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Biology · JC 2

Active learning ideas

The Greenhouse Effect and Global Warming

Natural selection is the primary mechanism of evolution. This topic explores how variation, selection pressures, and differential reproductive success lead to adaptation. Students study examples like antibiotic resistance and the peppered moth to see evolution in action. In the JC2 syllabus, the focus is on the population as the unit of evolution, not the individual.

MOE Syllabus OutcomesH1 Biology 8876 Syllabus Extension Topic (a)H1 Biology 8876 Syllabus Extension Topic (b)
35–50 minPairs → Whole Class3 activities

Activity 01

Simulation Game50 min · Small Groups

Simulation Game: The Selection Game

Students use different 'beaks' (spoons, tweezers, clips) to collect 'food' (seeds, beads). Over several 'generations', they track which beak types survive and reproduce, calculating the change in 'population' traits.

How do greenhouse gases trap heat in the Earth's atmosphere?
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Activity 02

Inquiry Circle40 min · Small Groups

Inquiry Circle: Antibiotic Resistance Data

Groups analyze real-world data from local hospitals showing the rise of resistant bacteria over a decade. They must identify the selection pressure and explain the genetic basis for the shift.

What are the main human activities contributing to global warming?
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Activity 03

Formal Debate35 min · Whole Class

Formal Debate: Is Evolution Predictable?

If we 'replayed the tape of life', would we get the same results? Students debate the roles of random mutation versus deterministic selection pressures in shaping life.

How is climate data collected and interpreted?
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A few notes on teaching this unit


Watch Out for These Misconceptions

  • Individuals evolve to 'fit' their environment.

    Individuals are born with certain traits; they don't change them. Evolution is a change in the population's gene pool over generations. Using a 'before and after' population tally helps students see the shift.

  • Natural selection is a 'random' process.

    While mutations are random, selection is highly non-random, it favors traits that provide a survival advantage. A simulation where 'random' traits meet 'specific' environmental hurdles helps clarify this.


Methods used in this brief