9B Fit and Healthy
9B Fit and Healthy
Year 9
Expectations
The unit builds on unit 7A Cells, unit 7B Reproduction, unit 8A Food and digestion, unit 8B Respiration,
unit 8C Microbes and disease and unit 9A Inheritance and selection.
Careful planning of the work in this unit alongside the schools drugs policy and the PSHE programme will be
required, particularly when pupils are introduced to the effects of smoking, alcohol and drugs, etc.
This unit provides opportunities to revisit and revise work on nutrition and human respiration and the function
of the circulatory system. With some pupils, teachers may wish to concentrate on some of the new topics,
extending activities, and with others to spend more time on revision of previous work.
This unit relates to unit 20 Twentieth-century medicine in the history scheme of work and to unit 9A(i)
Selecting materials (food) on special diets in the design and technology scheme of work.
most pupils will: describe how the body uses the energy in food,
Prior learning
Resources
Resources include:
secondary sources providing data about effects of smoking, effects of
alcohol on reaction time, heart disease
normal and decaffeinated cola
leaflets, articles, etc about fitness regimes
secondary sources providing data about illnesses caused by dietary
deficiencies and about sports-related injuries
information about replacement hip/knee joints
secondary sources illustrating how joints work
secondary sources illustrating how energy from food is used
slides showing smokers and non-smokers lungs
a variety of sources of information about health and disease over the
last 100 years
Out-of-school learning
Pupils could:
read publicly available leaflets on smoking, drugs and diet
find out about the strategies available to people wishing to give up
smoking
talk to people who have managed to give up smoking and those who
havent
read articles in newspapers and magazines about fitness and exercise
regimes, sports injuries and their cure
read fictional and non-fictional accounts of life in other cultures or of
life 50100 years ago
Science unit 9B
Use secondary sources, eg video clips, slides, ICT simulations, to remind pupils how describe the processes by which
energy from food is utilised, eg in leg muscles, and how this depends on the
the energy in food is utilised in
digestive, respiratory and circulatory systems. Ask pupils to make a summary, eg by
muscle
listing key points or annotating diagram(s) of the processes involved, prompting
describe the chemical reaction
them, as appropriate, with key words and phrases. Remind pupils of the word
through which energy is utilised
equation for respiration.
Science unit 9B
2
What helps the respiratory system to function?
that the lungs, diaphragm, rib
cage and associated muscles of
the rib cage are essential for
breathing
that reducing the chest volume
expels air from the lungs
Review pupils understanding of what happens when they breathe and help them
to construct a concept map of breathing, eg oxygen, carbon dioxide, asthma,
bronchi, lungs, moisture evaporating from the lungs.
Ask pupils to feel changes in the chest as they breathe by placing their hands on
their ribs and taking a few deep breaths in and out. Ask questions, eg
What happened to the chest wall when they breathed in?
What happened when they breathed out?
Which required more effort?
Ask pupils how breathing can vary, eg when asleep, blowing out candles, playing
the trumpet. Discuss how they could measure the volume breathed and which
factors might affect lung volume, eg swimming, playing a brass instrument, body
size, asthma.
Use secondary sources, eg models, video clips, software simulations, to illustrate
how air is drawn into and expelled from the lungs, and help pupils to label simple
diagrams.
What is the effect of smoking on the lungs and other body systems?
to make notes during a
Using a variety of resources, eg video clips, slides, illustrations, demonstrations,
demonstration and to use these
discuss with pupils the specific effects of smoke components, eg carbon monoxide,
in another task
nicotine, tar, on the organs of the respiratory system, on cardiovascular function
that smoking is implicated in a
and on developing babies, and of heat effects on ciliated epithelial cells. Remind
range of illnesses
pupils how to make notes during a demonstration and use these to annotate a
that carbon particles, carbon
diagram.
monoxide, heat, nicotine and tar Challenge pupils to give reasons why people find it difficult to give up smoking.
cause specific damage
Provide pupils with secondary data, eg death rate from specific illnesses correlated
that ciliated epithelial cells in the
with smoking habits, incidence of chest conditions in smoking and
airways are specialised for
non-smoking households, number of working days lost through smoking-related
moving fluid
illnesses, smoking habit and likelihood of miscarriage or stillbirth. Give prompts, eg
how evidence about the effects
Why was smoking acceptable 30 years ago, but is less so now?
of smoking has gradually been
What is the health warning?
collected
What is passive smoking?
