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Slide1
This PowerPoint is one small part of my Taxonomy and Classification Unit.
A Seven Part 3,000+ Slide PowerPoint full of engaging activities, critical class notes, review opportunities, question, answers, games, and much more.
19 Page bundled homework that chronologically follows the slideshow for nightly review. Modified version provided as well as answer keys.
24 pages of unit notes with visuals for students and support professionals.
2 PowerPoint Review Games with Answer Key
Rubrics, videos, templates, materials list, First Day PowerPoint, guide, and much more.
http://sciencepowerpoint.com/Taxonomy_Classification_Unit.htmlSlide2
Taxonomy and Classification UnitSlide3
Taxonomy and Classification Unit
Areas of Focus within The Taxonomy and Classification Unit:
Taxonomy, Classification, Need for Taxonomy vs. Common Names, What is a Species?, Dichotomous Keys, What does Classification Use?, The Domains of Life, Kingdoms of
Life,The
8 Taxonomic Ranks, Humans Taxonomic Classification, Kingdom
Monera
, Prokaryotic Cells, Types of Eubacteria, Bacteria Classification, Gram
Staining,Bacterial
Food Borne Illnesses, Penicillin and Antiseptic, Oral Hygiene and Plaque, Bacterial Reproduction (Binary Fission), Asexual Reproduction, Positives and Negatives of Bacteria, Protista, Plant-like
Protists
, Animal-like
Protists, Fungi-like Protists, Animalia, Characteristics of Animalia, Animal Symmetry, Phylums of Animalia (Extensive), Classes of Chordata, Mammals, Subclasses of Mammals, Characteristics of Mammals, Classes of Fish, Fashion a Fish Project, Animal Poster Project, Fungi, Positives and Negatives of Fungi, Divisions of Fungi (Extensive), Parts of a Mushroom, 3 Roles of Fungi, Fungi Reproduction, Mold Prevention, Plant Divisions, Photosynthesis, Plant Photo Tour, Non Vascular Plants, Algae, Lichens, Bryophytes, Seedless Vascular Plants, Cone Bearing Plants, Flowering Plants, Monocotyledons, Dicotyledons and much more.
Full Unit can be found at…
http://sciencepowerpoint.com/Taxonomy_Classification_Unit.htmlSlide4Slide5
ProtistaSlide6
RED SLIDE:
These are notes that are very important and should be recorded in your science journal.
Copyright © 2010 Ryan P. MurphySlide7
Slide8
Please use this red lineSlide9
-Please make notes legible and use indentations when appropriate.
Please use this red lineSlide10
-Please make notes legible and use indentations when appropriate.
Please use this red lineSlide11
-Please make notes legible and use indentations when appropriate. -Example of indent.
Slide12
-Please make notes legible and use indentations when appropriate. -Example of indent. -Skip a line between topics Slide13
-Please make notes legible and use indentations when appropriate. -Example of indent. -Skip a line between topics -Don’t skip pages Slide14
-Please make notes legible and use indentations when appropriate. -Example of indent. -Skip a line between topics -Don’t skip pages -Make visuals clear and well drawn. Slide15
-Please make notes legible and use indentations when appropriate. -Example of indent. -Skip a line between topics -Don’t skip pages -Make visuals clear and well drawn. Slide16
RED SLIDE: These are notes that are very important and should be recorded in your science journal.
BLACK SLIDE:
Pay attention, follow directions, complete projects as described and answer required questions neatly.
Copyright © 2010 Ryan P. MurphySlide17
Topics addressed in this UnitSlide18
Topics addressed in this Unit Part IIISlide19
Additional Standards AddressedSlide20
Keep an eye out for “The-Owl” and raise your hand as soon as you see him.
He will be hiding somewhere in the slideshow
Copyright © 2010 Ryan P. MurphySlide21
“Hoot, Hoot”
“Good Luck!”
