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Monday, December 31, 2012

Last post for 2012 ... two family picts!

Today, I worked most of the day on my AP Biology syllabus and sent it to the college board for approval.  This was part of the 2012-2013 AP Biology audit.  This course has changed ... less content but more depth (18 Chapters removed ... most of the animal science, most organ systems and almost all the plant science) and revised labs (now 13 investigations).  I posted the revised syllabus on my school website this evening ... about 30 pages ... I know, a little much!

I worked on my website tonight ... www.patscience.com ... I am shutting down my pages on softball and cross country ... time to move on.  I am currently working on updating the AP Biology page and will continue this during the spring semester.

Lots of birds visiting our feeders today, dozens of golden finches and sever black-capped chickadees ... took a walk to Long Creek this afternoon in a light rain ... lots of deer out feeding.

AP starts up Wednesday ... I am looking forward to a Spring teaching AP without having to coach!

Two family picts to end the year ...  one is a picture of my sister's and our children arranged from oldest to youngest and below, my Dad (Shorty) with his grandchildren.





Wednesday, December 26, 2012

Books for Christmas ... yeah!

Christmas has come and gone.  We had all three of our children and their spouses in for Christmas and it is always fun to see them and hear their stories.  We took several walks on the farm.



I received three books for Christmas ... THANKS!

Across Many Mountains by Yangzom Brauen (a family's story about their escape from Tibet and life in exile)
The Forest Unseen by David George Haskell (professor at the University of the South - Sewanee)
The Appalachian Trail by The Appalachian Trail Conservancy (a coffee table book ... but the pictures and story, WOW!)
Most unique gift was from Sue's Uncle Glen ... a piece of amber with a bee in it!
We had a very good Christmas!

I hope my AP Bio students will get to work on their Christmas assignment now that Christmas is over ... Lots of work to do before May!  Don't forget to take some notes for the discussion questions at the end of the assignment sheet!  Good luck!

We have started feeding the birds (sunflower seed).  We keep one feeder close to the house ... lots of juncos, golden finches (brownish green in the winter), cardinals, titmouse, red-bellied and hairy woodpeckers, nuthatches, bluejays and many more ... mostly finches below.  Some better pictures later!




Thursday, December 20, 2012

Brass Caroling and snow ...

What a difference a day makes.  Yesterday was 65 degrees and beautiful all day.  I checked all our beehives and started our tractor to do some work outside.  Today, cold and raining  ...  now snowing.

We had brass caroling tonight ... a tour on the town square, a few houses, the YMCA and rest homes.  Only playing once a year limits my sousaphone skills but as the evening wears on, I seem to regain some ability beyond embarrassment.  The musical effort each Christmas is headed up by former ACS band director, Sam Kent and his friend Ken Goforth.  It is always fun and several former students home for Christmas usually show up.  This year Hannah was home and got to participate ... we ended the musical tour and the Foster house for chili.  Picture below, is part of the group caroling tonight.




Tuesday, December 18, 2012

Semester is over and Squid Lab

We continued to have AP Biology students today pick up their books and reading assignment for Christmas vacation.  We are going to get through the ecology in two or three days.  We will be facing a new curriculum this year in AP Biology after over 20 years.  Several new labs ... human organ systems out with the exception of immune, endocrine and nervous systems ... most plant chapters are out with the exception of flowering plants and hormones.  Emphasis will be on inquiry, molecular, evolution and homeostasis.  Seven of the old labs stay with revisions and six more, now called investigations, are mostly new for a total of 13 investigations.  Two are computer only labs.
Should be a challenge but, fun!

Today we wrapped up some grading in Genetics ... handed back the finals from Monday.

In Selected Topics we used our Squid Lab for our final.  The dissection took the entire period with external and internal drawings / labeling.  A good way to end the course.  We had six students duck the last day of school that needed to take the final!

In computer programming today,  I had some students show me their programs they were still trying to finish.


I had to clean up the lab after school so got home late.   Pictures from today below ...














Monday, December 17, 2012

Last day of school 2012 tomorrow ...

Today, we had our final in Genetics ... we will hand it back tomorrow and tie up some loose ends ... students are suppose to bring in some breakfast for fun!

In Selected Topics, we finished our Chemistry / Gunpowder Lab and worked on our human organ system unit ... muscles and bones.  Tomorrow, we end up with a squid dissection.

Computer programming did a peer review of projects today ... lots of simple games and a very good job by many programmers!  We will wrap up some odds and ends to finish the course tomorrow.

It has been a good semester ... on to AP Biology and a new Selected Topics class in the Spring semester.

Faculty dinner tonight ...

