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Monday, February 7, 2011

1.2 Apoptosis: Cell Suicide

Plant and Animal Cell Diagrams

Scientific Drawing: Part 2

Scientific Drawing

Microscope Part Functions

Diagram for Labelling: Microscope

Use of the Compound Microscope

Learning Skills

Student Evaluation Criteria

Course Overview

Les Religions du Monde Worksheet

Course Teaches Different Faiths Article

Student Evaluation Criteria

Course Overview

Introduction aux Religions

Tout sur la terre functionne sur l'opposition.



Quelques statistiques:

Le Christianisme: catholicisme, protestantisme, orthodox.

  • 1,7 milliard de baptisés
L'Islam: sunnites, chiites, soufis.
  • 1,3 milliard
L'Hindouisme: 
  • 800 millions
Le Boudhisme: petit véhicule et grand véhicule.
  • 350 millions
Le Judaïsme: hassidiques, orthodoxes, conservateurs, libéraux.
  • 14 millions
La religion est la célébration de notre foi en publique.

Assette: controler la souffrance de son corps et se dépriver de tout.


3 Sortes de Religions:

L'illumination: Ã  travers des réflections et méditation personelle, tu comprends la religion. (Bouddhisme, Hindouisme)

La révélation: Dieu se fait connaître, il s'est manifesté aux humains pour leur faire croire et faire. (Judaïsme, Christianisme, l'Islam) exemple: la trinité.

L'environnement: la religion et la vie sont ensemble. Dieu est partout; l'environnement est sacré. (Shinto, spiritualité autochtone, animisme africain)


4 Types de Religions:

L'animisme: tous les phénomènes naturels et les animaux ont un esprit.

Le monothéisme: la croyance en un seul Dieu créateur.

La polythéisme: la croyance en plusieurs Dieux. Il y a souvent une hiérarchie.

Le dualisme: la croyance en deux forces opposées mais égales. On a tous deux parties. 

Exemple de Yin & Yang, qu'on a tous deux parties en nous. (une fille peut avoir des traits d'un garçon etc.)


 Les Similarités:

Puissance: quelque chose plus grand que l'homme. 

Saintes écritures: l'histoire, les règles, forme de culte.

Lieux saints: site d'un évènement religieux important (mais pas l'endroit de culte e.g. l'église).

Personnages importants: fondateurs, prophètes.

Symboles: par lesquels on peut identifier la religion.

Lieux de culte: endroit où on se réunis (l'église, temple, arbre).

Liturgie: pour célébrer les jours saints, événements et parole de Dieu.

Règle d'or: fraternité humaine.


Les Différences:
  • Le péché (sin)
  • La rédemption (salvation - salut)
  • La prêtrise (les prêtres)
  • Dieu





Les Religions du Monde

La cause de tout les problèmes et les guerres est la religion, pas l'ignorance, maladies, famine, etc.

Cochons considerés comme sal parce qu'ils ne mangent pas l'herbe.

Culture et la religion changent l'un et l'autre. Quand la culture change, la religion change aussi. (exemple: le pouvoir de toucher le pain à l'église)

1,8 Milliards de Chrétiens
1,3 Milliards d'Islams

Prendre des choses culturelles et leur transformer en quelque chose religieuse. (exemple: "spirit" au lieu de "Sprite") Faire ton propre annonce.

Le Coran n'est pas le Coran si c'est pas dans la langue de Mohammed. Quelques Musulmans doivent mémoriser le Coran pour qu'ils puissent le récrire si on en a besoin.

L'Islam est populaire à l'est où il y a un gros taux de natalité.

Maximes: fortunes.
Virtue: on doit faire ce qu'on doit faire parce que c'est la bonne chose à faire.

Les femmes peuvent devenir rabi dans la judaïsme libéral.

Torah: les 5 premier livres dans la bibles.
Sortent le Torah le samedi soir (le sabat) peut pas toucher avec tes mains. Quand c'est trop difficile à lire, il y a un funérail.

