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SCHEME OF WORK
Biology
Form 3 2026
TERM I
School


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WK LSN TOPIC SUB-TOPIC OBJECTIVES T/L ACTIVITIES T/L AIDS REFERENCE REMARKS
1 2-3
CLASSIFICATION II
Introduction and Principles of Classification
Binomial System of Nomenclature
Hierarchy of Taxa
By the end of the lesson, the learner should be able to:
Explain the importance of classification of organisms. Discuss the general principles of classification. Identify features used to classify organisms. Define taxa and taxon.
Define species and explain binomial nomenclature. Explain the rules of binomial naming system. Give examples of scientific names. State advantages of binomial nomenclature.
Q/A: Review of Classification I concepts. Discussion of classification criteria - structural similarities and differences. Q/A: Features for animals (body symmetry, coelom, appendages) and plants (vascular system, reproductive structures).
Detailed explanation of binomial system with two names (genus and species). Practice writing scientific names correctly - italics, capitalization rules. Q/A: Examples from Table 1.1 - human, chimpanzee, plants.
Charts - Classification features, Taxonomic units
Charts - Examples of scientific names (Table 1.1), Practice writing materials
Charts - Taxonomic pyramid (Fig 1.1), Wall charts showing hierarchy
Certificate Biology Form 3, Pages 1-2
Certificate Biology Form 3, Pages 2-3
1 4
CLASSIFICATION II
Five Kingdom System
Kingdom Monera - Introduction
By the end of the lesson, the learner should be able to:
Identify the five kingdoms of organisms. State general characteristics of each kingdom. Compare modern classification with earlier systems. Explain changes in classification systems.
Teacher exposition of five kingdoms: Monera, Protoctista, Mycota, Plantae, Animalia. Discussion using Table 1.2. Q/A: Why systems change - bacteria, fungi, algae reclassification.
Charts - Table 1.2 characteristics, Five kingdom comparison chart
Charts - Prokaryote vs eukaryote comparison, Microscope images
Certificate Biology Form 3, Pages 4-5
1 5
CLASSIFICATION II
Bacteria - Structure and Characteristics
Bacterial Types and Shapes
By the end of the lesson, the learner should be able to:
Describe the structure of bacteria. Draw and label a bacterial cell. State characteristics of bacteria. Explain bacterial cell wall composition.
Drawing and labeling generalized bacterial structure using Fig 1.2. Discussion of structural features - cell wall, DNA, flagella, capsule. Q/A: Mucoproteins in cell wall, lack of organelles.
Charts - Fig 1.2 bacterial structure, Drawing materials, Microscope
Charts - Fig 1.3 bacterial types, Microscope, Prepared bacterial slides
Certificate Biology Form 3, Pages 5-6
2 1
CLASSIFICATION II
Bacterial Reproduction and Economic Importance
Blue-green Algae
By the end of the lesson, the learner should be able to:
Describe bacterial reproduction by binary fission. Explain economic importance of bacteria. Identify harmful and useful bacteria. Give examples of bacterial diseases.
Exposition of asexual reproduction by binary fission. Discussion of harmful bacteria - diseases (tuberculosis, typhoid, cholera). Q/A: Useful bacteria - decomposition, nitrogen fixation, antibiotics.
Charts - Binary fission diagram, Disease-causing bacteria table, Specimens of antibiotics
Charts - Fig 1.4 Anabaena, Microscope, Water samples from local sources
Certificate Biology Form 3, Pages 6-7
2 2-3
CLASSIFICATION II
Kingdom Protoctista - Introduction
Protozoa (Protista)
By the end of the lesson, the learner should be able to:
State characteristics of Kingdom Protoctista. Identify the two sub-kingdoms. Give examples of protoctists. Distinguish from other kingdoms.
Describe characteristics of protozoa. Give examples of protozoa. Identify disease-causing protozoa. Examine protozoa practically.
Teacher exposition of Protoctista characteristics - eukaryotic, mostly unicellular. Discussion of two sub-kingdoms: Protozoa and Algae. Examples from Table 1.3.
