Thursday, June 30, 2022

AP Bio Instructional Adjustments after attending the 2022 AP Read

 

The view from Loews Hotel in Kansas City, MO.

This year, I went to the in person Read for the first time.  Readers always say that doing the Read will make you a better AP teacher. I want to make sure to reflect on my learning now while it is fresh in my mind to get the most out of the experience. 

I read last year, but it was virtual. After last year's Read, my big take away was to tell students to write more. Not off topic and don't contradict yourself, but make sure to answer the whole question in detail. So often I'd be reading an FRQ and although the student was going in the right direction, they were missing a little piece of critical information and didn't earn the point. There were other students who wrote an answer, and then added a little more detail in another sentence, and often times, the information required for the point was in that second sentence. 

Being in person left me with so much more to reflect on, or at least being trained on and reading the two FRQs that I did gave me plenty to consider. Here are a few:

1. If the FRQ has a data table that includes SEM, make sure to talk about statistical significance in your answer (and don't leave out the word statistical). It's also fine to talk about overlapping error bars. 

2. Remember, even if the means look different, if error bars overlap, the means are the SAME.

3. Be more specific in your answers. Keeping it general will not earn you any points. And keep track of what the question is actually asking. (I know this is a challenge when students feel time pressured.)

4. If asked to describe how some process will happen, make sure to describe the process from beginning to the very end. Don't stop half way through the process. To me, this is one of the biggest takeaways. 

5. I'm planning to find more data sets that are graphed best with scatter plots. I'll do some scouring of Data Points in HHMI Biointeractive such as Patterns of Predation. In fact, I may encourage students that when in doubt, graph a scatter plot and add a line of best fit if they feel they must.

6. Spend less time on how the processes happen correctly and more time asking students what will happen if something goes wrong along the way.

7. The independent and dependent variables should never be one word answers. 

Thursday, January 20, 2022

Hot Potato Lab


This year, my school is teaching our high school Biology classes through College Board's Pre-AP program. Even my Honors Biology class is going through Pre-AP Biology. One of the concepts that I have to teach with this curriculum that I haven't before at this level is Surface Area to Volume ratio in the context of how it plays a role in the size of cells. 

I teach this in AP Biology and we do the Surface Area to Volume diffusion lab using agar with phenolphthalein and sodium hydroxide and soak different sized cubes in dilute hydrochloric acid. I love this lab, but don't want to do it with my honors bio students, since they would do it again in AP Bio. So of course, I did a google search and found this hot potato inquiry lab




From the lab linked above (which is the answer key to the lab), I put together a google doc for my students to work with. Here is the link to that lab document.

I loved this lab, and I'll be keeping it in my curriculum for sure. Like many of the labs I do with students, I was so busy helping them trouble shoot and prepare that I forgot to take pictures. 

My students liked this lab because they got to use our Vernier temperature probes, and they love to use the probes. Since they used probes, students could just poke the probe right into the potato. They could also see through graphing the data what was happening with the rate of temperature loss. (But maybe this made me more excited than them.)



Here are some tips for the lab. I forgot to bring a crockpot to keep the potatoes hot during the day and I didn't cook them ahead of time. I have an incubator in my room whose maximum temperature is 60°C. In the morning, I put them in the incubator. Right before this last block class I put the potatoes in my classroom microwave for 5 minutes to make sure they were cooked all the way (soft), then put them back into the incubator until students needed them. The key is that they start with the potatoes hot. Even just being in the 60°C incubator was enough to keep the potatoes warm enough for the lab. 

None of the potatoes started at the same temperature, but that didn't matter since we were looking at the rate of temperature change for each of the potatoes.  Students used Google Sheets to collect their data and then graphed a scatter plot, added trend lines and the equation of the trend line. We then discussed how the slope of the trend line is the rate of heat loss from each potato.