Classifying Living Things JEOPARDY

© Mark E. Damon - All Rights Reserved
© Mark E. Damon - All Rights Reserved
Another
Presentation
© 2012- All rights Reserved
© Mark E. Damon - All Rights Reserved
Directions:
•
Scroll through the presentation and enter the answers (which are really the
questions) and the questions (which are really the answers).
•
Enter in the categories on the main game boards.
•
As you play the game, click on the TEXT DOLLAR AMOUNT that the
contestant calls, not the surrounding box.
•
When they have given a question, click again anywhere on the screen to
see the correct question. Keep track of which questions have already been
picked by printing out the game board screen and checking off as you go.
•
Click on the “Game” box to return to the main scoreboard.
•
Enter the score into the black box on each players podium.
•
Continue until all clues are given.
•
When finished, DO NOT save the game. This will overwrite the program
with the scores and data you enter. You MAY save it as a different name,
but keep this file untouched!
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Round 1
Round 2
Final
Jeopardy
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Vocabulary
More
Vocabulary
Microscopic
Organisms
Plants
Animals
BONUS:
What In the
World Is
It?
Round 2
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Final
Jeopardy
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Scores
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$300
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$300
$400 $400
$400
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$500 $500
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$100
Probably the oldest living organisms
(a) invertebrates
(b) nonvascular plants
(c) bacteria
(d) fungi
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(c) bacteria
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Having tubes or channels
(a) microscopic
(b) vascular
(c) vertebrate
(d) organism
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(b) vascular
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An animal with a backbone
(a) invertebrate
(b) vascular
(c) nonvascular
(d) vertebrate
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(d) vertebrate
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Without tubes or channels
(a) microscopic
(b) vascular
(c) invertebrate
(d) nonvascular
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(d) nonvascular
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A living thing
(a) organism
(b) microscopic
(c) cell
(d) atom
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(a) organism
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An animal without a backbone
(a) invertebrate
(b) vascular
(c) nonvascular
(d) vertebrate
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(a) invertebrate
Scores
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Algae and protozoans are _____.
(a) bacteria
(b) fungi
(c) protists
(d) invertebrates
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(c) protists
Scores
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Tool small to be seen with the eye
alone
(a) microscopic
(b) protists
(c) fungi
(d) organism
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(a) microscopic
Scores
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$400
Organisms that grow on plant
materials and absorb food from
them are _____.
(a) bacteria
(b) fungi
(c) protists
(d) invertebrates
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(b) fungi
Scores
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What controls all the functions of
a cell?
(a) the cell membrane
(b) vacuoles
(c) the nucleus
(d) the nuclear membrane
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(c) the nucleus
Scores
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What are the building blocks of
life?
(a) cells
(b) chloroplasts
(c) diatoms
(d) organisms
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(a) cells
Scores
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What are the most numerous
organisms on Earth?
(a) algae
(b) bacteria
(c) cells
(d) fungi
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(b) bacteria
Scores
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How are the cells of bacteria
different from all other cells?
(a) They do not have a nucleus.
(b) The do not have a cell membrane.
(c) They are microscopic organisms.
(d) They are multicelled organisms.
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(a) They do not have a nucleus.
Scores
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What kind of cell does this picture
show?
(a) animal cell
(b) bacteria
(c) protist
(d) plant cell
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(d) plant cell
Scores
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Some bacteria cause disease, but
not all bacteria are harmful.
List two ways in which bacteria
are helpful.
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(1) Bacteria help us digest our
food.
(2) Bacteria are used to help
clean up oil spills.
(3) Bacteria make oxygen that
help other living organisms to
breathe.
Scores
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Which statement is TRUE of
nonvascular plants?
(a) They absorb water that surrounds them.
(b) They have conducting tubes.
(c) They have stems and roots.
(d) They reproduce by seeds.
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(a) They absorb water that
surrounds them.