Study of unicellular protozoans using Fig 1.5. Practical examination of pond water under microscope. Students observe and draw Paramecium, Euglena, Amoeba. Q/A: Disease-causing protozoans and their vectors.
Charts - Protoctista characteristics, Table 1.3 examples
Charts - Fig 1.5 protozoa, Table 1.3 diseases, Microscopes, Pond water samples, Glass slides, Drawing materials
Certificate Biology Form 3, Page 8
Certificate Biology Form 3, Pages 8-9, 28
2 4
CLASSIFICATION II
Algae - Characteristics and Types
By the end of the lesson, the learner should be able to:
State characteristics of algae. Classify algae according to pigments. Give examples of different algal types. Explain their habitats.
Discussion of algae as aquatic autotrophs. Classification by pigments: green, brown, red algae. Study of Fig 1.6 examples. Q/A: Thallus structure, holdfast, photosynthetic pigments.
Charts - Fig 1.6 algae types, Specimens of different algae, Hand lenses
Certificate Biology Form 3, Pages 9-10
2 5
CLASSIFICATION II
Economic Importance of Algae
By the end of the lesson, the learner should be able to:
Explain ecological importance of algae. State economic uses of algae. Describe role as primary producers.
Discussion of algae as primary producers in aquatic ecosystems. Q/A: Food source for aquatic animals, oxygen production. Economic uses in food industry, cosmetics.
Charts - Aquatic food chains, Algae products, Ecosystem diagrams
Certificate Biology Form 3, Pages 10-11
3 1
CLASSIFICATION II
Kingdom Mycota (Fungi) - Introduction
By the end of the lesson, the learner should be able to:
State characteristics of Kingdom Fungi. Give examples of fungi. Describe fungal cell structure. Explain mode of nutrition.
Teacher exposition of fungal characteristics - eukaryotic, cell walls with chitin, heterotrophic. Examples: mushrooms, yeasts, moulds. Discussion of mycelium and hyphae structure.
Charts - Fungal characteristics, Specimens of mushrooms, bread moulds
Certificate Biology Form 3, Page 11
3 2-3
CLASSIFICATION II
Fungal Structure and Reproduction
Economic Importance of Fungi
Kingdom Plantae - Introduction
By the end of the lesson, the learner should be able to:
Describe structure of fungi. Explain fungal reproduction. Identify different types of fungi. Examine fungi practically.
State characteristics of Kingdom Plantae. Give examples of plants. Describe plant cell features. Explain autotrophic nutrition.
Study of fungal structure using Fig 1.7 - hyphae, mycelium, sporangia. Practical examination of bread moulds under microscope. Students observe and draw fungal structures. Safety: Handle specimens with forceps.
Teacher exposition of plant characteristics - multicellular, eukaryotic, chloroplasts, cellulose cell walls, autotrophic. Discussion of shoot and root systems, vascular tissue.
Charts - Fig 1.7 fungi, Microscopes, Bread mould specimens, Forceps, Glass slides, Drawing materials
Charts - Fungal diseases, Specimens of useful fungi, Food products made using fungi
Charts - Plant characteristics, Live plant specimens, Plant cell diagrams
Certificate Biology Form 3, Pages 11-12, 29
Certificate Biology Form 3, Page 13
3 4
CLASSIFICATION II
Plant Phyla Overview
By the end of the lesson, the learner should be able to:
Identify major plant phyla. Compare different plant groups. State examples of each phylum.
Study of Table 1.4 - Bryophyta, Pteridophyta, Spermatophyta. Discussion of evolutionary progression from simple to complex plants. Examples of each group.
Charts - Table 1.4 plant phyla, Specimens of mosses, ferns, flowering plants
Certificate Biology Form 3, Pages 13-14
3 5
CLASSIFICATION II
Phylum Bryophyta - Mosses and Liverworts
By the end of the lesson, the learner should be able to:
Describe characteristics of bryophytes. Explain alternation of generations. Give examples of bryophytes. Examine moss specimens practically.
