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The Properties of Water

Grade Level

Prospective and Practicing K-8 Teachers; may be adapted for use in elementary classes

Time

Exercises 1-4 take approximately 30 minutes.

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Objectives

Once you have completed this knowledge mapping exercise, you should be able to:
1.Organize ideas into categories of similar types.
2.Classify ideas into hierarchies of larger and smaller ideas.
3.Develop a better understanding of some key relationships used in biology.

Background
Information

Circle diagrams provide one way of graphically organizing ideas to illustrate their inclusivity. Completing the exercises below will test your knowledge about important molecules of life, including water and oils.

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Exercise 1

Organizing Inclusive Ideas

To Do Insert the terms below into the appropriate circle in Figure 1, below. A term may be used more than once.

adhesion
cohesion
hydrogen bonding
capillary action
density
surface tension

Figure 1. Some Characteristics of Water

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Exercise 2

Classifying Ideas

To Do Place each of the following ideas in the appropriate circle in Figure 2, below. Each idea may be used more than once.

adhesive
dissolving
mixing
boiling
gaseous
separated
cohesive
liquid
separating
dissolved
mixed
solid
Figure 2. Distinguishing Among Characteristics, States and Processes

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Exercise 3

Categories

Figure 3, below, illustrates that water is a category of things that includes salt water, fresh water, distilled water, and colored water, among others. Colored water contains both water and dye, so might be shown as overlapping with both concepts.

Figure 3. Many Kinds of Water

To Do Organize each of the following ideas into one of the six circles in Figure 4, below. An idea may be used more than once.

water
oil
detergent
polar substance
non-polar substance
amphipathic molecule

Figure 4. Bigger and Smaller Ideas

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Exercise 4

Water/Oil Interfaces in Cells

Water is the stuff of life. Many different kinds of molecules dissolve in water. Many reactions occur in water solutions.

Powerful
Idea

The water - oil interface provides the basis for spontaneous cell formation. Because oils avoid mixing with water, amphipathic phospholipid molecules spontaneously form a phospholipid bilayer such that the outer surfaces consist of polar heads (interacting with the watery environment inside and outside the cell) and the center of the bilayer consists of non-polar fatty acids (Figure 5).
Figure 5. Phospholipid Bilayer in cell membranes

The phospholipid bilayer forms a membrane around the cell. If phospholipids and water are mixed and shaken, micelles (empty cells) will spontaneously form. Molecules in the body seek one of these layers.

To Do Put the molecules below into the environment (Figure 6) where each is most likely to be found.

Figure 6. Molecules and Their Likely Environments

polar amino acid molecule from eating hamburger

a fatty acid from the same hamburger

vitamin E (a non-polar molecule) from the veggies

vitamin A (a polar molecule) from the veggies

testosterone (a non-polar steroid hormone) from the testes

insulin (a polar protein hormone) from the pancreas

an amphipathic transport protein

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