Copyright © 2010 Ryan P. MurphySlide22
New Area of Focus: Eukarya
Copyright © 2010 Ryan P. MurphySlide23
New Area of Focus: Eukarya
Copyright © 2010 Ryan P. MurphySlide24
Domain
Eukarya
: Have cells with a membrane bound nucleus and membrane bound organelles.
Copyright © 2010 Ryan P. MurphySlide25
Which number from the Eukaryotic cell below is the nucleus?
Copyright © 2010 Ryan P. MurphySlide26
Answer! Number 2 is the nucleus, number 1 is an organelle called the nucleolus.
Copyright © 2010 Ryan P. Murphy
Copyright © 2010 Ryan P. MurphySlide27
Animals, Plants, and Fungi all evolved from primitive Protists.Slide28
Animals, Plants, and Fungi all evolved from primitive Protists.
In ColoniesSlide29
New Area of Focus: Protista
Copyright © 2010 Ryan P. MurphySlide30
Domains and Kingdoms
Domain
Eubacteria
Archae
-bacteria
Kingdom
Eubacteria
Archae
-bacteria
Protista
Plantae
FungiAnimaliaCell TypeProkaryotic (No nucleus)Prokaryotic (No nucleus)Eukaryotic (Nucleus)Eukaryotic (Nucleus)Eukaryotic (Nucleus)Eukaryotic (Nucleus)Single or Multi-CellularSingle(Unicellular)Single(Unicellular)Single(Unicellular)MulticellularMulticellular
Multicellular
Gets Energy from..
Varies
Varies
Varies
Auto /
Hetero
Sunlight
Absorbs
Consumes
Food
EukaryaSlide31
Domains and Kingdoms
Domain
Eubacteria
Archae
-bacteria
Kingdom
Eubacteria
Archae
-bacteria
Protista
Plantae
FungiAnimaliaCell TypeProkaryotic (No nucleus)Prokaryotic (No nucleus)Eukaryotic (Nucleus)Eukaryotic (Nucleus)Eukaryotic (Nucleus)Eukaryotic (Nucleus)Single or Multi-CellularSingle(Unicellular)Single(Unicellular)Single(Unicellular)MulticellularMulticellular
Multicellular
Gets Energy from..
Varies
Varies
Varies
Auto /
Hetero
Sunlight
Absorbs
Consumes
Food
EukaryaSlide32
\
Can you say this with me…Slide33
\
Can you say this with me…
Millions of speciesSlide34
\
Can you say this with me…
Millions of species
6 KingdomsSlide35
\
Can you say this with me…
Millions of species
6 Kingdoms
DiverseSlide36
\
Can you say this with me…
Millions of species
6 Kingdoms
Diverse
Protist
are… Slide37
\
Can you say this with me…
Millions of species
6 Kingdoms
Diverse
Protist
are…
UnicellularSlide38
\
Can you say this with me…
Millions of species
6 Kingdoms
Diverse
Protist
are…
Unicellular
EukaryoticSlide39
\
Can you say this with me…
Millions of species
6 Kingdoms
Diverse
Protist
are…
Unicellular
Autotrophs
EukaryoticSlide40
\
Can you say this with me…
Millions of species
6 Kingdoms
Diverse
Protist
are…
Unicellular
Autotrophs
Heterotrophs
EukaryoticSlide41
\
Can you say this with me…
Millions of species
6 Kingdoms
Organized
by their
similarities and differences
a
nd placed into a naming system
Diverse
Protist
are…
Unicellular
Autotrophs
Heterotrophs
EukaryoticSlide42
\
Can you say this with me…
Millions of species
6 Kingdoms
Organized
by their
similarities and differences
a
nd placed into a naming system
Diverse
Protist
are…
Unicellular
Autotrophs
Heterotrophs
Eukaryotic
a
nd when in doubt…Slide43
\
Can you say this with me…
Millions of species
6 Kingdoms
Organized
by their
similarities and differences
a
nd placed into a naming system
Diverse
Protist
are…
Unicellular
Autotrophs
Heterotrophs
Eukaryotic
a
nd when in doubt…
Guess
ProtistSlide44
Protist Available Sheet Slide45
Protist Available Sheet Slide46
The name Protista means "the very first", There are thousands and thousands of species.