Scores
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What kind of plant is shown in the
picture?
(a) hornwort
(b) moss
(c) nonvascular
(d) vascular
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(d) vascular
Scores
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Why are the plants in the pictures
classified as nonvascular?
(a) They reproduce by seeds.
(b) They reproduce by spores.
(c) They grow in damp forests and along riverbanks.
(d) They lack tubes for carrying water and food.
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(d) They lack tubes for carrying
water and food.
Scores
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Which is NOT true of flowering
plants?
(a) They are vascular plants.
(b) They produce oxygen.
(c) They produce seeds.
(d) They make cones.
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(d) They make cones.
Scores
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Which would you plant on a
hillside to stop soil from
washing away?
(a) trees
(b) mosses
(c) liverworts
(d) fungi
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(a) trees
Scores
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How are humans classified?
(a) as invertebrates and amphibians
(b) as invertebrates and fish
(c) as vertebrates and reptiles
(d) as vertebrates and mammals
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(d) as vertebrates and mammals
Scores
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Look at the pictures that Amy’s teacher
drew on the board. She asked the class
to find something that all of these
creatures have in common. What do
you think they have in common?
(a) They are all insects.
(b) They are all arachnids.
(c) They are all arthropods.
(d) They are all crustaceans.
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(c) They are all arthropods.
Scores
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Which statement is true of
arthropods?
(a) They can live only in water.
(b) They can’t see or hear.
(c) They have an internal skeleton.
(d) They have an exoskeleton.
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(d) They have an exoskeleton.
Scores
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What does this circle graph
show?
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Almost all arthropods are insects.
Scores
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Scores
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$100
What In the World Is It?
Suppose you are walking in a forest and you find
something that you do not really know what it is.
A. Explain how you would know if it is living or
nonliving.
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A. All living things…
1. are made from the same basic chemical ingredients not found
in non-living things such as rocks.
2. are composed of (made up of) cells.
3. require water and a source of energy to run their life
processes.
4. have the ability to reproduce and grow.
5. have limited life spans. All organisms eventually wear out
and die.
6. can respond to their surroundings.
7. have the ability to move.
8. are able to repair injuries to themselves, provided the damage
is not too severe.
9. can undergo change over time. They are constantly
adapting to meet the challenges of their environments.
Scores
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What In the World Is It?
Suppose you are walking in a forest and you find
something that you do not really know what it is.
B. Suppose you decide it is a living organism.
Explain how you would know if it was a plant or
an animal.
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B.
Animals
Plants
1. Animals cannot make
1. Plants make their own
their own food. They
food through the
must eat other living or
process of
once-living things to
photosynthesis.
survive.
2. Plants are made up of
2. Animals are made up of
many cells, but their
many cells. Their cells
cells have a cell wall.
do not have a cell wall
There are also
or chloroplasts inside of
chloroplasts.
them.
3. Plants have roots,
3. Animals do not have
stems, and leaves.
roots, stems, or leaves.
Scores
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What In the World Is It?
Suppose you are walking in a forest and you find
something that you do not really know what it is.
C. Suppose you decide that it is an animal. Explain
how you would know if it was a vertebrate or an
invertebrate.
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C.
Vertebrates
Invertebrates
1. Are animals that have a 1. Are animals that DO
backbone.
NOT have a backbone.
2. Most vertebrates have 2. Most types of
sharp senses and large
invertebrates are
brains.
smaller than
3. The large vertebrate
vertebrates.
group is divided into
3. The invertebrate group
several smaller
is divided into several
groups…Mammals,
smaller
Birds, Fish,
groups…Arthropods,
Amphibians, and
Mollusks, Echinoderms,
Reptiles.
Annelids (worms), etc.
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Round 1
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Final
Jeopardy
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Scores
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Scores
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$600
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$800
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$800
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$1000
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$200
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$600
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$600
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$800
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$800
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Final
Jeopardy
Question
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