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The Respiratory System

Other • Year 11 • 45 • 12 students • Created with AI following Aligned with National Curriculum for England

Other
1Year 11
45
12 students
23 February 2025

Teaching Instructions

I want a plan to focus on the location and function of the respiratory system. Looking into the function of each component and what happens during inspiration and expiration

The Respiratory System

Curriculum Information

  • Subject: Biology (Other)
  • Level: Year 11, Key Stage 4
  • Exam Board Alignment: AQA, OCR, Edexcel, WJEC, or other UK GCSE specifications
  • Topic: The Respiratory System – Location and Function
  • Focus: Structure and function of the respiratory system; mechanisms of inspiration and expiration

Learning Objectives

By the end of the lesson, students will be able to:

  1. Describe the location and structure of key components of the respiratory system.
  2. Explain the function of each part in gaseous exchange.
  3. Analyse the process of inspiration and expiration, linking it to pressure and volume changes.

Lesson Structure (45 minutes)

Starter Activity (5 minutes) – "Lung Detective"

  • Begin with a mystery object in a sealed box (a balloon inflated and deflated by hand inside the box when students aren’t looking).
  • Ask: "What is inside this box, and what does it represent in the human body?"
  • This encourages students to think about expanding and contracting structures, linking to respiration.

Main Teaching (15 minutes) – "Breaking Down Breathing"

Step 1: Respiratory System Components (7 minutes)

  • Use a large anatomical model or diagram of the respiratory system.
  • Discuss each component:
    • Nasal cavity & trachea – Filtration and moistening of air.
    • Bronchi & bronchioles – Directing air into the lungs.
    • Alveoli – Site of gas exchange; link to diffusion.
    • Diaphragm & intercostal muscles – Crucial for breathing movements.
  • Ensure students make sketch notes in their books, drawing the system and labelling parts.

Step 2: Inspiration vs. Expiration (8 minutes) – Student-Powered Learning

  • Group Investigation (3 minutes):
    • Split into pairs.
    • Give each pair a balloon, a straw, and a plastic cup.
    • Ask them to model lung function (balloon = lung, straw = trachea).
  • Whole-Class Discussion (5 minutes):
    • Use student models to explain inspiration and expiration:
      • Inspiration: Diaphragm contracts, volume increases, pressure drops, air enters.
      • Expiration: Diaphragm relaxes, volume decreases, pressure increases, air exits.
    • Relate this to real-life examples (e.g., exercise, asthma).

Application Activity (10 minutes) – "Breathing in Action"

  • Investigation: Measuring Breaths Per Minute
    • Students work in pairs: One counts their partner’s breaths per minute at rest.
    • Then, they do star jumps for 30 seconds and measure again.
    • Discuss: Why does the rate change? What happens inside the lungs during exercise?
  • Extension Task:
    • Link to oxygen transport and diffusion using a quick quiz question:
      • Why does a higher breathing rate help muscles during exercise?
      • Encourage students to use terms like alveoli, capillaries, gas exchange, and oxygen diffusion in their responses.

Plenary (5 minutes) – "Quickfire Challenge"

  • Mini-Whiteboard Q&A
    • Teacher fires 5 rapid questions (e.g., What does the diaphragm do? Name the site of gas exchange).
    • Students write down answers and reveal them simultaneously for instant feedback.
  • Final Reflection:
    • Ask: "If the respiratory system failed, what would happen to the body?"
    • Encourages critical thinking and application of knowledge.

Assessment Opportunities

  • Observation during discussion and activities.
  • Student models (correct representation of inspiration/expiration).
  • Mini-whiteboard responses in plenary.

Differentiation

  • Support: Provide a simplified diagram for labelling. Pair weaker students with stronger peers in investigative tasks.
  • Challenge: Ask higher-ability students to explain the role of partial pressure in gas exchange.

Resources Needed

  • Balloon, straw, plastic cup (for respiration model).
  • Large diagram or model of the respiratory system.
  • Stopwatches for breathing rate experiment.
  • Mini-whiteboards and markers for plenary quiz.

Teacher’s Wow Factor: This lesson is highly interactive, engages all learning styles, and brings respiration to life using hands-on models, movement-based experimentation, and real-world application.

Will keep students engaged and teachers loving their AI-generated resource! 🚀

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