Le Torah prend un an à lire.
Le Bible prend trois ans à lire.

Quand les autochtones mangent un animal, ils font la prière pour remercier l'esprit de l'animal pour leur corps. Ils n'aiment pas le film 'Brother Bear' parce que l'héro est un homme blanc.

Autochtones: premiers écologistes.
On pense qu'on est plus haut que la nature mais les autochtones se sentent comme une partie de la nature.

Writing Module 09

The notes capture and organize the story.

  • Questions help focus story.
  • If incomplete, there is more reporting to do.
  • Organizing notes helps make decisions.
Highlighters organize notes making it easier to write the story.

Good stories come in many forms.

Effective writing is good writing.
  • Narrative elements
  • Fresh and original
  • Tightly written and lively

1.2 Apoptosis: Cell Suicide

1) What are the two common causes of cell death?
  • mechanical forces or toxic chemicals
  • eliminate cells harmful to the organism
2) Describe the changes that occur during apoptosis.
  • shrinking
  • disintegration of mitochondria and nucleus
  • breakdown of the cell into several membrane-bound fragments
  • intake of cell fragments by other cells
3) Describe the three triggers of apoptosis.
  • The formation of protein clusters called apoptosomes within the cell.
  • The attaching of cell death activator molecules to the outer surface of the cell membrane.
  • The formation of reactive oxygen molecules such as hydrogen peroxide in the cell.
4) Why do researchers assume that apoptosis is responsible for the decrease in the number of T-helper cells in AIDS?

When the T-helper cells are infected with HIV, they die by apoptosis.

5) Most cancer drugs used today attempt to slow down the rate of cell division (mitosis). Using the internet and other resources, discover how research on apoptosis might be used to produce new cancer drugs.

Cells commit apoptosis by disintegrating its organelles. This could help scientist because it they can find a way to target specific cells that are considered cancerous and duplicate their apoptosis process to rid the body of an excess amount of mutated cells.

Why should we learn about cells?

  • Protects cells to prevent infection and other harmful effects
  • Observe cells to diagnose diseases
  • Treat cells to heal illness
  • Stop harming cells through our choices and actions
Types of cells:

Eukaryotes (true cells):
  • cells with a nuclear membrane surrounding the nucleic acid
  • e.g. plant and animal cell
Prokaryotes:
  • Cells with no nuclear membrane
  • e.g. bacteria and cyanobacteria (blue-green)
By breaking an intermolecular bond, you create a different state of matter (e.g. two water molecules broken apart by heat would create water vapor).

The DNA in a bacteria is called a Plasmid. Viruses don't have the ability to reproduce itself therefore is not considered a cell. They reproduce  by injecting DNA into a host cell which then explodes - killing the host cell - releasing all new born viruses.

Incubation period: time for a virus to reproduce (e.g. when you're contagious)

The most contagious time is usually before symptoms start to show. 

The functions of a cell:
  • to grow
  • to repair and heal
  • to go through cell division and reproduce
For one cell birth there has to be one cell death. Older cells make more mistakes which is why older people have more diseases. 

Do cells live forever?
  • No, after a certain number of cell divisions all cells die by committing suicide (apoptosis).
When a cell is not functioning properly and cannot be fixed, the cell releases the enzymes in the lysosome to sacrifice itself for the overall health of the organism. It disintegrates all organelles within the cell.
  • Cells also die by injury caused by mechanical forces or toxic chemicals.
Reasons for apoptosis:
  • To eliminate cells that threaten the overall health of a multicellular organism
  • Part of normal development
Plant cells have very defined, boxy shapes because of the cell wall. The cell wall is made of cellulose. Glucose helps you absorb waste much easier. Vacuoles in plant cells are very large to store water, nutrients, etc.

Cytoplasm: water, any other fluid, waste, etc. inside of the cell wall.
Turgor Pressure: when the fluids push up against the cell wall to keep it up-right so it doesn't wilt.
Mitochondria: turns everything into a usable source of energy.