AP Biology students for Spring 2013 need to pick up their Christmas reading assignment and book tomorrow!


Sunday, December 16, 2012

Finals start tomorrow ...

Our finals are tomorrow and Tuesday.

Genetics will be taking their final tomorrow over the last five chapters we covered to finish the book.  Good luck.  On Friday, we finished our BLAST lab which is a new lab in AP Biology this Spring.

In Selected Topics, we will finish the write up on our Chemistry: Gunpowder Lab. We had great results from every lab group ... picts tomorrow.  We also will prep our squid dissection for Tuesday and finish our organ systems study tomorrow.

In Computer Programming we begin the peer review of student projects.  This was our final in this class and several of the projects looked great!

Sue Neal and I attended our oldest nephew's graduation from NKU on Saturday.  Was good to see the family and proud of Jay.

Grading papers tonight ... want to wrap that up by Tuesday!


Wednesday, December 12, 2012

School today ...

Today at school in genetics, we worked to finish the discussion questions on our last two chapters but have a few left for tomorrow.  Tomorrow we are doing one of the new labs for AP ... using the BLAST software tool to analyze DNA sequences ... http://blast.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/Blast.cgi

Selected Topics continued their work on human organ systems ... today, reproductive and circulatory.  Tomorrow we will begin the Best of Kentucky Daniel Boone Gunpowder Making Contest.  A short chemistry unit on balancing chemical equations.

I checked the last Visual BASIC problem of the year ... working on student generated projects and we will check on Monday to finish the course.

Sue Neal and I did some Christmas shopping after school today and had supper with John and Claire before getting home to check on Granny.  Four more school days until Christmas!

Tuesday, December 11, 2012

Bumblebees, Club Schedule and books ...

Today was Club Schedule at our school which means students were out of most of my classes.  We were able to have the Selected Topics class third block.

Genetics tomorrow will finish their Ricki Lewis Human Genetics book with discussion questions on mutations, non-disjunction and prehistoric man.  We are going to try to get our BLAST lab done on Thursday and Friday. Our final is on Monday.

Selected Topics finished their Plant vocabulary and started on human organ systems.  Today was the digestive system and the biochemistry of digestion.  Tomorrow, will be circulatory system and reproduction.  We will have a short chemistry unit Thursday and Friday before returning to organ systems the last two days before Christmas break.

Tomorrow in computer science we will check our last program on invisible clickable objects.  Our final projects will be peer reviewed on Monday ... a few students have already finished their projects!

I got home in time for a walk to Long Creek this evening ... still a little damp from the nearly 4 inches of rain we got Sunday and Monday.  Birds were busy but not many animals stirring around.

I got an interesting book recently on bumble bees ... actually two for our habitat restoration project for pollinators this spring.  The first is Befriending Bumble Bees (ordered from Xerces Society).  We are planning to build some bumble bee boxes and there is a lot of great information in this book about rearing bumble bees.

Bumble Bees of the Eastern United States is the other book (from Pollinator Partnership).  Great for identification of different species!  Some good reading and food for thought this winter before the bees get busy in the spring.






Monday, December 10, 2012

Tree Lab and Gene Regulation ...

This morning in Genetics, we went over gene regulation ... lac operon, trp operon, transcription factors and more.  Tomorrow is club schedule and all of the genetics class will be gone.  On Wednesday, we will work to finish our book ... Mutations, Nondisjunction and Hominids.  We are trying to squeeze in one more lab on Thursday and Friday.

Selected Topics finished their unit on Plants with a Tree Lab ... we calculated leaf surface area and mass of a maple tree and worked on vocabulary.  We will will finish this tomorrow and start our review to our final.

Helped a student on his checker program today ... took up most of the block.  We will have several out of this class tomorrow for club schedule.  We will check our last problem which is on invisible objects on Wednesday.  Projects due next Monday.

Had to go to the dentist today and still fighting off a cold.  Below is a picture from our Big Bird Test last week in Selected Topics in Science.  How can you care about the environment if you don't know what is out there!



Sunday, December 9, 2012

Angle pod milkweed pods ...

Last week in science we finished up our study of milkweed, milkweed ecology and a review of the many insects and spiders that frequent milkweed.  One activity was the dissection and quantification of milkweed pods.  Below are angle pod milkweed and common milkweed pods.  The angle pod (climbing) milkweed pods were larger as were their seed and floss.

Genetics found 231 seeds per pod in common milkweed and Selected topics 206.  It seem that the increase in pod weight only slightly yielded more seeds.  We made tables of our data and graphed some of the information, not shown.  Below is a comparison of angle pod milkweed (below) with common milkweed (top)

We will be start this seed in our high school greenhouse this spring and use the plants for our habitat restoration for pollinators project ... multiple sites across Allen County.




