Teacher: Abeer Obeid
|
Date:
|
Subject / grade level: DIGESTIVE SYSTEM/ Grade 9
|
Materials:
1. Sponge to represent the stomach
2. Rope to represent the SI
3. Plastic bag to represent the stomach
4. Crackers
5. Soda to represent the gastric juice
6. Stress ball the bolus
7. Socks to represent the esophagus
8. 2 Handouts: One to be filled during watching the
video; One as evaluation
9. Screen for the video to be watched.
|
Lesson
objective(s):
Content:
Students will
Process skills:
Students will
|
Differentiation
strategies to meet diverse learner needs:
The activity is differentiated by:
|
ENGAGEMENT (Can be in the form of a
Do Now, after like Demo, clip, question, etc.)
·
Describe how the teacher will capture
students’ interest.
·
What kind of questions should the students
ask themselves after the engagement?
Put the
following Questions on the first slide (or in the board)
What
is the one thing you do everyday?
What
happens when you eat?
Where
does this food go?
How
does a big bite go through your body?
Students
need to reach to the points of:
We
eat to get energy.
Food
passes by our system.
The
system breaks down food into small pieces.
BUT
HOW WILL THE FOOD BE BROKEN DOWN TO PIECES?
|
EXPLORATION
Show the
student using a rope, a sponge and a sock how does the digestive system look
from the outside.
What
happens when you eat your food?
·
When
you put these crackers in your mouth what is the first thing you do? – use
our teeth to cut them into pieces.
·
Where
do they pass then? – through the esophagus (using a stress ball and a sock
show how the food pass)
·
Where
will the food reach then? – the stomach
·
What
is the juice we find inside the stomach? – gastric juice which is acidic.
·
Explore
what will happen inside the stomach.
o Provide each group of students with a plastic bag
with zipper and give the students crackers.
o How will the crackers reach the stomach? Which
shape? – students will need to cut the crackers into pieces.
o We said that inside the stomach, we will have a
juice which is made up of the same as soda. So what will it include? – Acid
o The stomach needs to send to the intestine very
small soluble molecules, so what do you think it does to give the intestine
what it needs?
o How does the stomach work?
|
EXPLANATION (Next Period)
Students will watch a
video:
Students will be asked to
fill in a sheet of paper as they are watching the video.
Questions will be asked
from within their answers after the end of the video:
·
What is the importance of
digestion?
·
Where will the food pass?
·
What is the name of the
mechanical digestion taking place in the mouth?
·
What are the names of the
enzymes responsible for: Proteins, Fat, Carbohydrates?
·
Where does the chemical
digestion for each of the following food types start?
|
ELABORATION
With the aid of a
poster, I will be mentioning the following information summing up all the
activities which was taken place to make sure I target the students who can
only learn by the teacher’s words.
In our body, 2 types of
digestion take place: Chemical and mechanical.
The mechanical
digestion is an aid for the food where it breaks down food into smaller
parts:
The chemical digestion
break down the big molecules of proteins, fat and carbohydrates into smaller
molecules as nutrients to be absorbed into the blood stream.
|
EVALUATION
The class will be divided
into four groups of students each will need to prepare a cardboard. Each
group will be responsible for a topic and the cardboard will be hanged on the
wall:
·
Group 1: The chemical
digestion of food
·
Group 2: the mechanical
digestion of food
·
Group 3: the different
enzymes responsible for different types of protein.
·
Group 4: the track of
food into the digestive system.
A worksheet is to be
given to the students to solve. This worksheet targets 2 different aspects of
Bloom’s taxonomy: the analytic part and the creative part. Attached to the
Lesson plan.
|
Monday, October 27, 2014
Lesson Plan: Digestion
Subscribe to:
Post Comments (Atom)
Good work Abeer!
ReplyDelete