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Introduction to Biology and Chapter 1

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Page 1: Introduction to Biology and Chapter 1. What it will take to succeed You will need to read your textbook, take notes, pay attention in class, do assignments

Introduction to Biology and

Chapter 1

Page 2: Introduction to Biology and Chapter 1. What it will take to succeed You will need to read your textbook, take notes, pay attention in class, do assignments

What it will take to succeed

You will need to read your textbook, take notes, pay attention in class, do assignments (which includes answering questions in the textbook), study until you understand and can answer questions on the material, and prepare for quizzes….

Whew! That sounds like an awful lot of work! 1-2

Page 3: Introduction to Biology and Chapter 1. What it will take to succeed You will need to read your textbook, take notes, pay attention in class, do assignments

Why so much work?

We learn only 10% of what we read, and 20% of what we hear

We have to do more to learn more In biology we are going to be covering some

complex topics: for example we will start with a quick review of basic and organic chemistry, move into cell biology, and then go into enzymes, respiration, and photosynthesis. These topics cannot be learned well by simply listening to lectures.

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Page 4: Introduction to Biology and Chapter 1. What it will take to succeed You will need to read your textbook, take notes, pay attention in class, do assignments

Memory Tip

Memory researcher Robert Bjork “The typical college student spends far too much time reading and underlining and far too little time summarizing, paraphrasing, and testing his or her ability to retrieve what has been studied”

Inputting and encoding vs retrieval and outputting of information

Testing has to do with retrieval and outputting of information so don’t forget this important step when you are studying

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Page 5: Introduction to Biology and Chapter 1. What it will take to succeed You will need to read your textbook, take notes, pay attention in class, do assignments

Some tips Bring textbook to class Take notes; rework them after class to clear

up anything that is unclear. Look at a classmates notes as well as your own. Have a study buddy. Get their phone number so you will have someone to call if you have to miss class.

Power points will be posted on my wikispace before the exam: Take advantage of this resource

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Page 6: Introduction to Biology and Chapter 1. What it will take to succeed You will need to read your textbook, take notes, pay attention in class, do assignments

Learning Styles

Visual Learners: draw diagrams and chart concepts

Auditory Learners: listen to lecture tapes

Kinesthetic or Tactile Learners: learn from models and specimens, learn by doing

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Page 7: Introduction to Biology and Chapter 1. What it will take to succeed You will need to read your textbook, take notes, pay attention in class, do assignments

Copyright © The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. Permission required for reproduction or

display.

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Why a Study of Biology is Important

To be an informed citizen An understanding of biology is important

to address a number of social issues today.DNA testingBirth control Global warmingAIDS

Page 8: Introduction to Biology and Chapter 1. What it will take to succeed You will need to read your textbook, take notes, pay attention in class, do assignments

Biology- is the study of living and once-living things.

Bio- means life and –ology means the study of. Who uses Biology? Can you (class) name

different people who use Biology in life? Ex. Beekeeper, crime lab technicians,

optometrists, farmers.

Page 9: Introduction to Biology and Chapter 1. What it will take to succeed You will need to read your textbook, take notes, pay attention in class, do assignments
Page 10: Introduction to Biology and Chapter 1. What it will take to succeed You will need to read your textbook, take notes, pay attention in class, do assignments

The Characteristics of Living things

1. Made of one or more cells

2. Displays organization

3. Grows and develops

4. Reproduces

5. Responds to stimuli

6. Requires energy

7. Maintains homeostasis

8. Adaptations evolve over time

Page 11: Introduction to Biology and Chapter 1. What it will take to succeed You will need to read your textbook, take notes, pay attention in class, do assignments

The Study of Life

Living things are made of one or more cells.

Cells are the basic unit of structure and function in all living things.

One or more cells

Page 12: Introduction to Biology and Chapter 1. What it will take to succeed You will need to read your textbook, take notes, pay attention in class, do assignments

Specialized cells are organized into groups that work together called tissues.

Displays Organization

The Study of Life

Living things also display organization, which means they are arranged in an orderly way.

Tissues are organized into organs.

Organ systems work together to support an organism.

Page 13: Introduction to Biology and Chapter 1. What it will take to succeed You will need to read your textbook, take notes, pay attention in class, do assignments

Grows and Develops

The Study of Life

Growth results in the addition of mass to an organism and, in many organisms, the formation of new cells and new structures.