Ribosomes are not membrane bound and carry protein. They sit on top of the endoplasmic reticulum. They just store energy and are the smallest organelle in a cell. The endoplasmic reticulum with ribosomes on top make it "rough".

Chloroplast gives plants its colour. 
RNA: ribonucleic acid. (inside nucleolus)

DNA has to be protected at all times. (deoxyribonucleic acid) 

mRNA: messenger inside the nucleolus that tells the cell to produce proteins. It's a strand of code.
rRNA: comes to translate and read the code, calls out tRNA.
tRNA: carries a specific amino acid to come hook up the message. It's like a taxi, it picks up the amino acid, drops it off, then goes to get another one.

Our body can have up to 20 amino acids. 12 are produced by our bodies and 8 come from our diets.

Only animal cells have lysosomes and centrioles. Double layers are all membrane bound. 

Microscopes

Use a microscope to:

  • study chemical reactions
  • how a cell works
  • study cells
  • see organelles
  • see DNA replicate
Insulin is used to re-harvest genes. Sophisticated microscopes are used.

Biopsy: a sample of a tumor looked at under a microscope.
Tissues: multiple cells put together.

Oil immersion lens is used specifically to look at a specimen with a drop of oil on it to give a very high resolution magnification. Field of view changes with your change of magnification.

You can move the stage up, down and sideways. 
The diaphragm controls the amount of light. Only use lens paper to clean the lens.

Tissues put together make organs, organs put together make systems. Skin is the largest organ, second largest is the liver.

Chapter One: Cell Biology

1938, James Hillier and Albert Prebus at U of T produced the first functional electron microscope. Scientists able to view viruses and sub cellular parts with great resolution. Viruses are measured in microbes.

Resin: solidified cube of a cell.

The three types of Microscopes:
1) Transmission Electron Microscope (TEM)
  • Beam of electron passes through very thin slices of specimen
  • Two dimensional view
  • Time consuming to prepare specimen
  • View dead specimen only
  • Not portable
2) Scanning Electron Microscope (SEM)
  • Electron scans across the surface of the sample
  • Secondary electron releases by the sample to form a 3-D image
3) Scanning Tunneling Microscope (STM)
  • A minuscule electron probe is placed near the sample
  • The created image is converted to a topographic image by the computer
  • Can manipulate molecules and atoms
  • Study biology at the atomic level

Point of Interest

Phillipa of England was the first documented princess to wear white to her wedding in 1406.

In 1840, Victoria began a trend of women who would later wear white to honor their Queen. She chose white because she wanted to incorporate a piece of lace fabric she already owned.

Victorian Era

Queen Elizabeth - the longest rule in English history. This era sometimes known as the English Renaissance because the arts were reborn due to funding. Era was considered repressed and old fashioned with little expression but developed quickly technologically and became the beginning of the 'modern' times.

German is a respectful, beautiful language since it's the language of commerce and government.

Prince Albert had no living heirs so he adopted Queen Victoria. Lord Melbourne attempted to prevent her from seeing the harsh realities of English life and forbade her even from reading Charles Dickens' Oliver Twist. His only child died so he treated her like his daughter. When she became queen, no one expected her reign to last 64 years.

Enlightenment: "A state of maturity".
People believed they could now utilize reason to solve the world's prejudices and live in universal peace and harmony. Many writers believed they had achieved the enlightened state.

This era consisted of a patriarchal society and rural advancements.
Factory workers gained higher wages. In the books The Great Gatsby, Wuthering Heights, Great Expectations, Jan Eyre, Dracula, and The Picture of Dorian Gray, there should be directs references to characters who migrated to better themselves, characters rising out of poverty, social classes, strong women, schooling (differences between classes), spectacles and the use of the new railway system.

In 1851, the Great Exhibition took place in London, showcasing the new technologies and industrial advances.

More modern lifestyles became existent because of the new railway. By 1870, Britain grew from 10 million people to 26 million people.

The era was considered dark because after the Queen's husband died, she wore black for the rest of her life to represent her mourning.

