ALEX Lesson Plan

     

Human Nervous System

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  This lesson provided by:  
Author:Stephanie Carver
System: Cullman City
School: Cullman City Board Of Education
The event this resource created for:ASTA
  General Lesson Information  
Lesson Plan ID: 34835

Title:

Human Nervous System

Overview/Annotation:

This inquiry-based lesson allows students to explore how our bodies use our voluntary and involuntary nervous systems to make our bodies function. 

This lesson results from a collaboration between the Alabama State Department of Education and ASTA.

 Associated Standards and Objectives 
Content Standard(s):
Science
SC2015 (2015)
Grade: 4
10 ) Obtain and communicate information explaining that humans have systems that interact with one another for digestion, respiration, circulation, excretion, movement, control, coordination, and protection from disease.

Unpacked Content
Scientific And Engineering Practices:
Obtaining, Evaluating, and Communicating Information
Crosscutting Concepts: Systems and System Models
Disciplinary Core Idea: From Molecules to Organisms: Structures and Processes
Evidence Of Student Attainment:
Students:
  • Obtain information explaining that humans have systems that interact with one another for digestion, respiration, circulation, excretion, movement, control, coordination, and protection from disease.
  • Communicate information explaining that humans have systems that interact with one another for digestion, respiration, circulation, excretion, movement, control, coordination, and protection from disease.
Teacher Vocabulary:
  • communicate
  • articulate
  • obtain
  • structure
  • function
  • interactions
  • digestion
  • respiration
  • circulation
  • excretion
  • movement
  • control
  • coordination
  • protection
  • disease
  • body systems
Knowledge:
Students know:
  • Humans have systems that interact with one another.
  • The purpose, functions, and interactions of the digestive system.
  • The purpose, functions, and interactions of the respiratory system.
  • The purpose, functions, and interactions of the circulatory system.
  • The purpose, functions, and interactions of the excretory system.
  • The purpose, functions, and interactions of the systems that contribute to movement, control, and coordination.
  • The purpose, functions, and interactions of the systems that protect the body from disease.
Skills:
Students are able to:
  • Obtain information by reading and comprehending grade-appropriate complex texts about the interacting systems in the human body.
  • Evaluate information about interactions and functions of human body systems by comparing and/or combining across complex texts and/or other reliable media.
  • Communicate information orally and/or in written formats about interactions and functions of human body systems.
Understanding:
Students understand that:
  • The body is a system of interacting parts that makes up a whole and carries out functions its individual parts can not.
AMSTI Resources:
AMSTI Module:
Animal Studies

Alabama Alternate Achievement Standards
AAS Standard:
SCI.AAS.4.10- Identify human systems (i.e. digestive, circulatory, and respiratory).


Local/National Standards:

Scientific and Engineering Practices: Obtaining, Evaluating, and Communicating Information

Crosscutting Concepts: Systems and System Models

Primary Learning Objective(s):

Learning Targets:

  • I can identify that the human body has systems that interact with one another.
  • I can communicate that the voluntary and involuntary nervous system makes my body function.

Additional Learning Objective(s):

 
 Preparation Information 

Total Duration:

61 to 90 Minutes

Materials and Resources:

  • rubber ball
  • 1 ruler per group of students
  • masking tape
  • student notebooks

Technology Resources Needed:

Background/Preparation:

 
  Procedures/Activities: 

Engage

Show students National Geographic’s “Weird But True” fun facts on the human body. http://kids.nationalgeographic.com/explore/adventure_pass/weird-but-true/humanbody2/#WBT2_180.png 

Think/Pair/Share

What do you know about the human body?  Do you know any fun facts?  Give the students a few minutes to discuss with their partner and then share aloud.