Yellowjackets and old honey

About a week ago, I got rid of some old honey by spreading the honey on some old comb in open frames.  Our honey bees soon found it and were there in numbers.  However, some other visitors showed up for the feast.  Even though we have had a few cold days and some temps as low as 25 F, yellowjackets are still around.



Saturday, December 8, 2012

5 Trees and Milkweed Lab wraps up!

In Genetics Friday, we worked on finishing our book ... Chapters 9 and 10.  We had discussion questions and sample MC questions from our AP book.  Monday will be Chapter 11 and 12.  That leaves only one chapter to finish our Ricki Lewis book.  We will try to squeeze in one additional lab next week.  Club schedule is Tuesday so we won't be able to have class that day.

In Selected Topics, we had Mr. Chris Vernon, former certified forester and now teacher at AC-S HS join us for 5 trees of importance in Allen County ... tulip poplar, oaks, shagbark hickory, sugar maple and sassafras.  Afterwards, we finished our milkweed lab with analysis of pods and graphing our results.  Below students working on pod analysis and seed removal.
Monday we will finish our plant unit and spend the rest of the time in chemistry.

We checked or programs in computer programming on Friday.  One week to go and almost all students are working on their student generated final project.  Looks like some good programs!

Getting some much needed rain this evening with a little thunder and lightning.




Thursday, December 6, 2012

Flies, Fastplants and Milkweed Seed

In Genetics today, we finished up our Drosophila Lab with the Chi Square Analysis of data.  We accepted the null hypothesis on our sex-linked white-eye cross but did not for our dihybrid cross using sepia eye and vestigial wings ... although we got some great results ... all in all we sorted and counted over 1600 flies over parts of two days.

Also in Genetics, we finished up our lab extension on our fast plant crosses ... our F2 generation nearly maintained our F1 population gene frequency ... our Chi Square Analysis as close enough to accept the null hypothesis ... this lab took over six weeks to complete ... a long haul for a HS lab.

In Selected Topics, we started our Milkweed Lab by dissecting pods and collecting data to graph ... results tomorrow.  We also had a dispersion contest ... congrats to all the winners.

We started checking our last Visual BASIC problems in Computer Science today ... great programming ... many students are working on their final project.


Tuesday, December 4, 2012

Milkweed seed extraction continues

Today in Genetics, we wrapped up our seed extraction and pod analysis of common milkweed.  I will post our data tomorrow.  We wrapped it up with a seed dispersion contest which was won by Katie ... single seed with floss with the help of a small fan ... a distance of 14 feet.  This activity is part of our habitat restoration for pollinators scheduled for this Spring.

In Selected Topics today we researched milkweed ecology in preparation of our lab on Thursday.

Tomorrow the juniors are going to see Lincoln, the movie.  That takes nearly everyone out of my genetics and selected topic classes tomorrow.

Visual BASIC continues in computer programming.  Problems today included multiple timers used in gaming.






Monday, December 3, 2012

Angled pod milkweed ... found.

Still waiting on picture posting / memory problem ... it continues ...

Juniors will be out of school to the Lincoln movie on Wednesday.

In genetics, we finished our restriction enzyme lab today.  Tomorrow, we will be finish our fastplant / Hardy Weinberg Lab by counting our F2 plants.  We will be checking to see if the gene frequency stayed the same from one generation to the next.

http://www.carolina.com/dna-gel-electrophoresis-kits/restriction-enzyme-cleavage-of-dna-4-station-student-kit/211148Y.pr

In Selected Topics, we worked on plant taxonomy,  milkweed ecology and watched a short film on pollinators.  Tomorrow we are going to the Mac Lab to do some research for our Milkweed Ecology Lab on Thursday.

We have a couple of students that are finished with the last set of Microsoft Visual BASIC problems and are working on their final projects.  We will start checking problems on Wednesday.  Student generated projects will be due during finals.

Got in a walk after school to Long Creek ... found two angled pod (climbing) milkweed plants.  I collected some of the pods for seed and will start them in the greenhouse for our pollinator project in the Spring.  Picture of climbing milkweed below ... http://extension.missouri.edu/p/ipm1021-6

Sorry about no picts ... maybe the memory problem will be resolved soon.

Seeing if this pict stays ... by copy/drag from the website above.

Honeyvine milkweed

Friday, November 30, 2012

Big Bird test finished and an assembly ...

Still having issues with my Picasa account and the amount of storage I need.  Will try and fix it to put on pictures tomorrow.