Copyright © 2010 Ryan P. MurphySlide47
The name Protista means "the very first", There are thousands and thousands of species.
Copyright © 2010 Ryan P. MurphySlide48
The name Protista means "the very first", There are thousands and thousands of species.
Copyright © 2010 Ryan P. MurphySlide49
The name Protista means "the very first", There are thousands and thousands of species.
Copyright © 2010 Ryan P. MurphySlide50
What is this in your home?
We all have it and what tends to go in it?Slide51
Answer: The Junk drawer.
It’s where we put all the things that don’t have an organized place to go.Slide52
Protists
are like the junk drawer.
Slide53
Protists are like the junk drawer.
If it’s not a plant, animal, fungus, or bacteria it just goes in the junk drawer which we call Protists.Slide54
Protist: An organism with Eukaryotic Single cell, or colonies (multicellular). Lacking tissues and eats, makes, or decomposes for food.
Copyright © 2010 Ryan P. MurphySlide55
Remember, Protists lack tissues.
Which specimen below is a protist, and which is an animal?
Copyright © 2010 Ryan P. Murphy
A
BSlide56
Answer! Protists do not have eyes because an eye is made of tissue.
Copyright © 2010 Ryan P. Murphy
A
BSlide57
Note: Some protists such as the Euglena have a sensitive organelle called an eye spot to detect light.
It’s not a true eye.Slide58
Note: Some protists such as the Euglena have a sensitive organelle called an eye spot to detect light.
It’s not a true eye.
All
Protists
also require
m
oisture. Most live
i
n water or damp areas.Slide59
Algae exist with fungi in a symbiotic relationship within lichen.
Lichen are terrestrial and the driest living organism on the planet.Slide60
Algae exist with fungi in a symbiotic relationship within lichen.
Lichen are terrestrial and the driest living organism on the planet.
We will investigate
w
hen we study FungiSlide61
Which specimen below is a protist, and which is an animal?
Copyright © 2010 Ryan P. Murphy
B
ASlide62
Answer! Protists do not have tissues, so they do not have hearts.
Protists
Copyright © 2010 Ryan P. Murphy
A
BSlide63
Which specimen below is a protist, and which is an animal?
Copyright © 2010 Ryan P. Murphy
A
BSlide64
Animal?
Protist
Copyright © 2010 Ryan P. Murphy
A
BSlide65
Is this a protist? Why of why not?
Copyright © 2010 Ryan P. MurphySlide66
Answer! No, because the specimen has tissues such as eyes, and some sort of digestive tract.Slide67
Is this a Protist?
“Oh-Yah!”
Copyright © 2010 Ryan P. MurphySlide68
Answer! No, I don’t know what this is.
Copyright © 2010 Ryan P. MurphySlide69
Some nice reference materials can be obtained at…
Flashcards:
http://
www.learnnc.org/lp/media/uploads/2012/05/protist_mug_shots.pdfFoldable:http://www.learnnc.org/lp/media/uploads/2012/05/protist_foldable_1.pdfSlide70
Copyright © 2010 Ryan P. Murphy
Kingdoms of Life
Eubacteria
Archaebacteria
Eukaryotic
(Cells with Nucleus)
Prokaryotic
(Cells
with
no
Nucleus)
Universal Ancestor
ProtistaSlide71
Copyright © 2010 Ryan P. Murphy
Kingdoms of Life
Eubacteria
Archaebacteria
Eukaryotic
(Cells with Nucleus)
Prokaryotic
(Cells
with
no
Nucleus)
Universal Ancestor
Protista
Chromista
?Slide72
Note:
Chromista
(Kelps and diatoms) are a eukaryotic supergroup, which may be treated as a separate kingdom.
We will include
Chromista
in Protista to simplify.
