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New antibiotics
                           presents



                     DRAFT AQA Application




© CSE and ASE 2011                    This page may have been changed from the original
objectives
              Objectives
           ● Find out how harmful bacteria form
             antibiotic-resistant strains.
           ● Discover why resistant strains
             spread rapidly.
           ● Draw conclusions from evidence about new
             ways of treating infections.

           Preview note: This activity teaches new content from AQA
           Science GCSE (B1.1.2 - infectious diseases), and applies
           the assessed skill: ‘drawing justified conclusions from
STARTER
  ELICIT                                                                                                 2
                                                                                                         22
           evidence’.               © Association for Science Education and Centre for Science Education 2011
what the preview file contains
             ● full version of the Presentation (slides 4-10)
             ● ‘more science’ –material from the student activity sheets which you may want
               to present (slides 14-20)
             ● preview of the two main student activities (slides 12-13)
             BUT NOT the student activity sheets, or the teachers guide


           technical note
             ● we ‘embedded’ two fonts to make the design work (it’s why the file is big)
               Titles should look like this      Body text should look like this




             ● if they don’t appear correctly, you can download and install the fonts in 2 minutes:
               Download title font (dirt2stickler) from www.dafont.com/dirt2-stickler.font

               Download text font (Am. typewriter) from

               www.jabroo.com/index/search/q/american+typewriter Note: Click ‘Register’

               at top, complete the form and you’ll be taken to the download page
STARTER
  ELICIT                                                                                                                       3
                                                                                                                               33
                                                          © Association for Science Education and Centre for Science Education 2011
’’   Parliament, Health Questions
  Last Monday,
 Jim Beggs had a
   routine knee
    operation.

 In hospital, MRSA
infected his wound.
 Ten days later, the
  46-year-old dad


               ’’
     was dead.
                                                                                            4
                                                                                            4
                       © Association for Science Education and Centre for Science Education 2011
Parliament, Health Questions
Superbug MRSA killed
62 more hospital
patients last week.
We are running out of
antibiotics that work.
What does the
Health Minister
plan to do?                                                                                   5
                                                                                              5
                         © Association for Science Education and Centre for Science Education 2011
The minister is in trouble                                                   SS1 – 2




          Prepare a briefing to
          help me answer the MP .

             ● what are drug-resistant
               bacteria?
             ● how do they develop?
             ● why do they spread so fast?

                          more science



                                                                                      6
                                                                                      6
                 © Association for Science Education and Centre for Science Education 2011
In the
ministerial limousine

Let’s hear your briefing.



                                                                                     7
                                                                                     7
                © Association for Science Education and Centre for Science Education 2011
antibiotic labs
              Scientists are testing new
                                                                                        SS3 – 6




              weapons against superbugs.



  cockroach
    brains
                    honey
                                                    silver
                                                 nanoparticles
Are any worth funding?
       Is there enough evidence
STARTER
       to conclude that they work?
  ELICIT                                                                                         8
                                                                                                 8
                            © Association for Science Education and Centre for Science Education 2011
reasoner lifELINE                               To make conclusions from data

                                        Start here
                  More than one set of data?                A single set of data?

1 Examine
  evidence
                             Does
                         every source
                  of data support the claim
                                               No                   Is
                                                            there any evidence                       No
                                                          supporting the claim or
                       or hypothesis?                          hypothesis?

2 Draw
                     Yes                                 Yes
  conclusions            STRONG support                   WEAK support                          NO support


                            Explain HOW WELL each piece of                                  Explain why the
3 Justify them              evidence supports the hypothesis.                               evidence opposes
                                                                                            the hypothesis
                                                                                            or is unclear.
       Suggest further tests,
       and explain what
       results you expect if    Yes     Would further tests              No                 The hypothesis
       the claim or                     make the conclusion                                 could be wrong.
       hypothesis is correct.               stronger?


                                                    Suggest a different hypothesis
                                                    that fits the evidence better.                                       9
                                                    © Association for Science Education and Centre for Science Education 2011
Locust             Hypothesis Locust brain juice could cut

example            MRSA in humans because it contains
                   substances that kill bacteria.