We had an assembly first block ... a motivational event on behavior.  The guy that did the program is on youtube as the one man volleyball team.  No genetics today but, we were able to get our gels analyzed and watered our F2 fastplants.

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=SVaeLB7E5Qo

Selected Topics took the Big Bird Test today.  Some perfect scores ... you have to know animals are out there before you can care about taking care of the environment and wildlife.  We started our plant unit today also.

Selected Topics is getting close to finishing their last assigned problems ... we will start checking them next week and then students will generate/program a student final project.

Got home in time for a walk ... lots of birds and squirrels but, I only saw one deer.  They are all hiding out during hunting season!





Thursday, November 29, 2012

Last fly count and Big Bird test tomorrow!

Busy day in genetics since we will have an assembly tomorrow first block.  We loaded our gels to do some DNA analysis today, counted our F2 flies for the last time (all together a count of over 1600 flies between two crosses) and played our F2 fastplant seed to see if our Hardy Weinberg equilibrium is maintained.  Tomorrow we will do some measurements on the gels before going to the assembly.  All analysis will be done on Monday.

In Selected Topics we went over our animal science and taxonomy test before review our bird ID cards.  Test tomorrow and we will begin a mini-unit on plant science.

Computer programming students are working on their geography tutorial problem.  I did a demonstration today on how to use invisible buttons in a program.

Got home in time to take a walk to Long Creek today.

Still working on my Picasa picture problem!

Wednesday, November 28, 2012

Milkweed seed and PD after school ...

During genetics today, we harvested fastplant seed to plant.  We also worked removing milkweed seed from pods ... not an easy task.  We are ready to load our gels tomorrow morning.

Selected topics had a quick review before taking a test on taxonomy and animal science.  Tomorrow we continue to work on bird identification and start a small unit on plant science.

Computer programming are working on their geography tutorial and making some progress on our last Visual BASIC problems.

PD after school today so we got home late.

I have some pictures but, I am having some problems with the Picasa picture storage program limiting my picture usage on this blog.  Will try and fix before tomorrow.


Tuesday, November 27, 2012

Birds, Belted Kingfisher and Restriction Lab

Tomorrow in genetics,  we will be doing our restriction lab using electrophoresis to separate fragments of DNA for analysis.  We will not have class on Friday due to an assembly first block ... we will have to squeeze to get everything done tomorrow and Thursday.  I will try and take some pictures of the lab tomorrow ...

In Selected Topics we continue our study of animal science with bird identification.  Tomorrow, we have as test on invertebrates and vertebrates.  Bird identification (about sixty local birds) will continue until Friday.  It is amazing that students in high school know so little about their environment ... how can you protect something that you don't know exists!

Students are working through their last set of visual BASIC problems.  Today we looked at programming timers and for animation of objects in small groups.  Tomorrow, invisible buttons.

Tomorrow, we have professional development after school from 3-5.

Students were most curious about the belted kingfisher today during our study ... frequently found along Long Creek and Barren River.  A male below ...

birdwatchersdigest.com




Monday, November 26, 2012

Fly count today and frost flowers ...

We made our first F2 fly count today in Genetics.  We have F2 flies from a sex-linked cross and a dihybrid autosomal cross.  We will count again on Thursday.  Tomorrow some work in the book over the history of DNA discovery.  We will miss class on Friday due to an assembly.

We finished up our study of vertebrates today in Selected Topics and tomorrow will start our review and work on some bird identification.

Computer science is hard at work on their last set of Microsoft Visual BASIC problems ... decision statements, random number generation, invisible buttons, timers and animation.

Raining here this evening. First basketball game of the season tomorrow evening ... good luck to both teams!

A link for weather in Allen County on Kentucky Mesonet

http://www.kymesonet.org/#!sctv

Also,  local Allen County resident,  former state climatologist and my wife's Uncle Glen has pictures posted on NWS - Louisville ... link below and sample picture.

http://www.crh.noaa.gov/lmk/?n=frost_flowers




From website above ...


Frost flowers are thin layers (perhaps credit card thickness) of ice that are extruded through slits from the stems of white or yellow wingstem plants, among others. Their formation requires freezing air temperature, soil that is moist or wet but not frozen, and a plant's stem that has not been previously frozen. (Practically speaking, a once per year event, although not all individuals produce frost flowers on the first day of good conditions). The water in the plant's stem is drawn upward by capillary action from the ground. It expands as it freezes and splits the stem vertically and freezes on contact with the air. As more water is drawn from ground through the split, it extrudes a paper thin ice layer further from the stem. The length of the split determines if the frost flower is a narrow or wide ribbon of ice. It curls unpredictably as it is extruded, perhaps from unequal friction along the sides of the split, to form "petals". These flowers, no two of which are alike, are fragile and last only until they sublimate or melt.