Why cant people under 16 buy cigarettes?
Ask pupils to use what they have found out to produce either a leaflet for younger
pupils or a leaflet for adults explaining why smoking is harmful. Help pupils select
information to be emphasised in each leaflet.
Science unit 9B
3
Why is diet important?
that a balanced diet requires
nutrients, including vitamins, in
the correct quantities
that deficiencies in specific
nutrients lead to specific
diseases
how evidence about specific
nutrient deficiencies is used
Remind pupils of work they did in unit 7A Cells on the way in which cells ar e
arranged into tissues, and ask them to list a variety of body tissues. Point out that
the food we eat has to provide the components for growth and repair of all tissues
as well as energy for activity.
Use quick oral questions to review pupils knowledge of the components of a
balanced diet (covered in unit 8A Food and digestion). Discuss the effect of the
shortage of a particular dietary component and some of the overall consequences,
eg children succumb more easily to waterborne infections and measles,
developmental delay, effects of low-energy foods in the diet, lack of calcium in
bones and teeth.
Provide pupils with secondary sources, including ICT, to identify the consequences
of specific nutrient deficiencies. Consider investigations into the effects of specific
nutrient deficiencies, eg the work of Magendie and Gowland Hopkins, the role of
folic acid in development, the recognition of kwashiorkor (protein defi ciency).
Ask pupils about other ways in which a diet may be unhealthy and talk about ways
in which overeating can affect health and lifestyle. Help pupils make a summary of
the nutrients needed for a healthy diet and some of the consequences of an
inadequate or inappropriate diet.
Science unit 9B
4
What else can we do to maintain fitness?
how diet, smoking, alcohol and
exercise can affect fitness and
health
Ask pupils about sports-related injuries and how some of these occur, and ask
them to suggest how some might have been avoided. Discuss with pupils what
happens if they participate in an unfamiliar amount or form of exer cise. Show
pupils secondary sources, eg photographs, diagrams, video clips, software
simulations, that show the structure and functioning of joints and muscle systems
and discuss with them some of the problems that can occur. Ask pupils how these
problems may be dealt with, if possible showing a replacement joint, and what
kinds of exercise might reduce damage.
Provide pupils with a case study, eg of a treatment for a sports injury, a hip
replacement, and ask them to identify the different scientists who will have been
involved, eg in developing new materials, new techniques, in trialling, in carr ying
out treatment, and to present their findings, eg as a flow chart or diagram.
Science unit 9B
5
that drugs alter the way the
body works physically or
mentally
to recognise the need for
informed consent in
experiments involving people
how to deal with factors that
cannot be controlled
how to work collaboratively to
obtain sufficient valid data to
draw conclusions
Ask pupils to consider the question and to suggest how it could be tur ned into
further questions that could be investigated and the sources of information that
might be used. Agree, with the class, questions that individuals or groups could
investigate and the sources of data each might use. Discuss, eg as a debate, the
evidence for and against the idea that we are healthier than our
great-grandparents were, helping pupils to identify the key points and to
evaluate the strength of conflicting evidence.
produce supplementary
In unit 8C Microbes and disease pupils
questions relating to different
considered infectious diseases, and in
aspects of an original question
this unit they have considered influences
assemble evidence to answer the
of lifestyle on health. They may need to
question
be reminded that there are many other
decide whether the evidence
types of illness and that the cause of
supports or does not support the
many of these is not yet known.
idea, and give reasons for their
decision
Science unit 9B
6
Reviewing work
to relate fitness and health to
scientific knowledge and
understanding
Help pupils to summarise the key points identified in earlier activities and to turn
these into a series of recommendations for remaining fit and healthy. Ask pupils to
provide the scientific knowledge on which each recommendation is based.
Science unit 9B