Bacteria Type                          Percentage of bacteria
                                       killed after incubating for
                                       24 hours at 37 ºC
Resistant Escherichia coli                                        99.6
Resistant Pseudomonas aeruginosa                                  99.7
Resistant Staphylococcus aureus                                   97.6



                                  How confident are you that
                                  the hypothesis is correct?
                                  Use the lifeline to decide.



                                                                                                      10
                                  © Association for Science Education and Centre for Science Education 2011
The end


    The following slides give detailed
information linked from the main tasks.
                                                                                        11
                    © Association for Science Education and Centre for Science Education 2011
Student activity 1 preview:                 2 How do drug-resistant bacteria develop?
read pieces of text and                     Sometimes, the genes in bacteria change, or
                                            mutate. This happens naturally. Most
translate the information                   mutations are not useful to bacteria, but
into image captions, to                     occasionally they make bacteria resist
                                            antibiotics.
provide the minister’s                      Sam has a throat infection. He takes antibiotic
briefing.                                   tablets. The antibiotic kills nearly all the
                                            bacteria. But a few bacteria – the resistant ones
                                            – survive. These bacteria reproduce rapidly.
                                            This is natural selection.


2 How do drug-resistant bacteria develop?



      genes




              Sam takes an
   bacteria   antibiotic
   in Sam
Student activity 2 preview:
                                Research   Cockroach lab 1
‘visit’ the labs, examine two   Scientist Simon Lee, UK

pieces of evidence, and
draw a justified
                                Hypothesiisfections in humansjuibecause
                                could cut MRSA n
                                                 Cockroach brain ce
conclusion, using the           it contains substances that kill bacteria.
Lifeline                        Investigation
                                ● grow two types of bacteria on agar plates
                                ● add cockroach brain juice and leave for
                                  two hours at 37 ºC.

                                Data
                                Type of bacteria     Percentage of bacteria
                                                     killed


                                MRSA                 More than 90


                                Escherichia coli     More than 90


                                If an antibiotic kills 90% of the
                                bacteria, your body’s immune system
                                can kill the rest.
MRSA bacteria are
harmless on your skin.




                           More science 1
                                                                                         14
                                                                                        14
                    © Association for Science Education and Centre for Science Education 2011
But MRSA
          bacteria can cause
          fatal infections if
          they get in
          through a cut.




More science 2

                                                                           15
                                                                           15
       © Association for Science Education and Centre for Science Education 2011
We can fight
most bacteria with antibiotics.




        More science 3

                                                                                        16
                                                                                       16
                   © Association for Science Education and Centre for Science Education 2011
Bacteria can
change because
their genes
mutate.
                   genetic material


       Most mutations aren’t useful to
           bacteria, but occasionally
            mutations make bacteria
                 resist antibiotics.

                   More science 4
                                                                                      17
                  © Association for Science Education and Centre for Science Education 2011
The mutated
                  bacteria are not
                  destroyed by
                  antibiotics. They
                  survive and
                  reproduce quickly.



This is   natural selection                                                       .




 More science 5
                                                                                      18
                  © Association for Science Education and Centre for Science Education 2011
Antibiotics don’t affect MRSA.

             It’s   resistant.
Whenever we use
 new antibiotics,
resistant strains
        develop.

  More science 6    We’re running out
                    of ideas!                                                              19
                       © Association for Science Education and Centre for Science Education 2011
Hari has an ear infection.
An antibiotic kills almost all
the bacteria. Hari stops taking
the antibiotic.


        A tiny fraction of the bacteria have a
        natural resistance to the antibiotic.
        They do not die.