To find them, look for tall weeds, especially in locations that are seldom mowed. They seem to like the same habitat as purple ironweed, blackberries, and wingstems, with the actual frost flowers forming on the wingstems.

Sunday, November 25, 2012

Thanksgiving, sandhill cranes and turtlehead

Wrapping up Thanksgiving vacation tonight with some school work.

Tomorrow in Genetics we will begin our fly count, discussion questions on Chapter 9 ... DNA and Chromosomes in our Ricki Lewis book.  We have about five chapters remaining to finish our book.  We will be doing our restriction analysis of DNA using electrophoresis later in the week.

In Selected Topics, we will be back to animal science, vertebrates, tomorrow.

Our computer programming class will begin their last set of Microsoft Visual BASIC problems tomorrow.  We will end the semester with a student generated project.

Sue Neal and I had a good Thanksgiving.  We had over 30 members of Sue's family over for Thanksgiving dinner.  Lots of turkey and ham!  In the afternoon, Jimmy Neal and his son Yancy with Hannah, Arlo and I took a long walk back of the goat field ... over a two mile trek to get rid of all we ate! Two of our children were in for Thanksgiving and it was great to see them!

On Saturday, I put the bottom boards and entrance reducers in our hives ... should have done it earlier. While outside, I saw four groups of sandhill cranes heading south.  Occasionally, they would stop and circle in a thermal to gain elevation.  They were really high and you could hear them long before you could see them.  The picture (not really that good) below is with my Canon point and shoot ... maximum zoom ... we will see them on their return in mid-February.


I was able to harvest some turtlehead and lobelia seed after the freezing weather the last two weeks.





Monday, November 19, 2012

AP Unit Test Tomorrow ...

Tomorrow we have our unit test in Genetics ... Chapters 16-22, Bacterial Transformation Lab, and H-W problems.  We reviewed today and cleared the F1 flies from our Drosophila tubes.

Selected Topics began our study of Vertebrates ... this continues tomorrow.

In computer programming, we started checking our Microsoft Visual BASIC programs ... we have ten students to check tomorrow before heading out on Thanksgiving vacation.

Applications for the MarineLab trip started today ...

It was warm again today but got home late.  Picked some turnips for a teacher at school with a flashlight ... lots of deer on the move!

I am looking forward to Thanksgiving!


Sunday, November 18, 2012

Su ... last day at AC-S HS ...

Su (from Korea) has been part of our genetics class this year.  Su is moving to Bowling Green and Friday was her last day.  We had a farewell breakfast on Friday morning ... biscuits, honey and more.  Best of luck in Bowling Green!




Saturday, November 17, 2012

AP Meeting and BLAST

Sue Neal and I were in Louisville from Friday afternoon until this evening.  The Advance Kentucky AP Meeting went well.  Several good speakers and I got to work on the new BLAST lab to compare DNA and protein sequence between organisms and a lab generating Hardy-Weinberg data using Microsoft Excel.  The best part of this conference is to talk with other AP teachers across the state and exchange ideas. 

On Friday we finally had Genetics but a few students did not have their discussion question ready... ummmm!  The fly lab continues as did our fast plant lab.  Unit test on Tuesday.

Our selected Topics class has wrapped up invertebrates and will start our vertebrate study on Monday.  Computer programming finished their first set of Visual BASIC problems and we will check these starting on Monday.

The BLAST site is below ... we will use this in an upcoming genetics lab and next spring in AP Biology

http://blast.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/

from wikipedia...
In bioinformatics, Basic Local Alignment Search Tool, or BLAST, is an algorithm for comparing primary biological sequence information, such as the amino-acid sequences of different proteins or the nucleotides of DNA sequences. A BLAST search enables a researcher to compare a query sequence with a library or database of sequences, and identify library sequences that resemble the query sequence above a certain threshold. Different types of BLASTs are available according to the query sequences. For example, following the discovery of a previously unknown gene in the mouse, a scientist will typically perform a BLAST search of the human genome to see if humans carry a similar gene; BLAST will identify sequences in the human genome that resemble the mouse gene based on similarity of sequence. The BLAST program was designed by Stephen Altschul, Warren Gish, Webb Miller, Eugene Myers, and David J. Lipman at the NIH and was published in the Journal of Molecular Biology in 1990.[1]

Wednesday, November 14, 2012

Fly Lab underway ...

ILP's for sophomores today so they were out of class for a block updating the learning plan.  Writing and other meetings after school ...