Page 14: Introduction to Biology and Chapter 1. What it will take to succeed You will need to read your textbook, take notes, pay attention in class, do assignments

Reproduces

The Study of Life

A species is a group of organisms that can breed with one another and produce fertile offspring.

Page 15: Introduction to Biology and Chapter 1. What it will take to succeed You will need to read your textbook, take notes, pay attention in class, do assignments

Responds to StimuliThe Study of Life

Anything that is part of the internal or external environments and causes some sort of reaction by the organism is called a stimulus.

The reaction to a stimulus is a response.

Venus flytrap

Page 16: Introduction to Biology and Chapter 1. What it will take to succeed You will need to read your textbook, take notes, pay attention in class, do assignments

Requires Energy

The Study of Life

Living things get their energy from food.

Most plants and some unicellular organisms use light energy from the Sun to make their own food and fuel their activities.

Organisms that cannot make their own food get energy by consuming other organisms.

Page 17: Introduction to Biology and Chapter 1. What it will take to succeed You will need to read your textbook, take notes, pay attention in class, do assignments

Maintains Homeostasis

The Study of Life

Regulation of an organism’s internal conditions to maintain life is called homeostasis.

If anything happens within or to an organism that affects its normal state, processes to restore the normal state begin.

Page 18: Introduction to Biology and Chapter 1. What it will take to succeed You will need to read your textbook, take notes, pay attention in class, do assignments

Adaptations Evolve Over TimeThe Study of Life

An adaptation is any inherited characteristic that results from changes to a species over time.

Page 19: Introduction to Biology and Chapter 1. What it will take to succeed You will need to read your textbook, take notes, pay attention in class, do assignments
Page 20: Introduction to Biology and Chapter 1. What it will take to succeed You will need to read your textbook, take notes, pay attention in class, do assignments

The Methods of Biology

Much of the work in Biology is to solve problems.

Scientists use the scientific method to solve problems. The following steps are used to solve a problem:

recognizing the problem researching the problem forming a hypothesis testing the hypothesis drawing a conclusion

Page 21: Introduction to Biology and Chapter 1. What it will take to succeed You will need to read your textbook, take notes, pay attention in class, do assignments

*Scientific Method

Identify question

Form testable hypothesis

Consult prior Collect data to test hypothesis If hypothesis is

knowledge rejected

Interpret results

Report for peer review

Publish findings

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Page 22: Introduction to Biology and Chapter 1. What it will take to succeed You will need to read your textbook, take notes, pay attention in class, do assignments

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Constructing Hypotheses

Once the question is asked, scientists propose answers.

These answers are hypotheses. Hypotheses must:

be logicalaccount for all current informationbe testablemake the least possible assumptions

Page 23: Introduction to Biology and Chapter 1. What it will take to succeed You will need to read your textbook, take notes, pay attention in class, do assignments

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Testing Hypotheses

Hypotheses need to be tested to see if they are supported or disproved.Disproved hypotheses are rejected or modified.Hypotheses can be supported but not proven.

There are several ways to test a hypothesis:Gathering relevant historical informationMake additional observations from the natural

world.Experimentation

Page 24: Introduction to Biology and Chapter 1. What it will take to succeed You will need to read your textbook, take notes, pay attention in class, do assignments

Copyright © The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. Permission required for reproduction or

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Experimentation

An experiment is a re-creation of an occurrence. It tests whether or not the hypothesis can be

supported or rejected. Experiments must be controlled.

This means that all aspects except for one variable must be kept constant.

They usually include two groups.• Experimental group: variable is altered• Control group: variable is not altered

Page 25: Introduction to Biology and Chapter 1. What it will take to succeed You will need to read your textbook, take notes, pay attention in class, do assignments

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Experimental Design

The variable that is altered is called the independent variable. (What we are changing)Experiments should have only one independent

variable. The variables that change in response to the

independent variable are called dependent variables.Changes in the dependent variables are documented

as data. (What we are measuring) Data from the experiment is analyzed and

hypotheses are rejected and revised or supported.

Page 26: Introduction to Biology and Chapter 1. What it will take to succeed You will need to read your textbook, take notes, pay attention in class, do assignments

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Experimental Data Experiments must:

use large numbers of subjects or must be repeated several times (replication).

be independently reproducible. The validity of experimental results must:

be tested statistically.be scrutinized by other scientists.

