Making “sense” out of surface area to volume relationships
Author(s): Jenise Marie Snyder
Ursuline College
436 total view(s), 412 download(s)
- Lesson Plan - Making Sense of out Surface Area to Volume Relationships.docx(DOCX | 321 KB)
- Lecture Notes - Introduction to the Cell.pptx(PPTX | 138 KB)
- Activity - Making Sense out of Surface Area to Volume Ratios.docx(DOCX | 320 KB)
- Quiz - Surface Area to Volume.docx(DOCX | 22 KB)
- License terms
Description
Using a multimodal approach, students will explore the non-linear aspect of the surface area to volume relationship in a general biology course. Using their senses of taste and/or sight with different size candies that are coated (i.e. Reese’s Peanut Butter cups), student will determine how smaller cells and larger cells differ in these relationships. Students will identify the major ingredients as representing either surface area or volume, and identify their preference for small or large candies based on their size. In small groups, small and large circular cell areas and volumes will be calculated and relationships will be established. Cellular structures related to surface area (membrane) and the cell volumes (organelles) will be reviewed as well as the importance of being small. Concepts of multicellularity will be discussed. Examples along the biological hierarchy are provided and the relationship between structure and function will be discussed.
Cite this work
Researchers should cite this work as follows:
- Snyder, J. M. (2023). Making “sense” out of surface area to volume relationships. QUBES Educational Resources. doi:10.25334/QW67-ZS42