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TE Activity: Endocrine Excitement! Contributed by: Integrated Teaching and Learning Program, College of Engineering, University of Colorado at Boulder
Learning Objectives (Return to Contents) After this activity, students should be able to:
Materials List (Return to Contents) To share with the entire class:
Introduction/Motivation (Return to Contents) Communication is important for everyone! It's a great skill for you, astronauts and engineers alike to have. Why do you think communication is important? Well, communication helps engineers, astronauts and anyone to get ideas across to each other. Astronauts need to be able to communicate with ground control on Earth while they are exploring space. If we could not communicate, then we could not let others know what we are thinking, or when we are sad or happy. Engineers would not be able to let you know what cool new technologies they have designed to help people out. In fact, engineers are the ones who design all the cool new technologies that help us communicate with friends far away, like cell phones, emails and text messaging. In our activity today, we are going to see one way that the body actually communicates with itself ─ through hormones. Hormones help our body know what to do. They are part of our body's communication system ─ called the endocrine system. The endocrine system helps messages travel throughout our body so that our body can do all the different things it needs to do. There are four main parts to this endocrine system, glands, hormones, bloodstream and receptors. Glands make and send hormones through the bloodstream to specific receptor sites. These hormone messages tell our body to do things like make more blood cells, digest food, absorb vitamins or even grow. There has to be one specific receptor site for each hormone message, otherwise your glands might tell your stomach to produce more blood cells or your bones to digest food. That would not work! When a hormone matches up with its specific receptor, then the body knows what it is supposed to do next. It is kind of like receiving a letter in the mail. One of the most fascinating things about hormones is how incredibly specific they are! In fact, hormones act like real puzzle pieces, or like a lock and key. Sometimes, when you are putting together a puzzle, you can force a puzzle piece in next to another piece when it is not really meant to fit there. But, hormones and receptors are not quite like that: they have to match up perfectly, or they will not send a message. Today, we are going to do an activity that will help us learn more about how the hormones and receptor sites fit together like puzzle pieces. You are going to be either a hormone or a receptor. If you are a receptor, you will stand still and wait for your hormone to come and find you. If you are a hormone, you will search around the classroom until you find the receptor that is a perfect match for you. Are you ready? Let's get started! Vocabulary/Definitions (Return to Contents)
Procedure (Return to Contents) Before the Activity
With the Students
Safety Issues (Return to Contents) Remind students to be careful not to bump into each other when moving around the classroom. Troubleshooting Tips (Return to Contents) If there are an uneven number of students in the class, the teacher may need to participate. Assessment (Return to Contents) Pre-Activity Assessment Discussion Topic: Talk with students what it means to have a specific receptor site. Compare it to the child's toy where you fit the shapes into the different holes. Can they think of examples of specificity in their own lives? (One clear example is a lock and key, but encourage them to come up with other ideas.) Activity Embedded Assessment Formation: As a way to actively engage all students and assess their knowledge, have them all participate in the activity of matching hormones to receptor sites. Closely observe students as they interact with each other in this activity and notice if they seem to be grasping the concepts of specificity and hormone-receptor interactions. Post-Activity Assessment Telephone Game: Play the game "telephone" with the students. Have all the students stand in a circle. Whisper, "Engineers need good communication to talk about new technologies" in the first student's ear. Have that student turn to the person next to her/him and whisper the message to them. Continues whispering the message around the circle until it is relayed to the last person. The message can only be given once to each student. Have the last student say the message they heard aloud to the whole class. See how much the message has changed. Discuss with the students how communication can be a problem when it goes through many receptor sites. This is why the endocrine system makes hormones that can only relay a message to one receptor site. When engineers design new technologies for communication, they need to understand how signals and messages can get changed if there are too many middle receptor sites as well. Ask the students if they can think of any times in their own lives when a message has been messed up because of bad communication. Review Discussion: Review with the students what they learned. Discuss again how communication is so important for astronauts, engineers and for them. Discuss why it is such a good thing that the hormones in our bodies only match up with specific receptors. (This is good because it ensures that the hormones tell the "right" cells what to do.) Activity Extensions (Return to Contents) A related activity might be to have the students act out the "mail delivery" system of the endocrine system. One student could be the mail carrier, and several students could be the endocrine glands and write out "hormone" instructions for the "receptor" students to read. Once the mail carrier delivers the mail to the correct students, the "receptor" students could read the "mail" and then tell other "body" students what to act out. Activity Scaling (Return to Contents) For upper grades, you may design a more complicated system of interactions. For example, have one hormone-receptor pair interact with another pair, or create a chain-reaction of interactions. For lower grades, you may use matching shapes, or matching colors instead of puzzle pieces. References (Return to Contents) U.S. Department of Health and Human Services, National Institutes of Health, National Institute of Child Health and Human Development, "Study of Growth Hormone Treatment and Creutzfeldt-Jacob Disease Underscores Need for Prevention of Adrenal Crises," http://www.nichd.nih.gov/new/releases/growth_hormone.cfm - accessed June 1, 2006. Contributors Melissa Straten, Abigail Watrous, Malinda Schaefer Zarske, Janet YowellCopyright © 2006 by Regents of the University of ColoradoThe contents of this digital library curriculum were developed under a grant from the Fund for the Improvement of Postsecondary Education (FIPSE), U.S. Department of Education and National Science Foundation GK-12 grant no. 0226322. However, these contents do not necessarily represent the policies of the Department of Education or National Science Foundation, and you should not assume endorsement by the federal government. Supporting Program (Return to Contents) Integrated Teaching and Learning Program, College of Engineering, University of Colorado at BoulderLast Modified: September 26, 2008
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