Tuesday, October 18, 2022

Why Do Leaves Change Color in the Fall?

 

Why do leaves change color in the fall? This is the question I posed to my ten-year-old daughter when we took a short trip to Maine this month. I gave her the assignment of doing some research on the topic and writing a response. When I read what she had written, I thought that she had done very well with her explanation. I told her that we should share it with others, who might enjoy learning from what she had written. She suggested I post it on my blog, so here it is! The following piece and the photo of foliage above were done by her.

The leaves change color in the fall because the leaves start producing less chlorophyll. If you are wondering, chlorophyll is a chemical that makes leaves green. Chlorophyll is responsible for photosynthesis, when plants take in water and carbon dioxide and use sunlight to make sugar to feed themselves. In the fall, there is less sunlight, which means less photosynthesis for the plants and less need for chlorophyll. When this happens, the trees prepare to go dormant in the winter. Without chlorophyll, the green leaves start turning into red, orange, yellow, and brown leaves. As the chlorophyll breaks down, the carotenoids, orange-yellow and brown pigments, and anthocyanin, red and purple pigments, are revealed and/or created. (Most anthocyanin is created in the fall.) That is why sometimes the leaves are not solid colors, but a mix of colors because the carotenoids and the anthocyanin are slowly being revealed and/or created while the chlorophyll breaks down.

I hope that you enjoyed reading my daughter's work and perhaps learned something, too!

If you are interested in other blogposts related to science topics we explored while on vacation, here are a couple of links:

Snow Science: Freezing and Melting Points the Same?!



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Monday, October 10, 2022

Personality Quiz with Plant Cell Parts

                                                                                                                            Updated March 5, 2024

You can use a fun personality quiz to get your students better acquainted with the parts of a plant cell. What plant cell part best matches each of their personalities? Do your students like finding out information and passing it on like mRNA does? Maybe they are full of energy, like the mitochondria, or leaders, like the cell nucleus. When I created this activity for my sixth- and seventh-graders last year, I was pleasantly surprised by how much they enjoyed it!


As I was preparing my lessons for a return to school after a long Spring Break, I wanted to come up with an activity that would ease students back into their studies and provide a review of cell parts. We had already completed the Cell City project on animal cells, and I wanted to reinforce what they had learned about plant cells. A friend shared with me the idea of relating cell parts to different types of people. My daughter had been taking various personality quizzes and suggested I create one for my students related to cell organelles. This turned out to be a great idea!


The plant cell personality quiz I created has a very simple format: a Google slideshow with personality types on each slide, all referring to the last slide, which reveals which plant cell part the student would be. The last slide also includes a description of what the cell part does. Here is an example of one of the personality type slides:



After discovering which cell parts they would be, students report their results on a Google Form. They explain why their personality matches the cell part. Students also need to report the result of one peer and give their opinion of whether the cell part is a good match for their peer’s personality. Grading this assignment was fairly easy because in Google Forms, you can view the quiz results in a spreadsheet, allowing you to view all the students' results at the same time.



Before giving students the personality quiz, I told them that I had some guesses about what their personality quiz results would turn out to be. As they completed the quiz and I asked them about their results, I found that I had guessed correctly on many though some were a surprise! As students shared their results with me and one another, this activity turned out to be a way to not only review plant cell organelles but also to connect with one another.


I have posted this Plant Cell Personality Quiz for free on TPT. Here's the link:


Plant Cell Personality Quiz on TPT


If you are interested in a project related to cell parts, follow this link:


Cell City: Cell Organelles Project


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