Study of moss characteristics using Fig 1.8 and liverworts using Fig 1.9. Practical examination of moss specimens - identify gametophyte, sporophyte, rhizoids. Students draw observed structures.
Charts - Fig 1.8 moss, Fig 1.9 liverworts, Live moss specimens, Hand lenses, Drawing materials
Certificate Biology Form 3, Pages 14-15, 30
4 1
CLASSIFICATION II
Phylum Pteridophyta - Ferns
By the end of the lesson, the learner should be able to:
State characteristics of pteridophytes. Describe fern structure. Explain fern life cycle. Examine fern specimens and spores.
Discussion of fern characteristics using Fig 1.10. Practical examination of complete fern plant - fronds, rhizome, sori. Students collect spores and draw fern structures. Compare with bryophytes.
Charts - Fig 1.10 fern structure, Complete fern specimens, White paper, Hand lenses, Drawing materials
Certificate Biology Form 3, Pages 15-16, 30-31
4 2-3
CLASSIFICATION II
Phylum Spermatophyta - Introduction
Angiosperms - Characteristics
By the end of the lesson, the learner should be able to:
State characteristics of seed plants. Distinguish gymnosperms and angiosperms. Give examples of each group. Explain advantages of seeds.
Describe angiosperm characteristics. Explain double fertilization. Identify flower structures. State importance of flowers and fruits.
Discussion of seed-bearing plants using Fig 1.11. Comparison of gymnosperms (naked seeds in cones) vs angiosperms (seeds in fruits). Examples and advantages of seed reproduction.
Study of angiosperm features - flowers, double fertilization, seeds in fruits, embryo with cotyledons. Discussion of flower as reproductive organ and fruit development.
Charts - Fig 1.11 gymnosperms, Cone specimens, Seeds, Fruits
Flower specimens, Fruits with seeds, Hand lenses, Magnifying glasses
Certificate Biology Form 3, Pages 16-17
Certificate Biology Form 3, Page 17
4 4
CLASSIFICATION II
Classes of Angiosperms
By the end of the lesson, the learner should be able to:
Distinguish monocotyledons and dicotyledons. Compare structural features. Give examples of each class. Examine monocot and dicot specimens.
Detailed study of Table 1.5 comparing monocots and dicots. Practical examination of specimens - leaf venation, root systems, floral parts. Students draw comparative structures.
Charts - Table 1.5, Fig 1.12 structures, Monocot and dicot specimens, Hand lenses, Drawing materials
Certificate Biology Form 3, Pages 17-18
4 5
CLASSIFICATION II
Kingdom Animalia - Introduction
By the end of the lesson, the learner should be able to:
State characteristics of Kingdom Animalia. Give examples of animals. Explain heterotrophic nutrition. Describe animal adaptations.
Teacher exposition of animal characteristics - multicellular, no cell walls, heterotrophic, mobile, bilateral/radial symmetry. Discussion of adaptations for movement, feeding, response.
Charts - Animal characteristics, Various animal specimens/pictures
Certificate Biology Form 3, Page 18
5 1
CLASSIFICATION II
Animal Classification Features
By the end of the lesson, the learner should be able to:
Identify features used to classify animals. Explain body symmetry types. Describe skeleton types. State other classification criteria.
Discussion of classification features - body symmetry, segmentation, appendages, skeleton types, body cavities. Examples of bilateral vs radial symmetry, endoskeleton vs exoskeleton.
Charts - Body symmetry diagrams, Skeleton types, Animal classification features
Certificate Biology Form 3, Pages 18-19
5 2-3
CLASSIFICATION II
Phylum Arthropoda - Characteristics
Classes of Arthropoda
Phylum Chordata - Characteristics
By the end of the lesson, the learner should be able to:
State characteristics of arthropods. Give examples of arthropods. Describe exoskeleton and jointed limbs. Explain body segmentation.
Classify arthropods into classes. Compare different arthropod classes. Give examples of each class. Examine arthropod specimens.
Study of arthropod characteristics - largest phylum, exoskeleton with chitin, jointed limbs, segmented body, open circulatory system. Examples from different classes.