All students were present for starting our fruit fly lab this morning.  We have F1 flies so this lab last about two weeks.  We use to buy pure mutant cultures which meant we had to expand cultures to get virgin flies and then do our parent cross which also required virgin females.  This added an extra month to the experiment ... ordering F1 cultures saves a lot of time.  We are using sepia eye, vestigial wing, and white eye mutants in these crosses.  Fly sorting picts below:




In Selected Topics, we studied arthropods, review the invertebrates we studied and watched a short film on giant squid and whales.

We have a good start in Microsoft Visual BASIC.  Several students are working on their third program.  We will be able to check the first set of problems before Thanksgiving break.

We got home late because Sue Neal had a meeting on writing at our high school and we rode together today.


Tuesday, November 13, 2012

Club Schedule ... over! MarineLab

Club schedule today and club pictures so a lot of students out of classes today.  Tomorrow we get back to regular schedule for a few days.

Genetics tomorrow, we will set up our F1 cross of fruit flies.  It will take a couple of weeks to start and finish this lab.  We will do a Chi Square Analysis on our F2 flies at the conclusion of this lab.  We are still waiting for our fastplants to seed in our Population Genetics Lab.  We will hand in our Animal Behavior lab tomorrow.

In Selected Topics, we worked on our animal unit and classification of animals.  Tomorrow we should wrap up invertebrates.  Lots of drawings and some video clips.

A lot of student out of Computer Programming today as we limped through our first Microsoft Visual BASIC problem. 

http://profile.ak.fbcdn.net/hprofile-ak-prn1/27518_140435862641148_4017_n.jpg

We met with science students wanting to go on MarineLab VIII (Spring break 2013).  It appears we will have enough students to go if we can wrap up the logistics.  Our first AP Bio trip was in 1993 and since then we have had seven trips by school bus / camping to the Keys and three trips to NYC (via air on President's Day weekend).  These trips get harder and harder to plan and make affordable in the austere times we are in.  Not like the old days ... get a bus and head out!  We have had over 200 students and several teachers take these trips.  School should be more than the questions at the end of the chapter ... true in 1993 and still true.

Check out Mr. Byrn's photos (over 900) from our last trip to the Keys in 2008.

http://www.byrnphotography.com/Academics/2008-ACS-Marine-LabKeys-Trip/5117234_kzztLN#!i=308927971&k=yHncN


Monday, November 12, 2012

Club Schedule and Beekeepers

Home late ... beekeepers meeting tonight.  Phil Craft, state beekeeper retired, gave the program on winter and early Spring hive management.  A nice program.

http://philcrafthivecraft.com/

At school today, we had our Veteran's program.  Our students were well behaved and appropriately responsive.  Our choir and band did a great job!

In genetics today, we did the discussion questions for Chapter 19 ... Biotechnology.  We discussed PCR, bacterial transformations and other vectors to carry DNA from one organism to another.  We also prepped up our Drosophila lab for Wednesday.  Student spent some time finishing their inquiry lab write-up from last week.

In Selected Topics, we continue our Animal - Invertebrate study ... mostly parasitic worms!  Tomorrow, we will wrap up our study of invertebrates and take a practice quiz.

In computer science we started our study and programming in Microsoft Visual BASIC.  We will be doing more demonstrations tomorrow.

Tomorrow is Club Schedule,  most of our genetics students will miss class after missing two days last week for APES.

Sunday, November 11, 2012

Deer season starts ... grade check!

Deer seasons started this weekend for all!  There were lots of gunshots on Saturday morning both near and far.  There were not as many today ... too warm and too windy for many deer to be out roaming around.  Even though it was windy, this afternoon, I was able to get the last of the annual rye in areas that might erode in the Spring.

Tomorrow, we will have a Veteran's Day program second block and club schedule is on Tuesday.  The rest of the week looks good for class.

We have two labs going on in Genetics and our fruit flies will be ready to cross next week ... sex-linked crosses and a dihybrid cross.  We want to wrap up the two ongoing labs before Thanksgiving.

We are working on Plant and Animal science in Selected Topics tomorrow ... several students that missed school last week have a test to make up.  Tomorrow, invertebrate study continues with roundworms, segmented worms and mollusks.

In computer science, we start our study of Microsoft Visual BASIC.

The third 4.5 week period is over this week.  Hard to believe that there are only four and a half weeks left in this semester ... AP Biology looming on the horizon.

Lots of work to do this week!

Thursday, November 8, 2012

Lottery analysis ... foggy this morning!

One of the worse fogs I have ever driven in this morning.  There were a few accidents in the county but, it was a miracle that our students got in safely.

