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Warm Up Question

Warm Up Question. Wednesday: Warm Up Question. In a randomly breeding population of mice, 640 had black fur and 360 had brown fur. Black fur is dominant to brown fur. The Hardy-Weinberg Principle (p 2 + 2pq + q 2 = 1) can be used to calculate allele and phenotypic frequencies.

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Warm Up Question

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  1. Warm Up Question

  2. Wednesday: Warm Up Question • In a randomly breeding population of mice, 640 had black fur and 360 had brown fur. Black fur is dominant to brown fur. The Hardy-Weinberg Principle (p2 + 2pq + q2 = 1) can be used to calculate allele and phenotypic frequencies. • Calculate the frequency of the recessive allele. • Calculate the number of homozygous black mice in the sample.

  3. Activity: Dialysis Tubing, Starch, Iodine and Agar with DyeActivity: Diffusion Activity with Agar and Various Dyes

  4. Activity: Dialysis Tubing and Corn Syrup • Fill the dialysis tubing with different solutions of starch, iodine, and water and place the tubes into beakers with different solutions of starch, iodine, and water. • Formulate a hypothesis about what you think will happen when you drop the dialysis bag into the solution.

  5. Activity: Dialysis Tubing and Corn Syrup • In what ways can you relate this to the curriculum? • In what ways can you related this to your students’ every day lives?

  6. Activity: Agar and Dye • With your agar plate and a cork borer, core out six evenly spaced holes in the agar and fill them with the dyes as quickly as you can. • If you have trouble removing the agar cores, use a toothpick, but take care not to tear the agar. • Let the dyes diffuse for approximately 45 minutes. • When finished, mark the edges of the dye with a sharpie and measure in mm. • Keep track of your time in seconds.

  7. The Exam

  8. AP Biology New Exam Design

  9. The Exam Breakdown: • Total test time is 180 minutes. • 90 minutes for: • 63 Multiple Choice--choose the correct answer based on the information presented. • 6 Grid-in questions--mathematical calculations, then bubble in the answer. • 80 minutes + a 10 minute reading period for: • 8 free response questions: • 2 multi-part-related to the lab experience = 25% of grade • Questions 1 & 2: 10 points each--multi-part, related to the lab experience. • 6 single-part-general biology stuff. • Questions 3,4 & 5: 4-points each • Questions 6,7, & 8: 3-points each

  10. The Exam Breakdown: • When you open the practice exam, you’ll notice that the 2008 version has 100 MC questions. It’s an old version with some questions for you because in the past people have indicated they needed extra questions. • The 2012 version has 63 MC questions and is a sample test released before the 2013 exam. • https://www.collegeboard.org/

  11. The Exam Breakdown: • The 2013 version is an actual operational exam and only has 53 multiple choice questions and 5 grid-ins. This is because not all of them count; ETS uses them for other purposes that they don’t explain to us--most likely they are for test development. • All FRQ’s are used and have been released. • https://www.collegeboard.org/

  12. The Exam Breakdown: • Historically, students have had difficulty articulating their arguments and explaining the evidence--writing! • “Explain,” “describe,” and “justify” content knowledge posed difficulty for students. • Power Commands. • Students also have had difficulty using math--low scores on the grid-in questions. • Some of this may be due to the difficulty understanding what to do--how to fill in the answer.

  13. The Exam: • Students are permitted to use 4 function calculators on the exam. • Have them practice with these on things you do in class--don’t let them use their graphing calculators. • Can get them at the dollar store.

  14. The Exam: • The formula sheet is included for the students. • It is in the front of the practice exam. • Copy this and give it to your students for use on every test so they get familiar with it.

  15. The Exam: • Read and answer the first 10 questions of the practice exam and the first 2 grid-in questions. • Then turn to page 30 of your Workshop Workbook and read the directions. • When you are finished, answer the questions on pages 31-33. • Can you identify the Learning Objective to which the question belongs? If so, write it next to the question.

  16. Activity: Collect the Data from your Diffusion Activities.

  17. Activity: The Exam MC and Grid-in Questions

  18. The Exam: • With the other participants, identify the Big Idea, Science Practice, and Learning Objective to which each of the first 5 multiple choice and the first grid-in exam question addresses. • This will help you to become more familiar with the Big Ideas, Science Practices, and Learning Objectives and should help you guide your teaching and syllabus development.

  19. Activity: The Exam Free-Response Questions

  20. The Exam: Free-Response Questions • Let’s look at the Free Response Questions. • Read through questions 7 and 8 and provide a skeleton of an answer of what you think the key points should be. • Turn to pages 38 and 39 and answer the questions. • Decide whether or not you think you are covering the content in enough depth to enable your students to answer these questions successfully. • Next, look at the scoring guidelines associated with these questions. Do you cover the material thoroughly enough to allow your students to construct answers to these questions?

  21. The Exam: • Grading the short answer questions is one of the drawbacks to giving students practice with them. • The key to grading them is to do it distraction free. • Spend a few minutes with the key, and then grade! I can usually grade 60 tests in about 45-60 minutes. • Don’t get bogged down on how bad it is! • Hide out!

  22. Formative Vs. Summative Assessment: • Do you know the difference? • Do you use these effectively in your class? • Do you feel as though you have to grade everything you assign? • Some assessments can be used by the students as they grade each other. • You can give guidance to them as you go through some of the answers to the assessments with them. • Give them participation points!

  23. Activity: Graphing

  24. Using Excel • Write your measurement data from the dye diffusion activity on the board. • Using your computer, enter the data into Excel to allow you to analyze the data. • When finished, await further instructions for calculating averages, standard deviations, and for putting error bars onto your graph. You will use this analysis to support or refute your null hypothesis.

  25. Some Useful Websites • Go here to become a member of the Teacher Community List Serve: • http://apcentral.collegeboard.com/apc/public/homepage/4340.html • To access other useful information, go here: • http://apcentral.collegeboard.com/home • For information about the course audit • http://www.collegeboard.com/html/apcourseaudit/courses/biology.html • For information about the new course and exam • http://advancesinap.collegeboard.org

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