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Synthesizing Information
Quiz by VALERIE MANDOCDOC
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​Generating a new and bigger idea is going beyond the text.
​ A synthesis is recalling the author’s most important ideas from the text in order
Generating a new and bigger idea is going beyond the text.
A synthesis is recalling the author’s most important ideas from the text in order
A deeper understanding is becoming more aware or appreciative of an idea after reading a text
A synthesis is a summary, and a summary leads to synthesis
Synthesizing does not use critical thinkingÂ
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G8 SYNTHESIZING INFORMATION
Synthesizing Important Information from Various Sources
Synthesizing Important Information from Various Sources
TRUE/FALSE: Synthesizing Essential Information Found in Various Source
SB2. Obtain, evaluate, and communicate information to analyze how genetic information is expressed in cells. a. Construct an explanation of how the structures of DNA and RNA lead to the expression of information within the cell via the processes of replication, transcription, and translation. Learning Targets _______Identify the structural components of DNA and RNA Success Criteria _______Can accurately identify the key structural components of DNA (deoxyribose sugar, phosphate group, nitrogenous bases: adenine, thymine, cytosine, guanine). _______Can identify the key structural components of RNA (ribose sugar, phosphate group, nitrogenous bases: adenine, uracil, cytosine, guanine). _______Can describe the differences in the sugar backbone of DNA and RNA (deoxyribose vs. ribose). _______Can identify the double-stranded structure of DNA and the single-stranded structure of RNA. _______Identify the parts of protein synthesis and the location of each process Success Criteria _______Can identify and describe the two main processes of protein synthesis: transcription and translation. _______Can correctly explain that transcription occurs in the nucleus where DNA is transcribed into mRNA. _______Can explain that translation occurs in the cytoplasm at ribosomes where mRNA is translated into amino acid sequences to form proteins. _______Compare and Contrast DNA to RNA Success Criteria _______Can clearly identify similarities between DNA and RNA, such as both being nucleic acids and containing nucleotide structures. _______Can explain differences in DNA and RNA, including sugar types (deoxyribose vs. ribose), strand number (double-stranded DNA vs. single-stranded RNA), and nitrogenous base usage (thymine in DNA vs. uracil in RNA). _______Can describe the function of DNA as genetic storage and the function of RNA in protein synthesis (mRNA, tRNA, rRNA). _______Analyze the reasoning for enzymes usage in both DNA replication and protein synthesis. Success Criteria _______Can identify key enzymes involved in DNA replication (e.g., helicase, DNA polymerase, ligase) and explain their functions (e.g., helicase-unwinding DNA, DNA polymerase-synthesizing new DNA strands, ligase-sealing nicks in the DNA backbone). _______Can identify enzymes involved in protein synthesis (e.g., RNA polymerase) and explain their role in transcribing DNA into mRNA. _______Can analyze why enzymes are essential for speeding up chemical reactions…(ensuring accuracy, and catalyzing steps in replication and protein synthesis) _______Can provide specific examples of how enzyme malfunction can impact genetic replication or protein synthesis. _______Perform the steps of DNA replication and protein synthesis in order to demonstrate their understanding of how the structure of DNA supports the genetic expression in successive generations. Success Criteria _______Can demonstrate a step-by-step understanding of DNA replication, including unwinding, complementary base pairing, and proofreading. _______Can demonstrate the steps of transcription (formation of mRNA from DNA) and translation (conversion of mRNA into a polypeptide). _______Can show how DNA's structure (double helix, base pairing) ensures accurate replication for passing genetic information to offspring. _______Can illustrate how changes in DNA sequence can lead to changes in protein structure and function, thus affecting traits in successive generations.
Create 5 questions with 4 multiple choices A, B, C and D of the following text Understanding a text may require constant practice and good technique. One of the techniques is using an advanced organizer. Examples of advanced organizers include metaphors, analogies, flowchart, graphs, tables, illustrations, or even pictures. Understanding is synonymous to interpreting. When you interpret an advance organizer, you need to draw relationships of data, thus, forming a certain message or meaning out of the relationship drawn. It is vital for any advance organizer to use appropriate figures or symbols to stand for a certain data or idea. Just like writing like a short story, poem or song, it is important to label it with a title that usually bears the main idea in the whole graphic presentation. Using an advance organizer is like transferring what you have understood from the text with much lesser word used. As a result, you are summing up the bulk of information written in long sentences and paragraphs, synthesizing it into more important concepts or ideas in what you are reading.
Synthesizing
Synthesizing text