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Summit Biology Honors, Semester 1 (SCI204A)

Summit Biology Honors, Semester 1 (SCI204A)

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Quick Overview

This high school science course provides students with a challenging honors-level biology curriculum, focusing on the chemistry of living things: the cell, genetics, evolution, the structure and function of living things, and ecology. The program consists of advanced online lessons including extensive animations, an associated reference book, collaborative explorations, and hands-on laboratory experiments students can conduct at home. Honors activities include debates, research papers, extended collaborative laboratories, and virtual laboratories.

Teacher-Led Course (one-time payment)   $450.00

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Course Overview

This course provides students with a challenging honors-level biology curriculum, focusing on the chemistry of living things: the cell, genetics, evolution, the structure and function of living things, and ecology. The program consists of advanced online lessons including extensive animations, an associated reference book, collaborative explorations, and hands-on laboratory experiments students can conduct at home. Honors activities include debates, research papers, extended collaborative laboratories, and virtual laboratories.

 

Course Outline

SEMESTER ONE

Unit 1: The Science of Biology

Students explore biology as one of the sciences and confront the concepts of scientific methods. After exploring scientific processes as they apply to biology, students examine what "life" means as they investigate the characteristics that all living things share. Students then look at the importance of energy, what kinds of energy are significant when considering living things, and the relationship of structures of living things to their functions.

  • Introduction
  • Biology and Scientific Methods
  • Scientific Processes
  • Laboratory: Using a Microscope
  • The Characteristics of Life
  • Energy and Life
  • Structure and Function

Unit 2: The Chemistry of Life

Students explore the chemical basis for life by examining the most important groups of organic compounds: carbohydrates, proteins, lipids, and nucleic acids. Students then examine water and how it is important for living things. In each case, students focus on the relationship of the molecular structure of compounds to its function in living things.

  • Chemistry Review
  • Chemical Bonds
  • Carbon and Life
  • Organic Compounds and Trace Elements
  • Ions in Living Things
  • Useful Chemicals from Living Things
  • Water
  • Laboratory: Investigating Biological Compounds 1
  • Simple Carbohydrates
  • Complex Carbohydrates
  • Lipids
  • Amino Acids and Proteins
  • Levels of Protein Structure
  • Proteins as Enzymes
  • Nucleic Acids
  • ATP

Unit 3: Cell Biology

Students now are able to begin looking at the structure and function of living things. They begin with an exploration of the cell. They confront the structure of the cell, its membranes and organelles. In particular, they look at the processes by which cells gather and make energy available, focusing on the activities of the mitochondrion and the chloroplast. Students then proceed to look at cellular reproduction and study the processes of meiosis and mitosis.

  • The Cell and Life
  • Cell Structure
  • Cell Organelles
  • Two Types of Cells
  • Cell Membrane Structure
  • Movement Across Membranes
  • Passive Transport
  • Active Transport
  • Laboratory: Determining the Rate of Diffusion 1
  • Laboratory: Determining the Rate of Diffusion 2
  • Glycolysis and Fermentation
  • The Krebs Cycle
  • The Electron Transport System
  • Light and Photosynthesis
  • Photosynthesis and Glucose
  • Chemical Energy and Life
  • Respiration and Photosynthesis
  • Laboratory: The Rate of Photosynthesis 1
  • Reproduction and Development
  • Mitosis
  • Laboratory: Observing Mitosis
  • Cell Differentiation
  • Cell Specialization
  • Sexual Reproduction
  • Meiosis I
  • Meiosis II

Unit 4: Mendelian Genetics

Students learn about the work of Gregor Mendel as a way of studying modern genetics. They perform genetic crosses and begin to see how traits are inherited. As they examine Mendelian genetics more closely, they see the relationship between inheritance and chromosomes and between genes and alleles. This unit prepares students to go deeper into genetics at the molecular level.

  • The Work of Gregor Mendel
  • Mendelian Inheritance
  • Laboratory: Genetic Crosses 1
  • Pedigrees
  • Laboratory: Gene Mapping
  • Chromosomes and Genes
  • Genes and Alleles
  • Genetic Variation

Unit 5: Molecular Genetics

The chemical basis for genetics is one of the cornerstones of modern biology. In this unit, students understand the relationship between DNA, RNA, and proteins, and what this has to do with genes and inheritance. After establishing a firm basis in molecular genetics, students are able to understand modern applications of genetics, including biotechnology and genetic engineering.