Explore

Ask for a volunteer to come sit in a chair facing the class with her back to you.  Stand behind the student and clap your hands loudly.  More than likely, the student will jump.  Ask the class:  Why did she jump when I clapped?  Explain to the students that what they just witnessed was a case of feedback in action.  Feedback is the process in which our brains take in information and then use it to send information back to different parts of our bodies that control our actions.  Ask the class:  What system in our bodies sends messages back and forth from the brain?  (the nervous system) 

Explain that the nervous system is made up of two parts—the voluntary nervous system is the part that we can control and the involuntary nervous system is the part that simply happens inside us all the time.  The involuntary part of our nervous system uses feedback to keep our bodies functioning properly, and most of the time we don’t even know it is going on.  Think/Pair/Share different functions our body performs that are a part of our involuntary nervous system. (heart beating, breathing, etc.)  Discuss how breathing is part of the involuntary nervous system.  Sensors in your body constantly monitor the level of carbon dioxide and oxygen in your blood, sending information to the brain.  If the oxygen level drops compared to the amount of carbon dioxide, the brain sends a message to the heart to start pumping faster so that your breathing rate increases.  This happens when you start exercising.  Once the levels of oxygen in the blood come back to normal, the brain tells your heart to slow down and your breathing rate drops.

Toss a rubber ball to a student volunteer.  Ask the class: How did he know when and where to catch the ball?  (His eyes sent a message to his brain, and the brain sent a message to the hands to move to the correct spot.) Was this a voluntary or involuntary response?  (voluntary)  He didn’t have to catch the ball but chose to make the catch.  He used feedback to make this happen.

Give each group of students a ruler.  The students will be testing their reaction times using the ruler.  One person will hold the ruler at the top while the other partner places his or her hands at the bottom of the ruler without touching it.  The person holding the ruler by the top will drop the ruler saying when he is dropping it.  The person taking the test will try to catch the ruler when it begins to fall by clapping his hands together.  He will record where he grabbed the ruler on a chart like the one below in his notebook.  The lower the number, the faster the reaction time.  The students will repeat these steps on one another for 10 trials each. 

Reaction Time Data Chart

Trial 1

cm

Trial 2

cm

Trial 3

cm

Trial 4

cm

Trial 5

cm

Trial 6

cm

Trial 7

cm

Trial 8

cm

Trial 9

cm

Trial 10

cm

Explain

Students can answer the following questions in their notebooks then use them in a class discussion.

  1. Based on your data, did your reaction time change over the 10 trials?  How so?
  2. Is reaction time a voluntary or involuntary response?  Explain.
  3. Explain how feedback helped you catch the ruler.  What steps had to happen in order for your hand to react in time to catch the ruler?

Elaborate

Ask the students to test how their sense of balance is impacted by spinning around a few times.  Put a 3-feet long piece of masking tape on the ground in a straight line.  Have the students line up at one end and walk the line.  Have them do it again but slowly spin around a few times before walking.  Discuss how even though most feedback systems in our bodies are designed to adjust to changing conditions, they don’t always work as well as you might want them to. 

Evaluate

The student responses on to the discussion questions in their notebooks can be used as a formative assessment.  Teacher observation should be ongoing throughout the lesson. 


  Assessment  

Assessment Strategies

This is an introductory lesson so ongoing formative assessment should take place throughout the student discussion time.

The science notebook answers can be used as an assessment to ensure the standard has been met.

Acceleration:

Ask the students to develop their own experiment to test how exercise affects our heart rate.  The students should communicate that exercise increases our heart rate.  Ask the students to explain if the increase of our heart rate is voluntary or involuntary.  

Intervention:

It may be helpful to preview the vocabulary that will come up in the lesson. Providing the terms on cards would help students to visualize the word as they hear you say it during the lesson (nervous system, voluntary, involuntary, feedback, reaction).

Students may draw what they see happening in their notebooks instead of writing their answers for the discussion time.


View the Special Education resources for instructional guidance in providing modifications and adaptations for students with significant cognitive disabilities who qualify for the Alabama Alternate Assessment.
Alabama State Department of Education