If the hypothesis is supported by ample experimental data, it leads to a theory.

Page 27: Introduction to Biology and Chapter 1. What it will take to succeed You will need to read your textbook, take notes, pay attention in class, do assignments

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*Theory

A theory may be defined as a widely accepted, plausible general statement about a fundamental concept in science.The germ theory states that infectious

diseases are caused by microorganisms.• Many diseases are not caused by microorganisms,

so we must be careful not to generalize theories too broadly.

Theories continue to be tested.• Exceptions identified• Modifications made

Page 28: Introduction to Biology and Chapter 1. What it will take to succeed You will need to read your textbook, take notes, pay attention in class, do assignments

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A Scientific Law A scientific law is a uniform and constant fact of

nature that describes what happens in nature. An example: All living things come from pre-existing

living things. Scientific laws promote the process of generalization.

Inductive reasoning Since every bird that has been studied lays eggs, we can

generalize that all birds lay eggs. (IGA) Once a theory becomes established, it can be used

to predict specific facts. Deductive reasoning We can predict that a newly discovered bird species will lay

eggs.

Page 29: Introduction to Biology and Chapter 1. What it will take to succeed You will need to read your textbook, take notes, pay attention in class, do assignments

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Scientific Communication Data is shared with the

scientific community through research articles published in scientific journals. These articles are scrutinized

by other scientists before they are published.

Scientists present preliminary data at conferences.

Scientists collaborate

Page 30: Introduction to Biology and Chapter 1. What it will take to succeed You will need to read your textbook, take notes, pay attention in class, do assignments
Page 31: Introduction to Biology and Chapter 1. What it will take to succeed You will need to read your textbook, take notes, pay attention in class, do assignments

Quantitative Research Formal, objective, systematic process in which

numerical data are used to obtain information about the worldData obtained is then used to produce graphs

or tables to communicate findings

Page 32: Introduction to Biology and Chapter 1. What it will take to succeed You will need to read your textbook, take notes, pay attention in class, do assignments

International System of Units or SI system- is a measuring system based on units of 10.

Length- is the distance from one point to another.

The SI unit of length is the meter (m). One penny is the smallest unit of money.

Millimeters are the smallest unit of measurement.

SI Units

Page 33: Introduction to Biology and Chapter 1. What it will take to succeed You will need to read your textbook, take notes, pay attention in class, do assignments

Measurements Used in Biology

40 kilometers to the nearest city -2-liters of soda -a bag of potato chips weigh 184 grams -35 millimeter camera -medicine comes in 25 –milligram tablets

Page 34: Introduction to Biology and Chapter 1. What it will take to succeed You will need to read your textbook, take notes, pay attention in class, do assignments

How are metric units grouped

Prefix Symbol MeaningKilo k 1000Hecto h 100Deka da 10Deci d 0.1 (1/10)Centi c 0.01 (1/100)Milli m 0.001 (1/1000)

Page 35: Introduction to Biology and Chapter 1. What it will take to succeed You will need to read your textbook, take notes, pay attention in class, do assignments

Volume- is the amount of space a substance occupies.

If you multiple length by width by height = volume.

Example would be soft drinks. One liter equals 1000 milliliters (mL).

Page 36: Introduction to Biology and Chapter 1. What it will take to succeed You will need to read your textbook, take notes, pay attention in class, do assignments

Weight and Mass Weight is a measure of the force of gravity on

an object. Mass is how much matter is in something. The

instrument to measure mass is a balance. The unit to measure mass is the kilogram (kg).

Grams are used to measure small objects.

Page 37: Introduction to Biology and Chapter 1. What it will take to succeed You will need to read your textbook, take notes, pay attention in class, do assignments

Time and Temperature Time is the period between two events. Time is

measured in seconds. Temperature is the amount of heat in

something. The Kelvin scale (K) is used in science. Scientists use Celsius because it’s easier to use. Freezing point is 0 and boiling is 100 degrees.

Page 38: Introduction to Biology and Chapter 1. What it will take to succeed You will need to read your textbook, take notes, pay attention in class, do assignments

Descriptive Research

Is used to describe characteristics of a population or phenomenon being studied. (involves observing the subject)

It answers questions about how/when/why the characteristics occurred

Examples: how animals react to changes in their environment