  • DNA, RNA, and Proteins
  • Structure of DNA
  • Structures of RNA
  • DNA Replication
  • Transcription
  • Laboratory: Modeling DNA
  • Laboratory: Modeling DNA Replication
  • DNA Makes RNA
  • RNA Makes Protein
  • The Genetic Code

Unit 6: Semester 1 Review and Test

Students prepare for and take the semester test.

Unit 7: Honors Project 1: Research Paper

An independent research paper gives honors students the opportunity to explore biology topics in depth. Students select one of five topics to research and then develop a paper reporting on their topic.

  • Planning Your Research Paper
  • Finding and Using Information for Your Paper
  • Organizing Notes and Developing an Outline
  • Writing Your Paper
  • Creating a Works-Cited Page
  • Revising and Proofreading the Research Paper

Unit 8: Honors Project 2: Extended Lab: Rate of Photosynthesis

This honors project extends the Rate of Photosynthesis Lab so that students test the effects of an additional variable, light, as well as heat. Students model communication and collaboration of the scientific community by collecting and sharing data in an online shared spreadsheet. They benefit from multiple sets of data and repeated trials rather than a single set of their own data. Students download and graph the data then discuss outliers, experimental error, and other factors related to experimental design.

SEMESTER TWO

Unit 1: Gene Expression

In this unit, students explore the process by which the DNA-RNA relationship builds proteins. Then students learn how the process of proteins synthesis is controlled, a process called gene expression. Students then are able to understand modern applications of genetics, including biotechnology and genetic engineering.

  • Introduction
  • Proteins Express DNA
  • How Proteins Work
  • Gene Expression
  • Biotechnology
  • Genetic Engineering

Unit 2: Evolution

Evolution is the central organizing principle of biology. Students learn about the concept of evolution and the underlying principles of natural selection. Once they have mastered the fundamental principles, they see how modern evolution is a science that includes gene changes over time as the underlying mechanism for evolution.

  • Evolution and Biology
  • Evolution of Populations
  • Multiplying Variation in Populations
  • Types of Natural Selection
  • History of Evolutionary Thought
  • Evidence for Evolution
  • Evolution and Earth History
  • Laboratory: The Process of Natural Selection
  • Genetic Basis of Evolution
  • The Hardy-Weinberg Equation
  • Geographic Isolation
  • Genetic Isolation

Unit 3: Survey of Living Things 1

Students learn about the structure and function of living things by examining three representative organisms: a flatworm, a fern, and a human. In doing so, students examine processes such as digestion and respiration, comparing and contrasting how living things obtain food, break down food, eliminate waste, and obtain and use oxygen.

  • Classification and Taxonomy
  • Modern Classification
  • Laboratory: Dichotomous Key
  • Viruses and Prokaryotes
  • Protists and Fungi
  • Animals
  • Plants
  • Three Representative Organisms
  • Getting Energy
  • Digestion
  • Digestion in Humans
  • Laboratory: Human Digestion Actions
  • Waste Removal
  • Waste Removal in Humans
  • Obtaining Oxygen
  • Oxygen and the Human Body

Unit 4: Survey of Living Things 2

Students continue their examination of living things, focusing on three representative organisms. They explore the nervous and muscular systems and see how these systems aid in responding to the organism's environment. Students then examine various aspects of reproduction among living things and finish with a study of defense.

  • How Organisms Monitor Their Environments
  • Human Nervous System
  • Feedback Mechanisms
  • How Living Things Respond to Their Environments
  • Muscular Systems
  • How Muscles Contract
  • Laboratory: Chicken Muscles
  • Fern Reproduction
  • Flatworm Reproduction
  • Human Reproduction
  • How Organisms Defend Themselves
  • Human Immune Response
  • Plant Defenses

Unit 5: Ecology and the Environment

As students have moved through this curriculum, they have learned about living things, their structure, and functions. In this unit, they confront organisms in relation to their environments. Students study living things and the ecosystems in which they live, examining both the biotic and abiotic components of the world in which organisms exist.