In computer science, we are finishing our last qBASIC problem on sorting with an analysis of the last 100 Powerball picks.  Students were required to create a user menu for three different sorts ... frequency of white balls, frequency powerball picks, which numbers are picked after numbers the week before ... several single and two dimensional arrays.  A fun program to end up the unit ... we will see how we do on Saturday.
Next week, Microsoft Visual BASIC ...

We took our unit test on physics today.  There was lots of calculations and graphing of data ... we had nine students absent from class.  We will move on to animal and plant science tomorrow ...

Only a few students left in Genetics since the APES program is underway.  We did a 24 hour check of  our ongoing inquiry lab using brine shrimp, pollinated our fastplants and did a review activity.

I got home in time for a walk to Long Creek and back.  Lots of deer on the move, just in time for deer season to open up this weekend.  Checked the giant blue lobelia and turtlehead plants and their seed is about ready to harvest.


Wednesday, November 7, 2012

Election over, back to work!

Today our school, our top-30 juniors started the local APES program (American Private Enterprise System, see link below).  Most of my first block students will be out of class the rest of the week.  Students today in genetics started their natural selection inquiry using brine shrimp which will wrap up on Friday.  We also prepped up our Drosophila Lab which will start on Monday next week.  Two crosses ... white eye X wild (white eyes is a sex-linked mutant) and a dihybrid cross using vestigial wings and sepia eyes ... yielding a 9:3:3:1 phenotypic ratio in the F2 generation.

http://www.uky.edu/Ag/apes/

We reviewed in Selected Topics class for our physics test tomorrow.  Most of the unit was on motion, electromagnetic spectrum and force/energy.  Good luck tomorrow!

In computer science at least two students are finished with their last qBASIC programs.  We will start checking these problems tomorrow then off to Microsoft Visual BASIC on Monday.  Should be a good change and fun!

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Visual_Basic

Grading papers tonight ...

Tuesday, November 6, 2012

Skippers - Clouded Skipper and Sachem

I was finally able to identify the butterflies I saw on sunflowers last week ... I thought they were peculiar because of their wings.  I believe they are skippers (more than 280 species in North America, most of the tropical) ... antenna that have a club or hook but are short ... long proboscis ... wings at rest are held at angles ...

I think the skipper in the picture on top is a clouded skipper and the one below,  Sachem ???     Peterson Guide - Eastern Butterflies ???  ... best guess



Election Day 2012

No school today because of the election.

Tomorrow in Genetics, we will lose most of the students to the APES program.  We will be able to set up our inquiry extension on the natural selection lab using brine shrimp.  Our fruit flies have been shipped so we will have to prep up our genetics lab using these flies tomorrow.

In Selected Topics, we will review for our physics unit test on Thursday.  Next unit is our plant and animals science unit.

We are working on our final qBASIC program in computer science ... analyzing the last 100 picks from the Powerball Lottery (obvious randomly picked numbers ... maybe).  This program will examine the frequency of the numbers and which occur most often with certain other numbers.  A good lesson on sorting numbers!

I was able to take a long walk after voting at the East Allen fire department this morning.  Did some oak and hickory tree identification.  Also, I did some school work today and some yard work.

Listening to the election results the rest of the evening.


Sunday, November 4, 2012

Warm Day Saturday ... bees

Friday, our football team lost to Madisonville North Hopkins in the first round of the 4A football playoffs.  It has been a tough year.  Our cross country teams ran in the 2A Region 2 championship.  Sue Neal and I went over to watch ... we have spent a lot of Saturdays at cross country runs over the years.  It was fun to watch and it is still my favorite of all sports.  Our runners failed to qualify for State.

Today Sue Neal and I pulled up a lot of turnips to take to school and give away.  Some were as big as softballs.

We had a warm Saturday and the honeybees were out joining bumble bee in the remaining sunflowers. Their wings and the wings of the buckeye butterfly are about worn out!  One of our hives below show a lot of activity in and out of the hive.

Remember we will not have school on Tuesday for election day and most of my first block class will be out the rest of the week in the APES program.







Friday, November 2, 2012

Brine Shrimp and 142 lbs.

In Genetics today, we went over discussion questions in our chapter on cancer ... oncogenes, tumor-suppressor genes, p53 and more ... we concluded the first part of our natural selection lab, testing the ability of brine shrimp to hatch at various concentrations of salt in water.  We pollinated flowers again today and had our third quiz on the immune system without having a majority pass ... yet.

Yesterday I did a demonstration on beekeeping ... Wayne tried on one of my bee suits below ... You look like a veteran beekeeper Wayne!




