Gateway To Technology (GTT) Detailed Outline
This outline is a living document and will be adjusted at needed for success in the class.
Unit 8: Medical Detectives
Lesson 1.1 What is Engineering?
Understandings
1. An engineering notebook is used to record original ideas or designs and to document the design process related to an invention or innovation.
2. A portfolio is an organized collection of best works.
3. Science is the study of the natural world, while technology is the study of how humans develop new products to meet needs and wants.
4. Teams of people can accomplish more than one individual working alone.
5. Technological change is seen through inventions, innovations, and the evolution of technological artifacts, processes, and systems.
6. Technology can have positive and negative social, cultural, economical, political, and environmental consequences.
7. Engineers, designers, and engineering technologists are needed in high demand for the development of future technology to meet societal needs and wants.
Knowledge and Skills
It is expected that students will:
· Utilize standard procedures to use and maintain an engineering notebook.
· Use guidelines for developing and maintaining an engineering notebook to evaluate and select pieces of one’s own work for inclusion in a portfolio.
· Describe the relationship between science, technology, engineering, and math.
· Identify the differences between invention and innovation.
· Operate as an effective member of a team to complete an investigation.
· Describe engineering and explain how engineers participate in or contribute to the invention and innovation of products.
· Describe impacts that technology has had on society.
Lesson 8.1 What is a Medical Detective?
Understandings
1. Patient health can be evaluated in a variety of ways, including collecting a patient's medical history and testing vital signs.
2. An epidemic is an infectious disease that spreads rapidly and sickens a large number of people.
3. Medical professionals use a sequential, logical process to evaluate, diagnose, and treat patients.
4. A variety of health care professionals and scientists investigate medical mysteries.
Knowledge and Skills
It is expected that students will:
· Measure vital signs including heart rate, blood pressure, and temperature.
· Demonstrate the use of technology as an important tool in the Biomedical Sciences.
· Explain the different ways a virus spreads through a population.
· Describe the spread of a viral illness after inoculation is introduced.
· Evaluate patient case files to diagnose the pathogen responsible for the patient’s mystery illness.
· Describe the steps that a medical professional will take to diagnose and treat a patient.
· Provide examples how medical professionals contribute to the health and wellness of individuals.
Lesson 8.2 Mysteries of the Human Body Systems
Understandings
1. The nervous system collects and interprets input from the outside world using specialized receptors.
2. The brain is a complex organ that is organized into specialized regions.
3. The expression of a genetic trait through families highlights the varying patterns of genetic inheritance.
4. The unique sequence of a person’s DNA can be utilized for a variety of purposes including testing for a genetic disease.
5. A mutation in the sequence of nucleotides in DNA may cause a genetic disease.
Knowledge and Skills
It is expected that students will:
· Describe how the brain collects and interprets input.
· Compare and contrast the senses of hearing and sight, taste and smell and how they are collected and processed by the human body.
· Identify major regions of the human brain.
· Dissect a sheep’s brain, accurately identifying and describing the function of the specified structures.
· Compare and contrast the brains of a human and sheep.
· Evaluate patient family history as part of a medical exam and create a pedigree.
· Determine the probability of a child inheriting a genetic disease.
· Use appropriate laboratory methods to isolate DNA from cheek cells.
· Analyze how changes in the huntingtin gene affect the resulting protein and nerve cell function.
Lesson 8.3 Murder Mystery
Understandings
1. Body temperature can be used as one way to determine the approximate time of death.
2. An autopsy can provide clues to the circumstances surrounding a mysterious death.
3. Human DNA is a unique code of over three billion base pairs that provides a genetic blueprint of an individual.
Knowledge and Skills
It is expected that students will:
· Know how to use patient and ambient temperature to identify the time of death.
· Know how to use the time of death information to identify suspects.
· List the steps of an autopsy.
· Analyze a portion of an autopsy report to determine the cause of death for a murder victim.
· Use DNA gel electrophoresis to compare DNA samples.
· Defend identification of suspect using physical evidence including time of death, cause of death, and DNA crime scene analysis.
