| Lesson Title (Description) | Grade Level | Lesson Type |
Angling for evolutionary answers: The work of David O. Conover Human activity has certainly affected our physical environment - but it is also changing the course of evolution. This research profile follows scientist David O. Conover as he investigates the impact of our fishing practices on fish evolution and discovers what happened to the big ones that got away. |
9-12 |
Article |
Evo in the news: The other green (r)evolution Though corn is "all-natural" in some ways, in others it is entirely manmade. This news brief from February 2007 explains the evolutionary tools
that ancient humans used to engineer modern corn and the tools that scientists are using today to reconstruct corn's evolutionary history. |
9-12 |
Article |
Exploring Variation and Heritability Students explore the natural variations present in a variety of organisms by examining sunflower seeds and Wisconsin Fast Plants™ to consider the role of heredity in natural selection. |
9-12 |
Classroom activity |
From the origin of life to the future of biotech: The work of Andy Ellington This research profile examines how scientist Andy Ellington has co-opted the power of artificial selection to construct new, useful molecules in his lab. The results of his work could help protect us from terrorist attacks and fight HIV and cancer. |
9-12 |
Article |
Webcast: Selection in action In lecture two of a four part series, evolutionary biologist David Kingsley discusses how just a few small genetic changes can have a big effect on morphology, using examples from maize, dog breeding, and stickleback fish. This lecture is available from Howard Hughes' BioInteractive website. |
9-12 |
Lecture |