Learn more about
Chromista
at…
http://www.ucmp.berkeley.edu/chromista/chromistasy.htmlSlide73
Plant-like
Protists
(photosynthetic but no roots, stems, or leaves)
------
Copyright © 2010 Ryan P. Murphy
Learn more about algae at…
http://www.lenntech.com/eutrophication-water-bodies/algae.htmSlide74
Green Algae
Copyright © 2010 Ryan P. MurphySlide75
Green Algae
Copyright © 2010 Ryan P. Murphy
Autotroph: Makes its own food.
Heterotroph: Eats Food
Is it a…Slide76
Green Algae
Copyright © 2010 Ryan P. Murphy
Autotroph: Makes its own food.
Heterotroph: Eats Food
Is it a…
a
nswer is…Slide77
Green Algae
Copyright © 2010 Ryan P. Murphy
Autotroph: Makes its own food.
Is it a…
a
nswer is…Slide78
Green Algae
(
Autroph
)
Copyright © 2010 Ryan P. Murphy
Autotroph: Makes its own food.
Is it a…
a
nswer is…Slide79
Green Algae
(
Autroph
)
Copyright © 2010 Ryan P. Murphy
Autotroph: Makes its own food.
Is it a…
a
nswer is…
PhotosynthesisSlide80
Green Algae
(
Autroph
)
Copyright © 2010 Ryan P. Murphy
Autotroph: Makes its own food.
Is it a…
a
nswer is…
PhotosynthesisSlide81
Green Algae
(
Autroph
)
Copyright © 2010 Ryan P. Murphy
Autotroph: Makes its own food.
Is it a…
a
nswer is…
PhotosynthesisSlide82
Green Algae
(
Autroph
)
Copyright © 2010 Ryan P. Murphy
Autotroph: Makes its own food.
Is it a…
Photosynthesis
Algae don’t have any roots,
l
eaves, or stems.Slide83
The Green Algae
Copyright © 2010 Ryan P. MurphySlide84Slide85
Algae can also
g
row as a colonySlide86
SpirogyraSlide87
Brown Algae
Copyright © 2010 Ryan P. MurphySlide88
Brown Algae
Copyright © 2010 Ryan P. Murphy
Autotroph
: Makes its own food.
Heterotroph: Eats Food
Is it…Slide89
Brown Algae
(A)
Copyright © 2010 Ryan P. Murphy
Autotroph
: Makes its own food
.
Is it…
Not all autotrophs
a
re greenSlide90
Brown Algae
(A)
Copyright © 2010 Ryan P. Murphy
Autotroph
: Makes its own food
.
Is it…
Not all autotrophs
a
re green
Can g
row as a colonySlide91Slide92
Kelp ForestSlide93Slide94
Red AlgaeSlide95
Red Algae
(A)
Autotroph: Makes its own food.Slide96
Cyanobacteria are bacteria that photosynthesize (Unicellular)
Copyright © 2010 Ryan P. Murphy
CyanobacteriaSlide97
Cyanobacteria are bacteria that photosynthesize (Unicellular)
Algae are photosynthetic
protists
(Unicelluar with no roots, leaves, stems)
Copyright © 2010 Ryan P. Murphy
Algae are
P
rotists
(Plant-like and very important)
CyanobacteriaSlide98
Cyanobacteria are bacteria that photosynthesize (Unicellular)
Algae are photosynthetic
protists
(Unicelluar with no roots, leaves, stems)Plants are photosynthetic (Multi-cellular and have leaves, roots, stems)
Copyright © 2010 Ryan P. Murphy
Algae are
P
rotists
(Plant-like and very important)
Cyanobacteria
PlantsSlide99
Copyright © 2010 Ryan P. Murphy
Kingdoms of Life
Eubacteria
Archaebacteria
Eukaryotic
(Cells with Nucleus)
Prokaryotic
(Cells
with
no
Nucleus)
Universal Ancestor
ProtistaSlide100
Copyright © 2010 Ryan P. Murphy
Kingdoms of Life
Eubacteria
Archaebacteria
Eukaryotic
(Cells with Nucleus)
Prokaryotic
(Cells
with
no
Nucleus)
Universal Ancestor
ProtistaSlide101
Copyright © 2010 Ryan P. Murphy
Kingdoms of Life
Eubacteria
Archaebacteria
Eukaryotic
(Cells with Nucleus)
Prokaryotic
(Cells
with
no
Nucleus)
Universal Ancestor
Plantae
ProtistaSlide102
Algae is mostly aquatic.