We concluded our structure building lab with a test of student structures today ... congrats of Josh and Ryan below ... they won with their structure holding 142 lbs.  Posing with their prize ... a pound of Pap Downing Honey from Holland KY, each.   Monday we wrap up our physics unit before going on to plant and animal science.



We waited for all to finish the Josh lottery problem today ... our big lottery analysis program will start on Monday... next week will be the last week for qBASIC.

A long walk after school about dark ... lots of barred owls calling out tonight.

Thursday, November 1, 2012

Crunch time tomorrow ...

In our Genetics class, we took our morning quiz on the immune system, pollinated our fast plants, checked our brine shrimp experiment and set up my beekeeping presentation.  Tomorrow about the same to wrap up the week and our discussion questions on the Cancer chapter.

I did a beekeeping demonstration in Selected Topics ... anatomy of a hive and a quick year in beekeeping in in preparation for our plant and animal unit.  Tomorrow,  we crush our structures made of popsicle sticks ... 34 grams (about 24 sticks) with at least a 2" clear center and 7.5 - 8.5" tall.  The record is over 250 lbs.  No nails only clue ... we discussed load bearing members and torsion, gravity, and more.  Results tomorrow.

Students today wrapped up the Josh is cheating in the lottery program and we are now working on our lottery analysis of the picks over the last year ... frequency of number and numeric patterns.  We plan to finish up qBASIC next week and move on to Microsoft Visual BASIC.

I hosted after school detention today before heading home.

Wednesday, October 31, 2012

Fast Plant blooming and Hang time ...

In Genetics today after our morning quiz on the immune system, we handed out our Friday Caption (this week on our transformation lab).  We made bee sticks to pollinate our blooming fast plants.  Students pretended to be bees and randomly pollinated our plants.  We will see if we end up with gene frequencies staying the same in the next generation.  We also started our brine shrimp lab and will continue this lab tomorrow testing eggs hatching at different concentrations of salt in water.

Fast plant's blooms below ...  http://www.fastplants.org/how_to_grow/pollinating.php


Below the best transformation lab plates ... LB/Amp and LB/Amp/Xgal from the + tubes ... from our genetis lab yesterday ... Hayden and Cameron's plates.



In Selected Topics we did a mini-lab on gravity and hangtime.  Congrats to Josh (stayed in the air for .39 seconds, best ever in Selected Topics)  We tested six students and calculated the time they were in the air by how the jumped in a standing jump.  T = square root of  (2d/g) ... where gravity is 10m per second squared.  We also continued on our Superstructure lab.  Crunch day will be on Friday.

Computer programming is working on the Josh lottery problem.  Should finish this difficult sort problem tomorrow.

Got home in time to cut two buckets of sunflowers to take to school and take a walk to Long Creek.

First freeze is predicted tonight.  





Tuesday, October 30, 2012

Transformation Lab results ...

Today was another cold and windy day as the storm Sandy heads north through New York.  In Selected Topics, we looked over the NOAA weather map today to seed how low the pressure was in the center of Sandy ... 960 mb and the isobars were close showing strong winds.  This was considerably lower than we observed during our weather unit earlier in the year.  In this class, we also continued our study of pollinators and student groups work on their superstructures that will be tested on Friday.

In genetics, we went over our study questions on the immune system and finished our transformation lab.  Best student group had about 500 bacterial transformation per plate ... very good!  Tomorrow, we start our brine shrimp lab for a study of animal behavior.

Tomorrow in computer programming we will start our first of two lottery analysis problems.  We are hoping to wrap up qBASIC first of next week.

I had afternoon detention to monitor after school so got home late.  I did run up to Granny's to fill her bird feeder so she watch the birds.


Monday, October 29, 2012

Super Structure start and Bacterial Transformations

Today in Genetics, it was transformation lab day (pBLU Lab from Carolina Biological)!  Students used a protocol to induce bacteria to take up a plasmid.  Results tomorrow and the immune system discussion questions.



In Selected Topics we started our super structure lab ... these structures must have less than 34 grams of wood and must be 7.5-8.5 inches tall ... last year,  we had a student structure hold over 250 pounds.  In addition to working on this structure we are preparing to start our unit on animal and plant science.




Computer programming is still working on sorting problems and making good progress ... I think we can end up qBASIC early next week.


Sunday, October 28, 2012

Bumblebees and Sunflowers ... wow!

Frost predicted tonight.  Today was cool with some sunshine.  Several bumblebees were slowly moving through a sunflower plot in Holland, KY.  Ten of my best pictures of today below ...  I cannot wait until the Spring ...