  • Individuals and Populations
  • Communities
  • Ecosystems
  • Ecosystem Stability
  • Biomes
  • Biodiversity
  • Energy Flow in Ecosystems
  • Food Chains and Food Webs
  • Succession
  • Laboratory: Patterns of Succession
  • Changes in Ecosystems
  • Water and Nitrogen Cycles
  • Carbon and Oxygen Cycles
  • Laboratory: Fixation in Root Nodules
  • Laboratory: The Effects of Acidity on Seed Germination
  • Natural Resources
  • Environmental Challenges
  • Global Temperatures
  • Pollution

Unit 6: Semester 2 Review and Test

Students prepare for and take the semester test.

Unit 7: Honors Project 1: Virtual Lab: Antibiotic Resistance

Antibiotic resistance describes how the effects of antibiotics on certain bacteria weaken or become ineffective over time. Students investigate antibiotic resistance by conducting an experiment in the K12 Virtual Science Lab.

  • Virtual Lab: Antibiotic Resistance

Unit 8: Honors Project 2: Issues in Science: Online Debate

Research and technology produce new information and capabilities, as well as great responsibility. The scientific community wrestles with the question, "Just because we can, does that mean we should?" Examining all sides of an issue can sometimes bring together everyone's opinions. Other times, people just have to agree to disagree. Different sides of an issue can be examined with a debate. This project is an opportunity for students to examine current scientific issues and express opposing viewpoints through structured debate. Students work in collaborative teams to develop and present a case online. Teamwork and sharing ideas are emphasized; students meet online or in person.

  • Debates: A Different Way to Argue
  • Gathering Evidence
  • Building a Case
  • Reasoning and Refutation
  • Effective Debating Strategies
  • Debate: Constructive Argument
  • Debate: First Rebuttal
  • Debate: Second Rebuttal
  • Debate: Summary Argument

Additional Information

Course Length 4 Months
Prerequisites N/A
Course Materials

Many K12 courses utilize physical materials in addition to the online content.  These materials may include the following.


K12
Standard Kits

STANDARD kits contain K12 course materials that are required for completion of the course.  These kits include K12 authored materials and/or difficult to procure materials that a student needs to complete a course. Printed reference guides are not included in Standard kits.


Consumable
Materials

CONSUMABLE kits contain only those materials from the standard kit that are intended for one time use. Families who purchase a Standard kit for Child A could later purchase a Consumable kit for Child B to complete the same course.


Additional
Materials

Offered for added convenience, ADDITIONAL kits contain easily obtained materials needed for the course which a family may already have in their home. 


Learning
Coach and/or Student Reference Guides are available for purchase with some courses.  Electronic versions of these reference guides are also available within digital courses.

Course Start Date

Courses Taught by a K12 Teacher

Courses with a teacher have designated start dates throughout Fall, Spring, and Summer. Full-year courses last 10 months and semester courses last 4 months. Courses are taught by teachers in K12 International Academy. For details on start dates, click here.

Teacher Assisted Yes, this course is taught by a K12 International Academy teacher. If you are looking for a teacher-supported option with additional flexibility and year-round start dates, click here to learn about the Keystone School, another K12 online private schooling option.
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To use this course, you'll need a computer with an Internet connection.  Some courses require additional free software programs, which you can download from the Internet.

Hardware and Browsers (Minimum Recommendations)

Windows OS

  • CPU: 1.8 GHz or faster processor (or equivalent)

  • RAM: 1GB of RAM

  • Browser: Microsoft Internet Explorer 9.0 or higher, Mozilla Firefox 10.0 versions or higher, Chrome 17.0 or higher

  • At this time our users are encouraged not to upgrade to Windows 10 or Edge (the new browser)

 

Mac OS

  • CPU: PowerPC G4 1 GHz or faster processor; Intel Core Duo 1.83 GHz or faster processor

  • RAM: 1GB of RAM

  • Browser: Firefox 10.0 versions or higher, Chrome 17.0 or higher (Safari is not supported!)

Internet Connections

It is highly recommended that a broadband connection be used instead of dial up.

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