Copyright © 2010 Ryan P. MurphySlide103
It can be incredibly small,
Copyright © 2010 Ryan P. MurphySlide104
It can be incredibly small,
and also very large.
Copyright © 2010 Ryan P. MurphySlide105
Algae produce more than 71% of the Earth’s oxygen.
Copyright © 2010 Ryan P. MurphySlide106
Algae remove huge amounts of Carbon Dioxide from the air.
Copyright © 2010 Ryan P. MurphySlide107
Algae remove huge amounts of Carbon Dioxide from the air.
Carbon Dioxide causes global warming, so algae is one of our most important allies in the fight against climate change.
Copyright © 2010 Ryan P. MurphySlide108
Phytoplankton are the basis of most food chains in the ocean and in fresh water.
No algae, no fish.
Copyright © 2010 Ryan P. MurphySlide109
Algae may become the next fuel of the future.
A form of bio-diesel gasoline.
Copyright © 2010 Ryan P. MurphySlide110
Fossil fuel burning power plants can use algae to clean / lower their emissions by 40% and create bio-fuels in the process.
Copyright © 2010 Ryan P. MurphySlide111
Fossil fuel burning power plants can use algae to clean / lower their emissions by 40% and create bio-fuels in the process.
They feed the algae their pollution.
Copyright © 2010 Ryan P. MurphySlide112
Video! Algae as a bio-fuel.
Will algae power your car in the near future?
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=n9_-ZguuhBw
Copyright © 2010 Ryan P. MurphySlide113
.
Copyright © 2010 Ryan P. MurphySlide114
Brown algae was one of the first algae to colonize land.
Copyright © 2010 Ryan P. MurphySlide115
They are photosynthetic. The make food from the sun.
Copyright © 2010 Ryan P. MurphySlide116
Algae can be found as bacteria, protists, and plants.Slide117
Activity! Looking at algae under the microscope.
Copyright © 2010 Ryan P. MurphySlide118
Activity! Looking at algae under the microscope.
Create a wet mount slide and use a compound light microscope.
Copyright © 2010 Ryan P. MurphySlide119
Activity! Looking at algae under the microscope.
Create a wet mount slide and use a compound light microscope.
Copyright © 2010 Ryan P. MurphySlide120
Activity! Looking at algae under the microscope.
Create a wet mount slide and use a compound light microscope.
Copyright © 2010 Ryan P. MurphySlide121
Activity! Looking at algae under the microscope.
Create a wet mount slide and use a compound light microscope.
Copyright © 2010 Ryan P. MurphySlide122
Activity! Looking at algae under the microscope.
Create a wet mount slide and use a compound light microscope.
Sketch and color some of the algae sample on
medium power.
Copyright © 2010 Ryan P. MurphySlide123
Activity! Looking at algae under the microscope.
Create a wet mount slide and use a compound light microscope.
Sketch and color some of the algae sample on
medium power.Use a Petri-dish to create a circle.
Copyright © 2010 Ryan P. MurphySlide124
Activity! Looking at algae under the microscope.
Create a wet mount slide and use a compound light microscope.
Sketch and color some of the algae sample on
medium power.Use a Petri-dish to create a circle.
Copyright © 2010 Ryan P. Murphy
AlgaeSlide125
Brown algae was one of the first algae to colonize land.
Copyright © 2010 Ryan P. MurphySlide126
Between 500 and 400 million years ago,
some algae made the transition to land, becoming land plants required a series of adaptations to help them survive out of the water.
Copyright © 2010 Ryan P. MurphySlide127
Between 500 and 400 million years ago,
some algae made the transition to land,
becoming land plants required a series of adaptations to help them survive out of the water.
