Cell City – organelles & structure
Tiny but Mighty – microbes, bacteria, and microbiomes
Medicine or Menace – antibiotics & resistance
Zoom In! – microscopes & tools
Building Blocks of Life – organization & scale
100

What organelle is known as the “powerhouse” of the cell?

Mitochondria

100

What is the microbiome?

The collection of microorganisms that live on and inside the human body.

100

What are antibiotics used for?

To kill or slow the growth of harmful bacteria.

100

What tool do scientists use to view cells too small to see with the naked eye?

Microscope

100

What is the smallest unit of life?

Cell

200

Which organelle controls the cell’s activities and contains DNA?

Nucleus

200

Name one benefit that “good” bacteria provide in the human body.

Help with digestion, protect against harmful bacteria, or support immunity.

200

Why don’t antibiotics work on viruses?

Viruses aren’t made of cells, so antibiotics have nothing to target.

200

Which type of microscope uses light and lenses to magnify an image?

Light microscope

200

Arrange these from simplest to most complex: cell, organ, tissue, organ system, organism.

Cell → Tissue → Organ → Organ System → Organism

300

What is the difference between a plant and an animal cell’s outer structure?

Plant cells have a cell wall and membrane; animal cells only have a membrane.

300

Why do some scientists compare the microbiome to an ecosystem?

It includes many species that interact and depend on each other.

300

What does “antibiotic resistance” mean?

Some bacteria adapt and survive even when antibiotics are used.

300

Which microscope can show smaller details like ribosomes or viruses?

Electron microscope

300

 Are humans considered multicellular or unicellular ?

Mulitcellular 

400

A cell without a nucleus is called what?

Prokaryotic

400

What happens when antibiotics destroy too many bacteria in the gut?

The balance of good and bad bacteria is disrupted, possibly causing sickness.

400

How can overusing antibiotics cause resistance?

it kills weaker bacteria, allowing resistant ones to survive and reproduce.

400

Why can’t we see ribosomes with a light microscope?

They’re too small to be resolved with visible light.

400

How does cell specialization help multicellular organisms survive?

Each type of cell performs a specific job, allowing the organism to function efficiently.

500

Why does the shape of a cell relate to its function?

The shape helps the cell perform its specific role (e.g., nerve cells are long to send signals).

500

How might your diet change your microbiome?

Eating different foods feeds different microbes, changing which types grow and survive.

500

Describe one way scientists or doctors can help prevent antibiotic resistance.

Prescribe antibiotics only when necessary, complete doses, or develop new treatments.

500

Why is magnification important in studying cell structure and function?

It helps scientists observe organelles and understand how each part supports life.

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