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Key Concept: Carbon Cycle Goals: Students will be able to … Trace the pathway of a carbon atom through living and nonliving components of an ecosystem, explaining both the processes and types of organisms involved.
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Key Concept: Carbon Cycle Goals: Students will be able to … Trace the pathway of a carbon atom through living and nonliving components of an ecosystem,

Dec 30, 2015

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Sydney Eaton
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Page 1: Key Concept: Carbon Cycle Goals: Students will be able to … Trace the pathway of a carbon atom through living and nonliving components of an ecosystem,

Key Concept: Carbon Cycle

Goals: Students will be able to …

Trace the pathway of a carbon atom through

living and nonliving components of an ecosystem, explaining both the processes

andtypes of organisms involved.

Page 2: Key Concept: Carbon Cycle Goals: Students will be able to … Trace the pathway of a carbon atom through living and nonliving components of an ecosystem,

Carbon Cycle Pre-test

Page 3: Key Concept: Carbon Cycle Goals: Students will be able to … Trace the pathway of a carbon atom through living and nonliving components of an ecosystem,

Pre-test

Which of the following substances has mass? Answer yes or no in the blank to the left.

H20 vapor _______CO2 _______Glucose (C6H12O6) _______O2 _______

Page 4: Key Concept: Carbon Cycle Goals: Students will be able to … Trace the pathway of a carbon atom through living and nonliving components of an ecosystem,

Student Responses(n=171)

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H20 CO2 O2 C6H12O6

substance

% of students answering "yes"

Page 5: Key Concept: Carbon Cycle Goals: Students will be able to … Trace the pathway of a carbon atom through living and nonliving components of an ecosystem,

Pre-test

What are the different pathways that carbon can take once it is inside a plant? select as many as apply

a. it can exit the plant as CO2

b. it can become part of the plant’s cell walls, protein, fat, DNAc. it can be consumed by an insect feeding on the plant and

become part of the insect’s bodyd. as a plant decomposes in the soil, carbon can exit the soil

as CO2

Page 6: Key Concept: Carbon Cycle Goals: Students will be able to … Trace the pathway of a carbon atom through living and nonliving components of an ecosystem,

Student Responses(n=171)

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exit plant as CO2 become part ofplant

eaten by insect exit soil as CO2

pathway

% of students selecting

Page 7: Key Concept: Carbon Cycle Goals: Students will be able to … Trace the pathway of a carbon atom through living and nonliving components of an ecosystem,

Pre-test

The majority of the actual weight (dry biomass) gained by

plants as they progress from seed to adult plant comes from

which of the following substances?

a. molecules in the air that enter through the leavesb. particle substances in the soil taken up by the rootsc. substances dissolved in water that are taken up by rootsd. energy from the sun

Page 8: Key Concept: Carbon Cycle Goals: Students will be able to … Trace the pathway of a carbon atom through living and nonliving components of an ecosystem,

Student Responses(n=171)

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molecules in theair

particlesubstances in soil

substancesdissolved in

water

energy from thesun

substance

% of students

Page 9: Key Concept: Carbon Cycle Goals: Students will be able to … Trace the pathway of a carbon atom through living and nonliving components of an ecosystem,

Instructional Design

Lecture: food chains and webs (15 min) Lecture: energy flow / matter cycling (80 min)

» Matter / conservation of matter» Energy / types of energy» Laws of thermodynamics» Efficiency of energy transfer» Biogeochemical Cycles- biological & geological

forms and processes

Page 10: Key Concept: Carbon Cycle Goals: Students will be able to … Trace the pathway of a carbon atom through living and nonliving components of an ecosystem,

Formative Assessment

Explain this statement: Energy flows through an ecosystem. Matter cycles within an ecosystem.

Discuss in your group - submit one answer per group.

Page 11: Key Concept: Carbon Cycle Goals: Students will be able to … Trace the pathway of a carbon atom through living and nonliving components of an ecosystem,

In-class Group Activity

1. Draw a food chain based on the diagram of the carbon cycle in Figure 3-16. Include the decomposers. Label each trophic level.

