Human and Social Biology Lesson 2
Human and Social Biology Lesson 2
Human and Social Biology Lesson 2
SOCIAL BIOLOGY
and biology
CHARACTERISTICS OF LIVING THINGS AND
CELLS
Objectives
At the end of this session students will be able to:
Describe the characteristics of living organisms.
Compare the structures of an unspecialized plant and animal cells and selected
microbes(virus, bacteria, fungi)
State the functions of cell structures( cell wall, cell membrane, nucleus, ribosomes,
cytoplasm, mitochondria, vacuoles, chloroplasts and endoplasmic reticulum).
Identify selected cells which make up the human body: epithelial, sperm, egg cells,
nerve cells muscle cells.
Explain the importance of cell specialization in humans
Distinguish between osmosis and diffusion.
Explain the importance of osmosis, diffusion and active transport in living systems.
What Is Biology ?
Biology is the natural science that focuses on the study of life
and living organisms, including their structure, function,
development, interactions, evolution, distribution, and
taxonomy.
A permanent increase
in size and dry mass
by an increase in cell
number or cell size
or both
RESPIRATION
Respiration is known
as, the release of energy
from food. When we
breathe we take in
Oxygen. Oxygen is
used to produce energy.
IRRITIBILITY /SENSITIVITY
The change
in location or
position of
the whole
organism or
part.
NUTRITION
The
obtaining
or making
of food.
EXCRETION
Reproduction is
the passing on of
genetic
information from
one generation to
another.
Assessment
S
organisms
What is Biology?
Why is the study of Human and Social Biology important?
What are the 7 characteristics of living things?
What is the basic unit of life?
What is cell specialization?
State two differences between the plant cell and the animal cell