Study of five arthropod classes using Figs 1.13-1.16. Practical examination of preserved specimens - identify key features, body segments, appendages. Students draw and label structures.
Charts - Arthropod characteristics, Specimens of insects, spiders, crabs
Charts - Figs 1.13-1.16, Preserved arthropod specimens, Hand lenses, Forceps, Drawing materials
Charts - Chordate characteristics, Table 1.6, Vertebrate specimens
Certificate Biology Form 3, Pages 19-20
Certificate Biology Form 3, Pages 20-22
5 4
CLASSIFICATION II
Classes of Chordates
By the end of the lesson, the learner should be able to:
Classify chordates into classes. Compare fish, amphibians, reptiles, birds, mammals. Give examples of each class.
Study of five chordate classes using Figs 1.16-1.20. Comparison of fish (Pisces), amphibians, reptiles, birds (Aves), mammals. Key distinguishing features of each class.
Charts - Figs 1.16-1.20 chordate classes, Specimens/pictures of vertebrates
Certificate Biology Form 3, Pages 23-27
5 5
CLASSIFICATION II
Dichotomous Keys - Introduction
By the end of the lesson, the learner should be able to:
Explain the purpose of identification keys. Define dichotomous key. Understand key construction principles. Study examples of keys.
Teacher exposition of identification keys using Fig 1.21 diagrammatic key. Discussion of dichotomous pattern - contrasting characteristics. Q/A: Why keys are important for organism identification.
Charts - Fig 1.21 arthropod key, Examples of identification keys
Certificate Biology Form 3, Pages 27-28
6 1
CLASSIFICATION II
Construction of Dichotomous Keys
By the end of the lesson, the learner should be able to:
Construct simple dichotomous keys. Practice key construction rules. Use observable features for key making. Create keys for given specimens.
Students construct numerical keys using leaf specimens from Fig 1.23. Practice with invertebrate specimens. Teacher guidance on using contrasting features systematically.
Various leaf specimens, Fig 1.23 leaf types, Invertebrate specimens, Key construction worksheets
Certificate Biology Form 3, Pages 28-33
6 2-3
CLASSIFICATION II
ECOLOGY
Using Identification Keys
Introduction to Ecology
Ecological Terms and Concepts
Ecosystems - Structure and Components
By the end of the lesson, the learner should be able to:
Use dichotomous keys to identify organisms. Practice with complex keys. Identify chordates using provided keys. Apply keys to unknown specimens.
Define ecology and explain its importance. Distinguish between biotic and abiotic factors. State the significance of ecological studies.
Practical use of identification keys for chordate specimens. Students work through numerical keys step by step. Practice identifying organisms using keys from practical activities section.
Q/A: Review of organism-environment interactions. Discussion of ecology definition and importance. Teacher exposition of ecological studies for conservation and biodiversity.
Chordate specimens, Provided identification keys, Unknown specimens for practice
Charts - Definition of ecology, Examples of ecological studies
Charts - Ecological terms definitions, Diagrams of biosphere layers
Charts - Ecosystem components, Examples of different ecosystems
Certificate Biology Form 3, Pages 31-33
Certificate Biology Form 3, Pages 36-37
6 4
ECOLOGY
Abiotic Factors - Temperature and Water
Abiotic Factors - Light and Humidity
By the end of the lesson, the learner should be able to:
Explain how temperature affects organisms. Describe the role of water in ecosystems. Analyze adaptations to temperature variations.
Detailed discussion of temperature effects on photosynthesis and plant growth. Exposition of water requirements for plants and animals. Q/A: Temperature ranges and organism distribution.
Charts - Temperature effects on organisms, Water cycle diagram
Charts - Light intensity effects, Humidity and transpiration
Certificate Biology Form 3, Pages 38-40
6 5
ECOLOGY
Abiotic Factors - Wind, Altitude, and Salinity
Biotic Factors - Producers
By the end of the lesson, the learner should be able to:
Explain effects of wind on plant growth. Describe altitude effects on organisms. Analyze salinity effects on plant distribution.
