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How are animals and plants like machines?

How are animals and plants like machines?

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# Unit Review: Anchoring Phenomenon
  • How do the owl’s body parts work together as a system?
  • How does information flow in the system?
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# Unit Review: Key Concepts
  • Muscles pull on bones to create movement.
  • Eyes are sensory organs that receive information about the world.
  • Light enters the eye, which provides information about surroundings.
  • The pupil gets larger to let more light in when it is dark.
  • The brain receives information from the senses, processes the information, and controls the muscles to enable movement.
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# Unit Review: Owl System Model

If you haven’t completed your final Owl System Model worksheet, now is the time to do so. We’ll review how the owl senses and responds to its environment in the next few slides.

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Step 1: Light reflects off the mouse and enters the owl’s eye. The eyes are sensory organs.

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Step 2: The information signal travels from the eye to the owl’s brain.

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Step 3: The owl’s brain processes the information and sends a signal to the muscles in the wings.

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Step 4: The owl’s brain also sends a signal to the muscles in its claws.

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Step 5: The owl’s muscles receive the signal and pull on the bones, creating movement. The wings flap and the claws contract.

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In today’s activity, you will use your owl system model to help you explain how another animal or plant senses information, processes it, and responds to its environment.

We’ll walk you through it, step by step.

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Image & Video Credits

Mystery Science respects the intellectual property rights of the owners of visual assets. We make every effort to use images and videos under appropriate licenses from the owner or by reaching out to the owner to get explicit permission. If you are the owner of a visual and believe we are using it without permission, please contact us—we will reply promptly and make things right.

Other
Angler Fish by BMC Evolutionary Biology Article
Bat by Image used under license from Shutterstock.com: rudmer
Empty Class Room by Image used under license from Shutterstock.com: Fotosr52
Great White Shark by Wikimedia User Terry Goss
Rattlesnake by Pixabay User
Sheet paper isolated by Image used under license from Shutterstock.com: Spacezerocom
Venus Flytrap by Wikimedia User Bjorn S

Activity Prep

Print Prep
In the Performance Task, students research another animal or plant. They create a system model to explain how the animal's or plant's parts work together as a system to receive information, process it, and respond to its environment.
Preview activity

Unit Review

20 mins

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