Students explore what cells are, why all living things are made of them, and how plant and animal cells differ in structure.
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Teach: cell, nucleus, membrane, cytoplasm, mitochondria, chloroplast, vacuole, cell wall. A labelled diagram is the most important resource — draw it clearly and have students copy and annotate.
Focus on three structures only — nucleus, membrane, cytoplasm — shared by both cell types before introducing the plant-specific additions.
Can students draw and label both cell types from memory? Can they explain the function of at least four organelles and give one structural difference between plant and animal cells?
Draw both cell types in soil. The onion skin observation can use any magnifying glass or even a drop of water as a simple lens.
Students often think all cells look the same. Specialised cells demonstrate that structure varies dramatically based on function.
Cell biology is the foundation of all modern medicine, genetics, and biotechnology.
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