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WK | LSN | TOPIC | SUB-TOPIC | OBJECTIVES | T/L ACTIVITIES | T/L AIDS | REFERENCE | REMARKS |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
1 | 4 |
EXCRETION AND HOMEOSTASIS
|
Introduction- Definition and importance of homeostasis and excretion.
|
By the end of the
lesson, the learner
should be able to:
To define homeostasis and excretion. To explain necessity of excretion in plants and animals. |
Q/A: Definitions of digestion, ingestion and egestion, secretion and excretion. Discuss importance of excretion in plants and animals. |
text book
|
K.L.B. BK 2
PP. 83-84 |
|
2 | 1 |
EXCRETION AND HOMEOSTASIS
|
Excretion in plants.
Excretion and homeostasis in unicellular organisms. |
By the end of the
lesson, the learner
should be able to:
To name plants excretory products. To state uses of excretory products of plants. |
Probing questions.
Exposition of new terms. Discuss uses and abuses of plant excretory products. |
Some plants excretory products.
text book |
K.L.B. BK 2
PP. 83-84 |
|
2 | 2-3 |
EXCRETION AND HOMEOSTASIS
|
Excretion and homeostasis in animals.
The mammalian skin. The lungs. The kidneys structure. |
By the end of the
lesson, the learner
should be able to:
To identify excretory organs in various animals. To explain the role of lungs as excretory organs. |
Exposition and discussion.
Observe drawings of various animals showing excretory organs. |
Specimens of platyhelmin-thes, annelida, insects.
Permanent slides of mammalian skin. Chart/ model- Mammalian lungs. Wall-Charts?internal organs of a kidney. |
K.L.B. BK 2
P. 85 K.L.B. BK 2 P. 87 |
|
2 | 4 |
EXCRETION AND HOMEOSTASIS
|
The nephron.
Urine formation. The loop of Henle. Kidney diseases and disorders. |
By the end of the
lesson, the learner
should be able to:
Describe features of the nephron. |
Discuss features of the nephron.
Draw structure of the nephron. Label the diagram. |
Chart?Kidney nephron.
chart Chart- The nephron. text book |
|
|
3 | 1 |
EXCRETION AND HOMEOSTASIS
|
The Liver.
Deamination. Other functions of the liver. Liver disorders. Homeostasis. |
By the end of the
lesson, the learner
should be able to:
To draw and label a diagram of the liver. |
Drawing and labeling diagram of the liver.
|
Chart-Structure of the liver
text book |
K.L.B. BK 2 PP 93-94
|
|
3 | 2-3 |
EXCRETION AND HOMEOSTASIS
|
The feedback mechanism.
The hypothalamus. The skin and thermoregulation. Blood vessels and their functions in thermo-regulation. Homeostatic behavioral activities. Osmoregulation. Blood sugar. Diabetes. |
By the end of the
lesson, the learner
should be able to:
To differentiate between positive and negative feedback and state their roles in maintaining the desirable point. To explain the adaptation of blood vessels and their function in thermo-regulation. |
Schematic representation of feedbacks.
Exposition and discussion. Exposition and discussion. Drawing schematic diagrams. |
Chart-
Schematic diagram of feedback mechanism text book text book text book,video |
K.L.B. BK 2 PP 97-98
K.L.B. BK 2 PP 98-99 |
|
3 | 4 |
CLASSIFICATION II
|
Introduction and Principles of Classification
|
By the end of the
lesson, the learner
should be able to:
Explain the importance of classification of organisms. Discuss the general principles of classification. Identify features used to classify organisms. Define taxa and taxon. |
Q/A: Review of Classification I concepts. Discussion of classification criteria - structural similarities and differences. Q/A: Features for animals (body symmetry, coelom, appendages) and plants (vascular system, reproductive structures).
|
Charts - Classification features, Taxonomic units
|
Certificate Biology Form 3, Pages 1-2
|
|
4 | 1 |
CLASSIFICATION II
|
Binomial System of Nomenclature
Hierarchy of Taxa |
By the end of the
lesson, the learner
should be able to:
Define species and explain binomial nomenclature. Explain the rules of binomial naming system. Give examples of scientific names. State advantages of binomial nomenclature. |
Detailed explanation of binomial system with two names (genus and species). Practice writing scientific names correctly - italics, capitalization rules. Q/A: Examples from Table 1.1 - human, chimpanzee, plants.
|
Charts - Examples of scientific names (Table 1.1), Practice writing materials
Charts - Taxonomic pyramid (Fig 1.1), Wall charts showing hierarchy |
Certificate Biology Form 3, Pages 2-3
|
|
4 | 2 |
CLASSIFICATION II
|
Five Kingdom System
|
By the end of the
lesson, the learner
should be able to:
Identify the five kingdoms of organisms. State general characteristics of each kingdom. Compare modern classification with earlier systems. Explain changes in classification systems. |
Teacher exposition of five kingdoms: Monera, Protoctista, Mycota, Plantae, Animalia. Discussion using Table 1.2. Q/A: Why systems change - bacteria, fungi, algae reclassification.