Discussion of wind effects on transpiration and plant shape. Exposition of altitude effects on atmospheric pressure and temperature. Q/A: Halophyte adaptations to saline conditions.
Charts - Wind effects on plants, Altitude zonation, Halophyte examples
Charts - Examples of producers, Photosynthesis equation
Certificate Biology Form 3, Pages 42-43
7 1
ECOLOGY
Biotic Factors - Consumers
Biotic Factors - Decomposers and Detrivores
By the end of the lesson, the learner should be able to:
Classify consumers into different types. Distinguish primary, secondary, and tertiary consumers. Give examples of herbivores and carnivores.
Detailed discussion of consumer types - primary (herbivores), secondary (carnivores), tertiary consumers. Examples: grazers, browsers, predators. Q/A: Omnivores as multiple-level consumers.
Charts - Consumer classification, Examples of different consumer types
Charts - Examples of decomposers, Nutrient cycling diagrams
Certificate Biology Form 3, Pages 44-45
7 2-3
ECOLOGY
Nitrogen Cycle
Trophic Levels and Energy Flow
By the end of the lesson, the learner should be able to:
Describe the nitrogen cycle process. Explain the role of bacteria in nitrogen fixation. Identify stages of nitrification and denitrification.
Define trophic levels and identify different levels. Explain energy flow through ecosystems. Describe energy losses between trophic levels.
Detailed study of nitrogen cycle using Fig 2.1. Discussion of nitrogen-fixing bacteria, nitrifying bacteria, and denitrifying bacteria. Q/A: Importance of nitrogen for protein synthesis.
Teacher exposition of trophic levels - producers to tertiary consumers. Discussion of unidirectional energy flow and energy losses. Q/A: Reasons for energy loss at each level.
Charts - Fig 2.1 nitrogen cycle, Table 2.1 bacterial roles
Charts - Trophic level diagrams, Energy flow patterns
Certificate Biology Form 3, Pages 38-40
Certificate Biology Form 3, Pages 43-45
7 4
ECOLOGY
Food Chains
By the end of the lesson, the learner should be able to:
Define food chains and construct examples. Identify energy flow direction in food chains. Give examples from terrestrial and aquatic habitats.
Study of food chain examples from textbook. Construction of terrestrial food chains (grass→impala→leopard). Aquatic food chains (plankton→fish→shark). Practice drawing food chains.
Charts - Food chain examples, Arrows showing energy direction
Certificate Biology Form 3, Pages 46-47
7 5
ECOLOGY
Food Webs
By the end of the lesson, the learner should be able to:
Explain food webs as interconnected food chains. Construct food webs from given organisms. Analyze complex feeding relationships.
Study of Fig 2.4 simple food web. Construction of food webs showing multiple feeding relationships. Q/A: How food webs show ecosystem complexity.
Charts - Fig 2.4 food web, Complex food web examples
Certificate Biology Form 3, Pages 46-47
8

MID TERM

9 1
ECOLOGY
Ecological Pyramids - Introduction
By the end of the lesson, the learner should be able to:
Define ecological pyramids. Distinguish types of ecological pyramids. Explain pyramid of numbers concept.
Teacher exposition of ecological pyramids as graphical representations. Discussion of pyramid types - numbers, biomass, energy. Study of pyramid of numbers using Fig 2.6.
Charts - Fig 2.6 pyramid of numbers, Different pyramid types
Certificate Biology Form 3, Pages 47-49
9 2-3
ECOLOGY
Pyramid of Numbers and Biomass
Interspecific Relationships - Predation
Parasitism - Types and Adaptations
By the end of the lesson, the learner should be able to:
Construct pyramids of numbers from data. Explain inverted pyramids. Define and construct pyramid of biomass.
Define predator-prey relationships. Describe predator and prey adaptations. Give examples of predation in different habitats.
Practice constructing normal and inverted pyramids of numbers. Discussion of when inverted pyramids occur (parasites, large trees). Study of biomass calculation and pyramid construction.
