1.Natural selection causes evolution by changing the inherited traits of an individual over time. true false
Natural selection causes evolution by changing the inherited traits of a population or group of organisms over time.
2. Natural selection occurs over many generations, and therefore, evolution takes a long amount of time. true false
Scoring Award points as follows:
Lesson Objective: Scholars identify and explain evidence of homologous structures that support the theory that species living today share descent from common ancestry. Scholars can also describe the evolutionary information the fossil record provides and how we know that it is reliable.
Materials Needed
Prep
[Tip: Although the resource listed supports adult-level intellectual preparation, this material could easily be used on a flex day to deepen scholar understanding.]
What are scholars doing in this lesson?
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Activity
Discourse Debrief activity:
Make broader connections:
Accountability (Exit Ticket) Directions: Read the text excerpt below and respond to the questions that follow.
Analogy, in biology, means similarity of function and resemblance of structures that have different origins. For example, the wings of a fly, a moth, and a bird are analogous because they developed independently as adaptations to perform a common function flying. The presence of the analogous structure in this case, the wing does not reflect evolutionary closeness among the organisms that possess it.
In many cases, analogous structures tend to become similar in appearance by a process termed convergence. An example is the convergence of the streamlined form in the bodies of squid, shark, seal, porpoise, penguin, and ichthyosaur, animals of diverse ancestry. They are classified, however, in separate and distinct families, sharing characteristics that have evolved independently in response to similar environmental challenges.
Adapted from Encyclopedia Britannica
1.Based on the text above, describe the main difference between analogous and homologous structures. [1]
The main difference between analogous and homologous structures is that although they are similar in appearance and sometimes in function, analogous structures have evolved separately from each other, usually because of similar environmental challenges in different areas.
Diagram 1: Leaf modifications found in different plants
2.Why are the leaves in Diagram 1 considered homologous structures? [1]
Scoring Award points as follows:
Lesson Objective: Scholars understand that because much of our genetic toolkit is similar, most embryos (including humans’) start out with clear structural similarities, and we still have anatomical vestiges of these genetic similarities within our bodies. They must also be able to explain how these anatomical similarities provide further evidence of evolution.
Materials Needed
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What are scholars doing in this lesson?
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Activity
Discourse Debrief activity:
Make broader connections:
Accountability (Exit Ticket) Pelvic bones are primarily used to support weight in organisms when they change from standing to sitting positions. They help to support some of the internal organs, like the intestines, but overall they help an organism to balance while standing. The diagram below shows a vestigial structure (pelvic bones) in the modern dolphin.
“Vestigial structures do not help us understand the theory of evolution because they aren’t used by the
organism anymore.”
1.Evaluate the accuracy of this statement. Explain using your knowledge of common ancestry to support and justify your response. [3]
This statement is not scientifically accurate because vestigial structures can help us understand the theory of evolution. Although vestigial structures are no longer used by the organism, like the pelvic bones in the dolphin, they can tell us about the common ancestor of the dolphin. For example, because pelvic bones are used for balance during standing or sitting and dolphins swim, their presence tells us that dolphins evolved from ancestors that used to sit or stand, when pelvic bones would be more useful.
[Tip: In addition to this Exit Ticket, evaluate scholar responses to the Essential Question in their Lab Notebooks. This will help teachers understand where scholars are in their understanding of the answer to the Essential Question.]
Scoring Award points as follows:
1.Award one point for each of the following:
Lesson Objective: Scholars can explain how technological advances like DNA sequencing have further contributed to the veracity of the theory of natural selection. They learn how similarities or changes in DNA segments reflect the relatedness of organisms and can be represented in a phylogenetic tree. Scholars understand how DNA sequencing contributes more concrete evidence toward the argument for evolution and answering the unit’s Essential Question.
Materials Needed
Prep
What are scholars doing in this lesson?
Do Now
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Activity
Discourse Debrief activity:
Make broader connections:
Note: Understanding that degradation or mutation of DNA in individual cells can occur during an organism’s lifetime is beyond the scope of this unit. Although this may come up during the unit, the generalization that your DNA cannot be changed is considered an acceptable one for middle schoolers.
Accountability (Exit Ticket) The table below shows segments of DNA present in one trait for three related reptile species.
Table 1. Comparison of DNA Sequences in Three Lizard Species
Lizard Species | DNA Sequences |
---|---|
Species A |
C G A T A |
Species B |
C G A T A |
Species C |
G C T A T |
1.In the box below, draw a phylogenetic tree that represents the evolutionary relationships between the three lizard species. [2]
2.Identify one advantage of using modern techniques such as DNA sequencing as evidence to understand evolution. [1]
DNA sequencing is helpful in understanding evolution because it provides more specific evidence on how closely related organisms are by comparing their DNA codes for different traits.
Scoring Award points as follows:
Lesson Objective: Scholars will demonstrate the ability to synthesize important information from throughout the unit that supports them in constructing a strong, evidence-based letter. While writing their letter to the Turkish government, they in turn answer the unit’s Essential Question.
Materials Needed
Prep
[Tip: If your schedule allows for extra time or a flex day before the end of the unit, consider expanding this lesson into two days, so scholars have a chance to revise the first drafts of their letters after Discourse.]
What are scholars doing in this lesson?
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Activity
[Tip: One teacher can pull together a small group of struggling readers to work through the article.]
Discourse Debrief activity:
Make broader connections:
Accountability (Classwork)
To Whom It May Concern:
I am writing to share my disagreement with your decision to remove evolution from the science curriculum in your schools. This decision withholds important scientific discoveries and information from children.
School should be a place where children can learn things, not have things withheld from them because they could create conflict. Students need to be able to add their informed voices to the larger conversation about this issue, and sheltering them simply leaves them ignorant and unable to contribute.
I understand that Darwin’s theory of evolution creates a personal conflict with some people’s religious beliefs; however, this doesn’t mean it should be hidden from students. Unraveling the mysteries of the unknown, grappling with difficult data, and forming the strongest possible conclusions based on the available evidence are what science is all about! Students should be allowed this opportunity if they cannot do this in school, where will they learn?
Speaking of the evidence, there is ample evidence that supports evolution in the fossil record! Fossils have revealed to us entire evolutionary lines (like those of the whale and the horse). Studying those fossils, you can actually see the small changes that occurred over time as the animals changed into those we see today.
Additionally, with modern advances in DNA sequencing, scientists now have concrete evidence of how closely related organisms are to each other and whom they share common ancestors with. Knowing this can even help us uncover more information on why we are made the way we are and even potentially help us to develop medicine to better our society.
It is my hope that you take the above into account and reconsider your position on this issue. It is critical that all students have a chance to grapple with complex issues in science, even if they are controversial. The evidence in favor of evolution is overwhelming, and it is widely accepted by much of the world. Your scholars deserve the opportunity to learn about it.
Sincerely,
Scholar Name
Scoring Award points as follows:
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