These bacteria reproduce.
So the population of the
resistant strain of bacteria
increases.
              More science 7
                                                                                          20
                      © Association for Science Education and Centre for Science Education 2011
Credits
             Gary Talbot, Writer

             Philippa Hulme, Editor

             Tony Sherborne, Executive editor


  Picture                                         Slide             Credit
 Infected wound                                   3                 Wikimedia Commons

 Bacteria in mouth                                13                Wikimedia Commons




© Centre for Science Education & Association for Science Education 2011. The license for this material includes
downloading and using it within the institution. For any other usage, permission must be obtained from upd8. Contact
upd8@ase.org.uk upd8 is not responsible for any revision that may be made to the material after it has been downloaded.   21
                                                                                                                          21

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Crucial ppt preview new antibiotics

  • 1. New antibiotics presents DRAFT AQA Application © CSE and ASE 2011 This page may have been changed from the original
  • 2. objectives Objectives ● Find out how harmful bacteria form antibiotic-resistant strains. ● Discover why resistant strains spread rapidly. ● Draw conclusions from evidence about new ways of treating infections. Preview note: This activity teaches new content from AQA Science GCSE (B1.1.2 - infectious diseases), and applies the assessed skill: ‘drawing justified conclusions from STARTER ELICIT 2 22 evidence’. © Association for Science Education and Centre for Science Education 2011
  • 3. what the preview file contains ● full version of the Presentation (slides 4-10) ● ‘more science’ –material from the student activity sheets which you may want to present (slides 14-20) ● preview of the two main student activities (slides 12-13) BUT NOT the student activity sheets, or the teachers guide technical note ● we ‘embedded’ two fonts to make the design work (it’s why the file is big) Titles should look like this Body text should look like this ● if they don’t appear correctly, you can download and install the fonts in 2 minutes: Download title font (dirt2stickler) from www.dafont.com/dirt2-stickler.font Download text font (Am. typewriter) from www.jabroo.com/index/search/q/american+typewriter Note: Click ‘Register’ at top, complete the form and you’ll be taken to the download page STARTER ELICIT 3 33 © Association for Science Education and Centre for Science Education 2011
  • 4. ’’ Parliament, Health Questions Last Monday, Jim Beggs had a routine knee operation. In hospital, MRSA infected his wound. Ten days later, the 46-year-old dad ’’ was dead. 4 4 © Association for Science Education and Centre for Science Education 2011
  • 5. Parliament, Health Questions Superbug MRSA killed 62 more hospital patients last week. We are running out of antibiotics that work. What does the Health Minister plan to do? 5 5 © Association for Science Education and Centre for Science Education 2011
  • 6. The minister is in trouble SS1 – 2 Prepare a briefing to help me answer the MP . ● what are drug-resistant bacteria? ● how do they develop? ● why do they spread so fast? more science 6 6 © Association for Science Education and Centre for Science Education 2011
  • 7. In the ministerial limousine Let’s hear your briefing. 7 7 © Association for Science Education and Centre for Science Education 2011
  • 8. antibiotic labs Scientists are testing new SS3 – 6 weapons against superbugs. cockroach brains honey silver nanoparticles Are any worth funding? Is there enough evidence STARTER to conclude that they work? ELICIT 8 8 © Association for Science Education and Centre for Science Education 2011
  • 9. reasoner lifELINE To make conclusions from data Start here More than one set of data? A single set of data? 1 Examine evidence Does every source of data support the claim No Is there any evidence No supporting the claim or or hypothesis? hypothesis? 2 Draw Yes Yes conclusions STRONG support WEAK support NO support Explain HOW WELL each piece of Explain why the 3 Justify them evidence supports the hypothesis. evidence opposes the hypothesis or is unclear. Suggest further tests, and explain what results you expect if Yes Would further tests No The hypothesis the claim or make the conclusion could be wrong. hypothesis is correct. stronger? Suggest a different hypothesis that fits the evidence better. 9 © Association for Science Education and Centre for Science Education 2011