Detailed discussion of predation as feeding relationship. Study of predator adaptations (speed, senses, hunting strategies). Q/A: Prey defense mechanisms (camouflage, mimicry, protective covering).
Data sets for pyramid construction, Calculators, Graph paper
Charts - Predator-prey examples, Adaptation illustrations
Charts - Parasite examples, Adaptation diagrams, Life cycle illustrations
Certificate Biology Form 3, Pages 47-50
Certificate Biology Form 3, Pages 50-52
9 4
ECOLOGY
Saprophytism and Economic Importance
By the end of the lesson, the learner should be able to:
Define saprophytism and role of decomposers. Explain economic importance of saprophytes. Describe harmful effects of saprophytes.
Discussion of saprophytes as decomposers. Economic benefits: recycling, soil fertility, antibiotics, fermentation. Harmful effects: food decay, food poisoning. Q/A: Useful vs harmful saprophytic activities.
Charts - Decomposition process, Examples of useful and harmful saprophytes
Certificate Biology Form 3, Pages 57-60
9 5
ECOLOGY
Mutualism and Symbiosis
By the end of the lesson, the learner should be able to:
Define mutualism and symbiosis. Give examples of mutually beneficial relationships. Explain lichens, mycorrhiza, and nitrogen-fixing bacteria.
Study of mutualistic relationships with examples: lichens (algae-fungi), mycorrhiza (fungi-tree roots), nitrogen-fixing bacteria (Rhizobium-legumes). Q/A: Benefits to both partners in each relationship.
Charts - Fig 2.8 lichens, Fig 2.9 root nodules, Symbiotic relationship examples
Certificate Biology Form 3, Pages 60-63
10 1
ECOLOGY
Commensalism
By the end of the lesson, the learner should be able to:
Define commensalism and give examples. Distinguish commensalism from other relationships. Analyze one-sided beneficial relationships.
Discussion of commensalism as one-sided benefit. Examples: ox-pecker birds and buffalo, cattle egrets and grazing animals, epiphytic plants on trees. Q/A: Why host doesn't benefit or suffer.
Charts - Commensalism examples, Epiphyte illustrations
Certificate Biology Form 3, Pages 63-64
10 2-3
ECOLOGY
Population Studies - Introduction
Population Estimation Methods - Direct Counting
By the end of the lesson, the learner should be able to:
Define population and population density. Explain factors affecting population size. Describe carrying capacity concept.
Describe direct counting methods. Explain when direct counting is suitable. Practice population estimation calculations.
Teacher exposition of population definitions. Discussion of biological factors: birth rate, death rate, sex ratio. Q/A: Environmental factors affecting population growth.
Discussion of direct counting for small populations and large slow-moving animals. Examples: tree counting, aerial surveys. Practice with simple population counts and density calculations.
Charts - Population definitions, Factors affecting population
Calculators, Sample area measurements, Population data sets
Certificate Biology Form 3, Pages 60-61
Certificate Biology Form 3, Pages 61-62
10 4
ECOLOGY
Capture-Mark-Release-Recapture Method
By the end of the lesson, the learner should be able to:
Explain the capture-recapture method. Apply the capture-recapture formula. Identify sources of error in the method.
Detailed study of capture-recapture method for mobile animals. Practice using the formula: P = (M × R)/m. Discussion of assumptions and sources of error.
Calculators, Sample data for calculations, Formula charts
Certificate Biology Form 3, Pages 61-62
10 5
ECOLOGY
Quadrat and Transect Methods
By the end of the lesson, the learner should be able to:
Describe quadrat sampling method. Explain line and belt transect techniques. Practice population estimation using sampling.
Study of quadrat method for plants and small animals using Fig 2.12. Discussion of line transects for distribution patterns. Practice calculations using sampling formulas.
Quadrats (if available), Measuring tapes, Sample area data, Calculators
Certificate Biology Form 3, Pages 62-64
11 1
ECOLOGY
Plant Adaptations - Xerophytes
By the end of the lesson, the learner should be able to:
Define xerophytes and their habitat conditions. Describe structural adaptations for water conservation. Explain physiological adaptations of desert plants.