Ideology of the time: 


  • Democracy - government by the people.
  • Feminism - the theory of the political, economical and social equality of the sexes producing and distributing to the community as a whole.
  • Socialism - a social organization theory that advocates ownership and control for producing and distributing to the community as a whole.
  • Utilitarianism - an ethical theory that all action should be directed toward achieving the greatest happiness for the greatest number of people.
  • Darwinism - a theory that suggests a species originates from a parent and is adapted for the reproductive sex of their kind.
  • Agnosticism - an intellectual doctrine affirming the uncertainty of all claims to ultimate knowledge
A gentleman was someone who had a liberal (public) education and it did not matter who his antecedents were.

All Victorian women were said to be weak and helpless, incapable of making decisions outside of the home. They were educated mostly in arts and had no right to money.

There was a bill passes to prevent children under 9 from working in the textile industry, but it did not apply to other industries. Teenage prostitution then became rampant since most children could no longer work.

Due to 3 reform bills, most men were allowed to vote if they were over the age of 21. 

The fashion of the women: corsets, balloon sleeves, the bustle.
The fashion of the men: cravats, hats, jackets, trousers, and facial hair.

WIGS (liberals)
TORI'S (conservatives)

During this era, paranormal activity became less shunned and women had to use pen names to achieve "realism" with their writing since no one would take a woman author seriously.

Wednesday, February 2, 2011

French Tutor Available

I'm highly experienced in the French language. I'm currently a student who has been taking French immersion for the past eight years and took a student exchange program to France where I lived for three months. I have first hand experience with the culture, the literature, the grammar and vocabulary. I have been tutoring and teaching in French since the seventh grade and am willing to work around a price that you set! 
Contact me: dee.benson@live.com

Wednesday, January 26, 2011

Exams

Exams start tomorrow everyone!
On Thursday January 27th from 9am-11am, students are to write their first period exam.
On Friday January 28th from 9am-11am, students are to write their second period exam.
On Monday January 31st from 9am-11am, students are to write their third/fourth/fifth period exam.
On Tuesday February 1st from 9am-11am, students are to write their sixth period exam.

If for any reason buses are cancelled, each exam will be pushed forward by a day. Therefore Wednesday February 2nd is our "conflict day".

If a student does not have an exam on a day listed above, they are able to stay home without being considered truent or absent.

Students are only allowed pens, pencils, geometry sets, rulers, white-out, erasers, calculator, etc. which are to be put in a clear plastic bag. Teachers may inspect this bag to insure that no cheating will occur.
No student is allowed to leave the examination room until 11am. This is only to make sure that the hallways are silent so that others can complete their exams. Yellow buses will be picking up from the bus stop at their normal times and picking up from the school at 11am, dropping students off at their regular stop. Proper uniform must be worn or students are unable to write the exam. Bags, coats, etc. are to be placed at the back of the room. iPods, cellphones, or any other electronic device should be left in a locker or at home. No food or drink (with the exception of a water bottle) will be allowed in the examination room.

Each examination room is the class you have been learning the subject in for the whole semester (unless given other directions by your teacher) for example: if you have math period one in room 317, your exam will be held on Thursday January 27th from 9am-11am in room 317.

If there are no snow days or other conflict days during exams, students do not have to attend school on Wednesday February 2nd. They will then be able to get their exam mark the following day, Thursday February 3rd. If the student did not pass their exam, they can still pass the course. However, if they did not pass the course then they will need to attend night school, credit recovery, summer school, or will need to repeat the course the following year. For information pertaining to this, the student can make an appointment at guidance and meet with their councillor to discuss options.

Good luck on your exams All Saints, study hard!

Tuesday, January 18, 2011

Valentine's Semi-Formal Dance

The school's valentine's semi-formal dance will be held on February 17th at Tosca in Oshawa, here are directions from the school: Tosca Banquet Hall and Conference Centre. Tickets will be sold the first two days for $13 and the rest of the week they will be sold for $15. Student ID is required for each guest.