Copyright © 2010 Ryan P. MurphySlide128
Between 500 and 400 million years ago, some algae made the transition to land,
becoming land plants required a series of adaptations to help them survive out of the water.
Copyright © 2010 Ryan P. MurphySlide129
Raise your hand if you have ever put diatoms in your mouth?Slide130
Raise your hand if you have ever put diatoms in your mouth?
Filled with DiatomsSlide131
Raise your hand if you have ever put diatoms in your mouth?
Filled with Diatoms
(Silicates - glass)Slide132
Diatoms
ChrysophytaSlide133
Diatoms
Round shells made of glass.
ChrysophytaSlide134
Diatoms
Round shells made of glass.
Autotroph: Makes its own food
.
Is it…Slide135
Diatoms
Round shells made of glass.
Autotroph: Makes its own food.
Heterotroph: Eats Food
Is it…Slide136
End of Preview
Hundreds of more slides,
activities, video links,
homework package, lesson
notes, review games,
rubrics, and much more
on the full version of this unit
and larger curriculum.Slide137
“AYE” Advance Your Exploration ELA and Literacy Opportunity Worksheet
Visit some of the many provided links or..
Articles can be found at (w/ membership to NABT and NSTA)
http://www.nabt.org/websites/institution/index.php?p=1http://learningcenter.nsta.org/browse_journals.aspx?journal=tst
Please visit at least one of the “learn more”
educational
links provided in this unit and complete this worksheet. Slide138
“AYE” Advance Your Exploration ELA and Literacy Opportunity Worksheet
Visit some of the many provided links or..
Articles can be found at (w/ membership to NABT and NSTA)
http://www.nabt.org/websites/institution/index.php?p=1http://learningcenter.nsta.org/browse_journals.aspx?journal=tstSlide139
This PowerPoint is one small part of my Taxonomy and Classification Unit.
A Seven Part 3,000+ Slide PowerPoint full of engaging activities, critical class notes, review opportunities, question, answers, games, and much more.
19 Page bundled homework that chronologically follows the slideshow for nightly review. Modified version provided as well as answer keys.
24 pages of unit notes with visuals for students and support professionals.2 PowerPoint Review Games with Answer Key
Rubrics, videos, templates, materials list, First Day PowerPoint, guide, and much more.
http://sciencepowerpoint.com/Taxonomy_Classification_Unit.htmlSlide140
Taxonomy and Classification UnitSlide141
Taxonomy and Classification Unit
Areas of Focus within The Taxonomy and Classification Unit:
Taxonomy, Classification, Need for Taxonomy vs. Common Names, What is a Species?, Dichotomous Keys, What does Classification Use?, The Domains of Life, Kingdoms of
Life,The
8 Taxonomic Ranks, Humans Taxonomic Classification, Kingdom
Monera
, Prokaryotic Cells, Types of Eubacteria, Bacteria Classification, Gram
Staining,Bacterial
Food Borne Illnesses, Penicillin and Antiseptic, Oral Hygiene and Plaque, Bacterial Reproduction (Binary Fission), Asexual Reproduction, Positives and Negatives of Bacteria, Protista, Plant-like
Protists
, Animal-like
Protists, Fungi-like Protists, Animalia, Characteristics of Animalia, Animal Symmetry, Phylums of Animalia (Extensive), Classes of Chordata, Mammals, Subclasses of Mammals, Characteristics of Mammals, Classes of Fish, Fashion a Fish Project, Animal Poster Project, Fungi, Positives and Negatives of Fungi, Divisions of Fungi (Extensive), Parts of a Mushroom, 3 Roles of Fungi, Fungi Reproduction, Mold Prevention, Plant Divisions, Photosynthesis, Plant Photo Tour, Non Vascular Plants, Algae, Lichens, Bryophytes, Seedless Vascular Plants, Cone Bearing Plants, Flowering Plants, Monocotyledons, Dicotyledons and much more.