Study of xerophyte adaptations using Fig 2.14. Discussion of modified leaves, water storage, extensive roots, waxy cuticles. Q/A: Stomatal adaptations and reduced transpiration.
Charts - Fig 2.14 xerophyte examples, Cactus specimens (if available)
Certificate Biology Form 3, Pages 64-66
11 2-3
ECOLOGY
Plant Adaptations - Hydrophytes
Plant Adaptations - Halophytes and Mesophytes
By the end of the lesson, the learner should be able to:
Define hydrophytes and aquatic conditions. Describe adaptations to aquatic environments. Explain buoyancy and gaseous exchange adaptations.
Define halophytes and saline habitat adaptations. Describe mesophyte characteristics. Compare different plant adaptation types.
Study of hydrophyte adaptations using Fig 2.15. Discussion of aerenchyma tissue, stomatal distribution, reduced xylem. Q/A: Adaptations to low light and oxygen levels in water.
Study of mangrove adaptations using Fig 2.16. Discussion of salt excretion, pneumatophores, viviparous seeds. Q/A: Mesophyte balance between water uptake and loss.
Charts - Fig 2.15 aquatic plants, Water plant specimens (if available)
Charts - Fig 2.16 mangroves, Comparison table of plant types
Certificate Biology Form 3, Pages 66-68
Certificate Biology Form 3, Pages 68-70
11 4
ECOLOGY
Environmental Pollution - Introduction
Air Pollution and Global Warming
By the end of the lesson, the learner should be able to:
Define pollution and identify major pollutants. Classify types of environmental pollution. Explain pollution effects on ecosystems.
Teacher exposition of pollution definition and sources. Discussion of air, water, and soil pollution types. Q/A: Human activities causing pollution and ecosystem disruption.
Charts - Pollution types and sources, Environmental damage photos
Charts - Fig 2.18 greenhouse effect, Air pollution sources diagram
Certificate Biology Form 3, Pages 70-71
11 5
ECOLOGY
Water Pollution
By the end of the lesson, the learner should be able to:
Identify sources of water pollution. Explain effects on aquatic ecosystems. Describe eutrophication process.
Study of water pollution sources using Fig 2.20. Discussion of domestic waste, industrial effluents, pesticides, oil spills. Q/A: Eutrophication, algal blooms, and oxygen depletion.
Charts - Fig 2.20 water pollution sources, Eutrophication process diagram
Certificate Biology Form 3, Pages 75-78
12 1
ECOLOGY
Soil Pollution and Land Degradation
By the end of the lesson, the learner should be able to:
Identify causes of soil pollution. Explain land degradation processes. Describe soil conservation methods.
Discussion of soil pollution from non-biodegradable materials, pesticides, oil spills. Study of soil conservation using Fig 2.22. Q/A: Terracing, contour ploughing, agroforestry.
Charts - Fig 2.22 soil conservation methods, Soil erosion examples
Certificate Biology Form 3, Pages 78-82
12 2-3
ECOLOGY
Human Diseases and Ecology
Malaria and Parasitic Diseases
Practical Activities and Field Studies
By the end of the lesson, the learner should be able to:
Relate environmental conditions to disease occurrence. Describe waterborne diseases. Explain disease transmission and prevention.
Describe malaria life cycle and transmission. Explain bilharzia and parasitic worm diseases. Analyze prevention and control measures.
Study of cholera, typhoid, amoebic dysentery transmission and prevention. Discussion of poor sanitation as disease cause. Q/A: Hygiene practices and disease control.
Detailed study of Plasmodium life cycle using Fig 2.24. Discussion of Anopheles mosquito control. Study of Schistosoma and Ascaris adaptations and prevention.
Charts - Disease transmission cycles, Prevention methods
Charts - Fig 2.24 malaria life cycle, Parasite life cycles, Prevention methods
Quadrats, Sweep nets, Measuring tapes, Notebooks, Collection containers, Hand lenses
Certificate Biology Form 3, Pages 82-84
Certificate Biology Form 3, Pages 84-88

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