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Remote Ready Biology Learning Activities has 50 remote-ready activities, which work for either your classroom or remote teaching.
Observation
I found that the first four chapters of “What Evolution Is” by Ernst Mayr tied at least partly back to the themes that we have been discussing in class. First, with regard to the “seriously loopy science” process, Mayr states, “What made Darwin such a great scientist and intellectual innovator? He was a superb observer, endowed with an insatiable curiosity. He never took anything for granted but always asked why and how”(11). Darwin’s ability to observe, be curious, and learn from observations allowed him to form new observations. I also appreciated how Mayr examined each of Darwin’s crucial observations in order to explain how he had pieced each of them together to come up with the theory of Evolution… the common ancestor, gradual descent, fossil records, and much more. The pictures and examples of the homologies between different organisms such as the human, cat, whale, and bat were also really interesting. Last semester in Biology 101 we watched the stages of a developing chicken embryo. In that movie clip, and in reference to the diagram on page 28, the comparable similarities between a chicken and human are incredible-especially in stages one and two! I also felt that, in response to some of the other comments, while I agree that Mayr pretty much implied that he knew the “truth” of Evolution and focused way too much on “being correct”, at least he followed the process of proving other theories false in order to prove his theory “less wrong”. Basically, chapters one through four laid the basic framework for what we should know about evolution as a story and as a process and I am looking forward to what deeper ideas the rest of the book will bring.