2. Incoming radiation from the sun is 1,7000,000 kcals. Based on how energy flows through ecosystems, calculate the amount of kcals available for each trophic level.

3. On the diagram, show how and in what form (use arrows) energy is lost from each trophic level.

4. On the diagram, indicate in what form carbon moves into and out of each trophic level and the biological process that enables carbon movement to occur.

Page 12: Key Concept: Carbon Cycle Goals: Students will be able to … Trace the pathway of a carbon atom through living and nonliving components of an ecosystem,

Radish Experiment

Experimental Setup: Weighed out 3 batches of radish seeds each weighing 1.5 g. Experimental treatments:

» 1. Seeds placed on moistened paper towels in LIGHT» 2. Seeds placed on moistened paper towels in DARK» 3. Seeds not moistened (left DRY) placed in light

Page 13: Key Concept: Carbon Cycle Goals: Students will be able to … Trace the pathway of a carbon atom through living and nonliving components of an ecosystem,

Radish Experiment

In-class group activity:1. Develop a testable hypothesis for your group’s

experiment.2. Define the dependent and independent

variables in your hypothesis.3. Design a method to measure primary

productivity for your experiment.4. Predict the results.

Page 14: Key Concept: Carbon Cycle Goals: Students will be able to … Trace the pathway of a carbon atom through living and nonliving components of an ecosystem,

Radish Experiment

After 2 weeks, all plant material was dried in an oven overnight (no water left) and plant biomass was measured in grams.

Page 15: Key Concept: Carbon Cycle Goals: Students will be able to … Trace the pathway of a carbon atom through living and nonliving components of an ecosystem,

Processing Radish Experiment(week 7)

1.46 g 1.63 g 1.20 g

Formative Assessment: Write an explanation of the results.

Page 16: Key Concept: Carbon Cycle Goals: Students will be able to … Trace the pathway of a carbon atom through living and nonliving components of an ecosystem,

The Grandma Johnson Problem

Hypothetical Scenario: Grandma Johnson had verysentimental feelings toward Johnson Canyon, Utah where sheand her late husband had honeymooned long ago. Her feelingstoward this spot were such that upon her death sherequested to be buried under a creosote bush overlooking thecanyon. She loved the idea that she'd become part of thewonderful wilderness and live on through the wildlife thatlived there. Think to yourself and begin to trace the path of acarbon atom from Grandma Johnson's (GJ) remains to whereit could become part of a coyote (NOTE: the coyote WILLNOT dig up Grandma and consume any of her remains). Whatfundamental pathways and processes of biology will beinvolved in the transit of GJ's carbon atoms to that of the wild coyote in Utah?

Page 17: Key Concept: Carbon Cycle Goals: Students will be able to … Trace the pathway of a carbon atom through living and nonliving components of an ecosystem,

Task: Create a concept map that illustrates your understanding of the relationship between these 10 concepts in the context of the Grandma Johnson problem. You may add up to 5 extra concepts if you need them to explain the problem more clearly.

photosynthesis respiration carbon cycle

decomposers primary producers consumers

carbon dioxide glucose energy

oxygen

1. Work on the problem individually first, save it in CTOOLS, and print a hard copy.

2. Work on the problem with a partner. Both of you can retrieve your concept maps, discuss, revise and produce the best final map to which both of you have contributed.

3. Submit all three maps - yours, your partner's and the FINAL MAP you completed together - Please put the final map on top, with both of your names. Staple them together (5 pts off if not stapled).

Page 18: Key Concept: Carbon Cycle Goals: Students will be able to … Trace the pathway of a carbon atom through living and nonliving components of an ecosystem,

Summative Assessments

Analogous questions from pre-test The final exam was optional; 72 of

182 students chose not to take the final

The following data are from the 110 who took the final

Page 19: Key Concept: Carbon Cycle Goals: Students will be able to … Trace the pathway of a carbon atom through living and nonliving components of an ecosystem,

Summative Assessment(final exam)

Which of the following substances has mass? Answer yes or no in the blank to the left.