  • 10. Locust Hypothesis Locust brain juice could cut example MRSA in humans because it contains substances that kill bacteria. Bacteria Type Percentage of bacteria killed after incubating for 24 hours at 37 ºC Resistant Escherichia coli 99.6 Resistant Pseudomonas aeruginosa 99.7 Resistant Staphylococcus aureus 97.6 How confident are you that the hypothesis is correct? Use the lifeline to decide. 10 © Association for Science Education and Centre for Science Education 2011
  • 11. The end The following slides give detailed information linked from the main tasks. 11 © Association for Science Education and Centre for Science Education 2011
  • 12. Student activity 1 preview: 2 How do drug-resistant bacteria develop? read pieces of text and Sometimes, the genes in bacteria change, or mutate. This happens naturally. Most translate the information mutations are not useful to bacteria, but into image captions, to occasionally they make bacteria resist antibiotics. provide the minister’s Sam has a throat infection. He takes antibiotic briefing. tablets. The antibiotic kills nearly all the bacteria. But a few bacteria – the resistant ones – survive. These bacteria reproduce rapidly. This is natural selection. 2 How do drug-resistant bacteria develop? genes Sam takes an bacteria antibiotic in Sam
  • 13. Student activity 2 preview: Research Cockroach lab 1 ‘visit’ the labs, examine two Scientist Simon Lee, UK pieces of evidence, and draw a justified Hypothesiisfections in humansjuibecause could cut MRSA n Cockroach brain ce conclusion, using the it contains substances that kill bacteria. Lifeline Investigation ● grow two types of bacteria on agar plates ● add cockroach brain juice and leave for two hours at 37 ºC. Data Type of bacteria Percentage of bacteria killed MRSA More than 90 Escherichia coli More than 90 If an antibiotic kills 90% of the bacteria, your body’s immune system can kill the rest.
  • 14. MRSA bacteria are harmless on your skin. More science 1 14 14 © Association for Science Education and Centre for Science Education 2011
  • 15. But MRSA bacteria can cause fatal infections if they get in through a cut. More science 2 15 15 © Association for Science Education and Centre for Science Education 2011
  • 16. We can fight most bacteria with antibiotics. More science 3 16 16 © Association for Science Education and Centre for Science Education 2011
  • 17. Bacteria can change because their genes mutate. genetic material Most mutations aren’t useful to bacteria, but occasionally mutations make bacteria resist antibiotics. More science 4 17 © Association for Science Education and Centre for Science Education 2011
  • 18. The mutated bacteria are not destroyed by antibiotics. They survive and reproduce quickly. This is natural selection . More science 5 18 © Association for Science Education and Centre for Science Education 2011
  • 19. Antibiotics don’t affect MRSA. It’s resistant. Whenever we use new antibiotics, resistant strains develop. More science 6 We’re running out of ideas! 19 © Association for Science Education and Centre for Science Education 2011
  • 20. Hari has an ear infection. An antibiotic kills almost all the bacteria. Hari stops taking the antibiotic. A tiny fraction of the bacteria have a natural resistance to the antibiotic. They do not die. These bacteria reproduce. So the population of the resistant strain of bacteria increases. More science 7 20 © Association for Science Education and Centre for Science Education 2011
  • 21. Credits Gary Talbot, Writer Philippa Hulme, Editor Tony Sherborne, Executive editor Picture Slide Credit Infected wound 3 Wikimedia Commons Bacteria in mouth 13 Wikimedia Commons © Centre for Science Education & Association for Science Education 2011. The license for this material includes downloading and using it within the institution. For any other usage, permission must be obtained from upd8. Contact upd8@ase.org.uk upd8 is not responsible for any revision that may be made to the material after it has been downloaded. 21 21

Notes de l'éditeur

  1. MRSA, or methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus bacteria, live on your skin and in your nose.
  2. This sore throat was caused by Streptococcus pyogenes bacteria. An antibiotic – penicillin – destroys the bacteria. Different antibiotics target different bacteria.
  3. Mutations happen naturally. Only a tiny proportion of bacteria mutate, in just a very few people. Antibiotics may no longer be effective against these changed bacteria. Developing new antibiotics is a very difficult and time-consuming process.
  4. Bacteria reproduce incredibly quickly. So large numbers of antibiotic-resistant bacteria are quickly formed.
  5. MRSA is resistant to most antibiotics, even the powerful methicillin. Further resistance can be prevented by taking antibiotics only when necessary finishing all the tablets, even when you feel better doctors prescribing the correct antibiotic for each type of bacteria
  6. This information is required for higher tier only.