MI BIG
Evolution III.4
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(Inspiration)
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All students will explain how scientists construct and scientifically
test theories concerning the origin of life and evolution of species.
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All students will compare ways that living organisms are adapted
(suited) to survive and reproduce in their environments and explain how
species change through time.
Overview
Biological evolution is continually being challenged by individuals and
organized groups. Many feel threatened by its perceived attack on their
belief systems. Teachers often feel uneasy presenting a topic knowing
parents or local groups may challenge them. The issue can be defused by a
better understanding of the nature of science, its process and
limitations. Science attempts to explain questions about the natural
world. It has no means to observe, analyze, or assess the supernatural.
Students need to be able to examine the evidence for evolution and reflect
on what it means to them.
Essential Background Narratives
Explain how scientists construct and scientifically test theories
concerning the origin of life and evolution of species.
Compare ways that living organisms are adapted to survive and reproduce in
their environments and explain how species change through time.
Are there patterns of similarity among organisms alive today? Are there
relationships among organisms that lived in the past and organisms alive
today? Where did humans come from in the history of the world? What is the
evidence that might give us some clues to these questions? Many students
come to the science classroom with strongly held beliefs that don't allow
them to openly examine the scientific explanations to these questions. The
challenge in the science classroom is to help students distinguish between
a scientist's way of thinking and understanding from those practiced by
some theologians, poets, or philosophers.
Students need working definitions of key terms with clear examples to
provide a framework for their thinking. This should help them demarcate
where science begins and ends. Words such as fact, theory, hypothesis, and
law are terms students encounter in casual conversation in everyday life.
In science these terms have a very specific meaning. A fact is an
observation that has been repeatedly confirmed but facts can change. It
was a scientific fact for many years that human cells had 24 pairs of
chromosomes. Improved techniques of microscopy revealed that they actually
have 23 pairs.
People commonly use the word theory to mean a "guess" or
"hunch". "My theory is..." in common usage would be
better stated as "My hypothesis is....". In science, a
hypothesis is a testable statement about the natural world. A theory, in
science, is a well-substantiated explanation of some aspect of the natural
world. It is a powerful idea that represents our best explanation at this
time. The abundance of supporting evidence makes the subsequent
abandonment of a theory unlikely. Theories can be continually refined and
even replaced with an alternative theory in light of new and compelling
evidence.
Finally, laws are generalizations that describe phenomena whereas theories
explain phenomena. The laws of thermodynamics describe what will happen
under certain circumstances; thermodynamic theories explain why these
events occur. A clear understanding of these terms should provide students
the structure needed to begin the study of evolution.
It is important for students to be able to distinguish between evolution
and the proposed mechanism, which accounts for its occurrence. Evolution
is the historical change in life forms that is well substantiated and is
generally accepted as fact by scientists. Students should explore the
similarities of vertebrate's limb structures such as the forelimb of a
chicken or bat, human, whale, cat, and lizard. They may also study
similarities in the early development of vertebrate embryos. Students need
an opportunity to observe, from the fossil record, kinds of organisms that
once lived on earth but now are extinct such as the Petoskey stone's,
Hexagonaria percarinata, trilobites, or crinoids. They can examine the
apparent relatedness of fossils to one another and to organisms living
today. This will begin to lay the groundwork for evidence of common
ancestry.
Students are naturally drawn to questions of their own ancestry. Students
can perform a simple comparison for similarities and differences when
given pictures or models of a gorilla, a modern human, and a hominid
fossil skull. Patterns will emerge as students discover intermediate
traits and forms. Further study of the relationships of humans to other
selected animal groups can be done by looking at DNA and blood protein
similarities. Vestigial structures such as the appendix, tailbone, wisdom
teeth, and ear muscles also give evidence to common ancestry with selected
animal groups.
Patterns and evidence of change, as well as recognizing the diversity and
apparent relatedness of species, needs to be firmly established before
delving into possible mechanisms for evolution. To better understand
natural selection students can survey the examples of artificial selection
occurring today with common pets like cats and dogs, or numerous
agricultural products.
Students need to understand the key components of natural selection.
Variation in heritable traits can give some organisms within a species a
distinct advantage over others. This variation is derived from new gene
combinations or mutations. If a trait, such as sharp claws or teeth for
capturing prey, or coloration for camouflage, gives an organism an
advantage to survive and reproduce, those advantageous traits will be
passed on to it's offspring. The advantaged offspring, in turn, are more
likely to survive and reproduce. The frequency of the advantageous trait
will therefore increase in the population. Some traits may give no
selective advantage or disadvantage to an organism in a particular
environment. If the environment changes, however, a particular trait may
become advantageous. The environment may also change enough that only a
few or possibly no organisms have the traits necessary for survival and
the species will then become extinct.
It is important for students to understand the level at which adaptation
takes place. Students should understand that organisms cannot willfully
change to better fit the environment and pass those changes on to
offspring. This involves a common language use of the word adapt, not a
biological definition. A Lamarckian vs. a Darwinian explanation of the
mechanism for change in the evolution of a giraffe's neck is a good
example for students to distinguish the different levels of adaptation
first proposed. Students should begin to understand that while natural
selection acts on the individual, the resulting adaptation is at the
population level. To further student understanding on adaptation, examples
of antibiotic and pesticide resistance can be studied.
Students should be given the opportunity to reflect on and construct their
understanding of patterns of change, relatedness of organisms alive today
and to those of the past. The scientifically literate student's
understanding of evolution and the proposed mechanisms which account for
its occurrence should clearly exhibit the process and nature of science.
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