H20 vapor _______CO2 _______Glucose (C6H12O6) _______O2 _______

Page 20: Key Concept: Carbon Cycle Goals: Students will be able to … Trace the pathway of a carbon atom through living and nonliving components of an ecosystem,

Student Responses(n=110)

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H2O CO2 O2 Glucose

substance

% of students responding "yes"

Pre-test Post-test

Page 21: Key Concept: Carbon Cycle Goals: Students will be able to … Trace the pathway of a carbon atom through living and nonliving components of an ecosystem,

Summative Assessment(final exam)

What are the different pathways that carbon can take once it is inside a plant?

a. it can exit the plant as CO2

b. it can become part of the plant’s cell walls, protein, fat, DNAc. it can be consumed by an insect feeding on the plant and

become part of the insect’s bodyd. as a plant decomposes in the soil, carbon can exit the soil

as CO2

Page 22: Key Concept: Carbon Cycle Goals: Students will be able to … Trace the pathway of a carbon atom through living and nonliving components of an ecosystem,

Student Responses(n=171)

0

10

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exit plant as CO2 become part ofplant

eaten by insect exit soil as CO2

pathway

% of students selecting

Pre-test Post-test

Page 23: Key Concept: Carbon Cycle Goals: Students will be able to … Trace the pathway of a carbon atom through living and nonliving components of an ecosystem,

Summative Assessment(final exam)

The majority of the actual weight (dry biomass) gained by plants as they progress from seed to adult plant comes from which of the following substances?

a. molecules in the air that enter through the leavesb. particle substances in the soil taken up by the rootsc. substances dissolved in water that are taken up by rootsd. energy from the sun

Page 24: Key Concept: Carbon Cycle Goals: Students will be able to … Trace the pathway of a carbon atom through living and nonliving components of an ecosystem,

Student Responses(n=171)

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molecules inthe air

particlesubstances in

soil

substancesdissolved in

water

energy fromthe sun

water

substance

% of students selecting

Pre-test Exam I Final Exam

Page 25: Key Concept: Carbon Cycle Goals: Students will be able to … Trace the pathway of a carbon atom through living and nonliving components of an ecosystem,

Success!!

Students understand the carbon cycle.

Really??

Page 26: Key Concept: Carbon Cycle Goals: Students will be able to … Trace the pathway of a carbon atom through living and nonliving components of an ecosystem,

Appropriate Assessment

Three questions on the final exam assessed student understanding of the concept that plants get carbon from CO2 in the atmosphere.

Page 27: Key Concept: Carbon Cycle Goals: Students will be able to … Trace the pathway of a carbon atom through living and nonliving components of an ecosystem,

Multiple Choice

The majority of the actual weight (dry biomass) gained by

plants as they progress from seed to adult plant comes from

which of the following substances?

a. molecules in the air that enter through the leavesb. particle substances in the soil taken up by the rootsc. substances dissolved in water that are taken up by rootsd. energy from the sun

Page 28: Key Concept: Carbon Cycle Goals: Students will be able to … Trace the pathway of a carbon atom through living and nonliving components of an ecosystem,

Fill-in table

Page 29: Key Concept: Carbon Cycle Goals: Students will be able to … Trace the pathway of a carbon atom through living and nonliving components of an ecosystem,

Spider Monkey Problem

Written response: Explain in detail the following:Deep within a remote forest of Guatemala, the remains of a spider monkey were buried under an enormous mahogany tree. Although rare, jaguars have been spotted in this forest by local farmers. Use coherently written sentences and clearly labeled drawings to explain how a carbon atom in glucose contained within the muscle cells of the spider monkey might become part of a cell within the stomach lining of a jaguar. Provide a written description of the processes AND organisms the carbon atom must go through to cycle through the ecosystem. Include a clearly labeled drawing of the system. (Note: the jaguar does not dig up the monkey and eat the remains!)

Page 30: Key Concept: Carbon Cycle Goals: Students will be able to … Trace the pathway of a carbon atom through living and nonliving components of an ecosystem,

Where do plants get carbon?(final exam)

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Multiple Choice Fill in the Table Extended Response

Assessment Type

% of students

from the air from the soil