|
Charts - Table 1.2 characteristics, Five kingdom comparison chart
|
Certificate Biology Form 3, Pages 4-5
|
|
4-5 |
Midterm Exams |
|||||||
5 | 3 |
CLASSIFICATION II
|
Kingdom Monera - Introduction
Bacteria - Structure and Characteristics |
By the end of the
lesson, the learner
should be able to:
State characteristics of Kingdom Monera. Define prokaryotic organisms. Give examples of Monera. Distinguish prokaryotes from eukaryotes. |
Detailed discussion of Monera characteristics - unicellular, prokaryotic, no organelles. Exposition of bacteria and blue-green algae as examples. Q/A: Differences between prokaryotes and eukaryotes.
|
Charts - Prokaryote vs eukaryote comparison, Microscope images
Charts - Fig 1.2 bacterial structure, Drawing materials, Microscope |
Certificate Biology Form 3, Page 5
|
|
5 | 4 |
CLASSIFICATION II
|
Bacterial Types and Shapes
|
By the end of the
lesson, the learner
should be able to:
Classify bacteria according to shape. Identify different bacterial arrangements. Give examples of each bacterial type. |
Study of bacterial shapes using Fig 1.3: coccus (spherical), bacillus (rod), vibrio (comma), spirillus (spiral). Discussion of arrangements - pairs, chains, clusters.
|
Charts - Fig 1.3 bacterial types, Microscope, Prepared bacterial slides
|
Certificate Biology Form 3, Pages 6-7
|
|
6 | 1 |
CLASSIFICATION II
|
Bacterial Reproduction and Economic Importance
Blue-green Algae |
By the end of the
lesson, the learner
should be able to:
Describe bacterial reproduction by binary fission. Explain economic importance of bacteria. Identify harmful and useful bacteria. Give examples of bacterial diseases. |
Exposition of asexual reproduction by binary fission. Discussion of harmful bacteria - diseases (tuberculosis, typhoid, cholera). Q/A: Useful bacteria - decomposition, nitrogen fixation, antibiotics.
|
Charts - Binary fission diagram, Disease-causing bacteria table, Specimens of antibiotics
Charts - Fig 1.4 Anabaena, Microscope, Water samples from local sources |
Certificate Biology Form 3, Pages 6-7
|
|
6 | 2-3 |
CLASSIFICATION II
|
Kingdom Protoctista - Introduction
Protozoa (Protista) Algae - Characteristics and Types |
By the end of the
lesson, the learner
should be able to:
State characteristics of Kingdom Protoctista. Identify the two sub-kingdoms. Give examples of protoctists. Distinguish from other kingdoms. State characteristics of algae. Classify algae according to pigments. Give examples of different algal types. Explain their habitats. |
Teacher exposition of Protoctista characteristics - eukaryotic, mostly unicellular. Discussion of two sub-kingdoms: Protozoa and Algae. Examples from Table 1.3.
Discussion of algae as aquatic autotrophs. Classification by pigments: green, brown, red algae. Study of Fig 1.6 examples. Q/A: Thallus structure, holdfast, photosynthetic pigments. |
Charts - Protoctista characteristics, Table 1.3 examples
Charts - Fig 1.5 protozoa, Table 1.3 diseases, Microscopes, Pond water samples, Glass slides, Drawing materials Charts - Fig 1.6 algae types, Specimens of different algae, Hand lenses |
Certificate Biology Form 3, Page 8
Certificate Biology Form 3, Pages 9-10 |
|
6 | 4 |
CLASSIFICATION II
|
Economic Importance of Algae
Kingdom Mycota (Fungi) - Introduction |
By the end of the
lesson, the learner
should be able to:
Explain ecological importance of algae. State economic uses of algae. Describe role as primary producers. |
Discussion of algae as primary producers in aquatic ecosystems. Q/A: Food source for aquatic animals, oxygen production. Economic uses in food industry, cosmetics.
|
Charts - Aquatic food chains, Algae products, Ecosystem diagrams
Charts - Fungal characteristics, Specimens of mushrooms, bread moulds |
Certificate Biology Form 3, Pages 10-11
|
|
7 | 1 |
CLASSIFICATION II
|
Fungal Structure and Reproduction
|
By the end of the
lesson, the learner
should be able to:
Describe structure of fungi. Explain fungal reproduction. Identify different types of fungi. Examine fungi practically. |
Study of fungal structure using Fig 1.7 - hyphae, mycelium, sporangia. Practical examination of bread moulds under microscope. Students observe and draw fungal structures. Safety: Handle specimens with forceps.
|
Charts - Fig 1.7 fungi, Microscopes, Bread mould specimens, Forceps, Glass slides, Drawing materials
|
Certificate Biology Form 3, Pages 11-12, 29
|
|
7 | 2 |
CLASSIFICATION II
|
Economic Importance of Fungi
Kingdom Plantae - Introduction Plant Phyla Overview |
By the end of the
lesson, the learner
should be able to:
Explain harmful effects of fungi. Describe useful roles of fungi. Give examples of fungal diseases. State uses in industry. |
Discussion of harmful fungi - plant diseases (wheat rust), human diseases (thrush, ringworm), food spoilage. Q/A: Useful fungi - decomposers, food production, medicines, brewing.
|
Charts - Fungal diseases, Specimens of useful fungi, Food products made using fungi
Charts - Plant characteristics, Live plant specimens, Plant cell diagrams Charts - Table 1.4 plant phyla, Specimens of mosses, ferns, flowering plants |
Certificate Biology Form 3, Pages 12-13
|
|
7-8 |
End term Exams |
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