Full Unit can be found at…
http://sciencepowerpoint.com/Taxonomy_Classification_Unit.htmlSlide142Slide143
Additional Standards AddressedSlide144
Please visit the links below to learn more about each of the units in this curriculum
These units take me about four years to complete with my students in grades 5-10.
Earth Science Units
Extended Tour Link and Curriculum Guide
Geology Topics Unit
http://sciencepowerpoint.com/Geology_Unit.html
Astronomy Topics Unit
http://sciencepowerpoint.com/Astronomy_Unit.html
Weather and Climate Unit
http://sciencepowerpoint.com/Weather_Climate_Unit.html
Soil Science,
Weathering, Morehttp://sciencepowerpoint.com/Soil_and_Glaciers_Unit.htmlWater Unithttp://sciencepowerpoint.com/Water_Molecule_Unit.htmlRivers Unithttp://sciencepowerpoint.com/River_and_Water_Quality_Unit.html
= Easier = More Difficult = Most Difficult
5
th
– 7
th
grade 6
th
– 8
th
grade 8
th
– 10
th
gradeSlide145
Physical Science Units
Extended
Tour Link and Curriculum Guide
Science Skills Unit
http://sciencepowerpoint.com/Science_Introduction_Lab_Safety_Metric_Methods.html
Motion
and Machines
Unit
http://sciencepowerpoint.com/Newtons_Laws_Motion_Machines_Unit.html
Matter,
Energy, Envs. Unithttp://sciencepowerpoint.com/Energy_Topics_Unit.html
Atoms and Periodic Table Unithttp://sciencepowerpoint.com/Atoms_Periodic_Table_of_Elements_Unit.htmlLife Science UnitsExtended Tour Link and Curriculum GuideHuman Body / Health Topicshttp://sciencepowerpoint.com/Human_Body_Systems_and_Health_Topics_Unit.htmlDNA and Genetics Unithttp://sciencepowerpoint.com/DNA_Genetics_Unit.htmlCell Biology Unithttp://sciencepowerpoint.com/Cellular_Biology_Unit.htmlInfectious Diseases Unithttp://sciencepowerpoint.com/Infectious_Diseases_Unit.html
Taxonomy
and Classification Unit
http://sciencepowerpoint.com/Taxonomy_Classification_Unit.html
Evolution
/ Natural Selection Unit
http://sciencepowerpoint.com/Evolution_Natural_Selection_Unit.html
Botany
Topics Unit
http://sciencepowerpoint.com/Plant_Botany_Unit.html
Ecology Feeding Levels
Unit
http://sciencepowerpoint.com/Ecology_Feeding_Levels_Unit.htm
Ecology Interactions Unit
http://sciencepowerpoint.com/Ecology_Interactions_Unit.html
Ecology Abiotic Factors
Unit
http://sciencepowerpoint.com/Ecology_Abiotic_Factors_Unit.htmlSlide146
More Units Available at…
Earth Science
: The Soil Science and Glaciers Unit, The Geology Topics Unit, The Astronomy Topics Unit, The Weather and Climate Unit, and The River Unit, The Water Molecule Unit.
Physical Science
: The Laws of Motion and Machines Unit, The Atoms and Periodic Table Unit, The Energy and the Environment Unit, and The Introduction to Science / Metric Unit.
Life Science
: The Diseases and Cells Unit, The DNA and Genetics Unit, The Life Topics Unit, The Plant Unit, The Taxonomy and Classification Unit, Ecology: Feeding Levels Unit, Ecology: Interactions Unit, Ecology: Abiotic Factors, The Evolution and Natural Selection Unit and The Human Body Systems and Health Topics Unit.
Copyright © 2010 Ryan P. MurphySlide147
Thank you for your time and interest in this curriculum tour. Please visit the welcome / guide on how a unit works and link to the many unit previews to see the PowerPoint slideshows, bundled homework, review games, unit notes, and much more. Thank you for your interest and please feel free to contact me with any questions you may have. Best wishes.
Sincerely,
Ryan Murphy
M.Ed
ryemurf@gmail.com