This outline is a living document and will be adjusted at needed for success in the class.
Unit 8: Medical Detectives
Lesson 1.1 What is Engineering?
Understandings
1. An engineering notebook is used to record original ideas or designs and to document the design process related to an invention or innovation.
2. A portfolio is an organized collection of best works.
3. Science is the study of the natural world, while technology is the study of how humans develop new products to meet needs and wants.
4. Teams of people can accomplish more than one individual working alone.
5. Technological change is seen through inventions, innovations, and the evolution of technological artifacts, processes, and systems.
6. Technology can have positive and negative social, cultural, economical, political, and environmental consequences.
7. Engineers, designers, and engineering technologists are needed in high demand for the development of future technology to meet societal needs and wants.
Knowledge and Skills
It is expected that students will:
· Utilize standard procedures to use and maintain an engineering notebook.
· Use guidelines for developing and maintaining an engineering notebook to evaluate and select pieces of one’s own work for inclusion in a portfolio.
· Describe the relationship between science, technology, engineering, and math.
· Identify the differences between invention and innovation.
· Operate as an effective member of a team to complete an investigation.
· Describe engineering and explain how engineers participate in or contribute to the invention and innovation of products.
· Describe impacts that technology has had on society.
Lesson 8.1 What is a Medical Detective?
Understandings
1. Patient health can be evaluated in a variety of ways, including collecting a patient's medical history and testing vital signs.
2. An epidemic is an infectious disease that spreads rapidly and sickens a large number of people.
3. Medical professionals use a sequential, logical process to evaluate, diagnose, and treat patients.
4. A variety of health care professionals and scientists investigate medical mysteries.
Knowledge and Skills
It is expected that students will:
· Measure vital signs including heart rate, blood pressure, and temperature.
· Demonstrate the use of technology as an important tool in the Biomedical Sciences.
· Explain the different ways a virus spreads through a population.
· Describe the spread of a viral illness after inoculation is introduced.
· Evaluate patient case files to diagnose the pathogen responsible for the patient’s mystery illness.
· Describe the steps that a medical professional will take to diagnose and treat a patient.
· Provide examples how medical professionals contribute to the health and wellness of individuals.
Lesson 8.2 Mysteries of the Human Body Systems
Understandings
1. The nervous system collects and interprets input from the outside world using specialized receptors.
2. The brain is a complex organ that is organized into specialized regions.
3. The expression of a genetic trait through families highlights the varying patterns of genetic inheritance.
4. The unique sequence of a person’s DNA can be utilized for a variety of purposes including testing for a genetic disease.
5. A mutation in the sequence of nucleotides in DNA may cause a genetic disease.
Knowledge and Skills
It is expected that students will:
· Describe how the brain collects and interprets input.
· Compare and contrast the senses of hearing and sight, taste and smell and how they are collected and processed by the human body.
· Identify major regions of the human brain.
· Dissect a sheep’s brain, accurately identifying and describing the function of the specified structures.
· Compare and contrast the brains of a human and sheep.
· Evaluate patient family history as part of a medical exam and create a pedigree.
· Determine the probability of a child inheriting a genetic disease.
· Use appropriate laboratory methods to isolate DNA from cheek cells.
· Analyze how changes in the huntingtin gene affect the resulting protein and nerve cell function.
Lesson 8.3 Murder Mystery
Understandings
1. Body temperature can be used as one way to determine the approximate time of death.
2. An autopsy can provide clues to the circumstances surrounding a mysterious death.
3. Human DNA is a unique code of over three billion base pairs that provides a genetic blueprint of an individual.
Knowledge and Skills
It is expected that students will:
· Know how to use patient and ambient temperature to identify the time of death.
· Know how to use the time of death information to identify suspects.
· List the steps of an autopsy.
· Analyze a portion of an autopsy report to determine the cause of death for a murder victim.
· Use DNA gel electrophoresis to compare DNA samples.
· Defend identification of suspect using physical evidence including time of death, cause of death, and DNA crime scene analysis.