Thu, Jan 21, 2027Spring (Semester 2) · Week 1Day 3 of 6780-min block

Intervention inventory

Today's target

Build a starter list of medical interventions and sort them so you can see the landscape of this course.

Due today · Tracker entry Required

Three-column intervention inventory (prevention, diagnosis, treatment) with at least ten entries and one written prediction.

Your 4 steps today
  1. 1
    Do this
    Build a starter list of medical interventions and sort them so you can see the landscape of this course.
  2. 2
  3. 3
    Submit this
    Tracker entry: Three-column intervention inventory (prevention, diagnosis, treatment) with at least ten entries and one written prediction.
  4. 4
    Submit it here
    1. 1CMSD website. Go to clevelandmetroschools.org and click the Clever button.
    2. 2Clever. Clever opens. Sign in if it asks.
    3. 3Microsoft (district) login. Use your district Microsoft account (the one for school).
    4. 4Schoology. Open Schoology, then your class, then Assignments, and find the file named below.
    The file to submit is named: Genetics of Disease (Medical Interventions) › Course launch, safety, Smith family case, intervention categories, and the daily submission routine. › Tracker entry
    Open Schoology
Were you absent? Jump to the make-up plan
Where this fits
Tested on (Ohio WebXam)
Genetics of Disease · 072130
PLTW lesson
MI · Intervention inventory
WebXam domain
Bio-Molecular Technology
Evidence to produce
Tracker entry
Lab / skill
OSHA — Hazard Communication & Safety Data Sheets (authoritative)
Quick glossary
CER:
Claim, Evidence, Reasoning — make a claim, back it with evidence, explain your reasoning.
SOP:
Standard Operating Procedure — the exact steps to follow (especially in a lab).
Tracker:
Your PLTW progress log where you record completed evidence.
myPLTW:
The PLTW course site where you do the online activities — you open it through Schoology.
Learn first

Minute-by-minute · 80-minute block

💡 Big idea: How do scientists and doctors decide which kind of intervention to use against a disease?

  1. 0-10 minBrainstorm: individually list at least eight interventions you have heard of
  2. 10-25 minWrite one sentence per intervention explaining the problem it solves and how it works
  3. 25-40 minSort the list into prevention, diagnosis, and treatment columns; flag uncertain ones
  4. 40-55 minPartner trade: add two interventions from your partner's list that you missed
  5. 55-70 minClass share-out: build a collective list on the board and discuss the hardest ones to classify
  6. 70-80 minWrite a one-sentence prediction about which category the course starts with and why
Mr. Mendoza's 5-minute intro
  • Every drug, test, and vaccine in medicine started as a question: how do we stop this disease?
  • By the end of this course you will have run some of the actual tools used to answer that question in a real lab.
  • Today's inventory is your baseline: what do you already know, and what gaps does this course fill?
  • Exit goal: a sorted three-column intervention list ready to revisit at the end of the year.
Do this, step by step
  1. 1List eight interventions you have heard of, from vaccines to antibiotics to gene therapy.
  2. 2For each, write one sentence: what problem does it solve and roughly how?
  3. 3Sort your list into prevention, diagnosis, and treatment columns.
  4. 4Mark any intervention you are unsure how to classify and flag it with a question mark.
  5. 5Trade lists with a partner and add two interventions you did not have.
  6. 6Write one prediction about which category we will study first and why.
You'll be able to
  • You will be able to give examples of prevention, diagnosis, and treatment interventions.
  • You will be able to classify a medical intervention by its purpose.
  • You will be able to connect an intervention to the problem it addresses.
Know by the end
  • Medical interventions fall into three categories: prevention (stop disease from starting), diagnosis (identify what is wrong), and treatment (fight or manage the disease).
  • The same disease may require interventions from all three categories at different stages.
  • This course focuses on molecular and genetic tools used in diagnosis and treatment.
📺 Tutor me: MedlinePlus: Health topics overview
Do the work

Your PLTW work today

Open this PLTW section today

Course launch, safety, Smith family case, intervention categories, and the daily submission routine. · Intervention inventory

Day 3 of this lesson. Open this exact section in myPLTW (reached through Schoology), then do the work below.

Do this: Open myPLTW and locate Activity 1.1.1 Intervention Inventory; review the categories of medical interventions you will encounter this semester.

Complete

Complete your starter intervention inventory list and note which category the course opens with.

How far to get

Notebook entry should already be uploaded (Wednesday); inventory list due today.

Upload as evidence

Completed intervention inventory in your notebook or uploaded to the portfolio.

All PLTW activities are completed inside the PLTW course environment — this page only gives direction. Submit producibles on Schoology.

The plan

Today's PLTW tracker

Check things off as you work, then submit. This tells Mr. Mendoza how you're doing so he can help the class. It does not replace turning in your producible on Schoology.

Use the code Mr. Mendoza gave you, not your name. Saved on this device.

Course launch, safety, Smith family case, intervention categories, and the daily submission routine.Day 3 of this projectSee the full week plan
Today's PLTW target

Course launch, safety, Smith family case, intervention categories, and the daily submission routine. · Intervention inventory

Open myPLTW and locate Activity 1.1.1 Intervention Inventory; review the categories of medical interventions you will encounter this semester.

Notebook entry should already be uploaded (Wednesday); inventory list due today.

This is how Mr. Mendoza sees the class keeping pace with PLTW. Be honest, it only helps if it is accurate.

1 · What you do today

🎯 Build a starter list of medical interventions and sort them so you can see the landscape of this course.

  • List eight interventions you have heard of, from vaccines to antibiotics to gene therapy.
  • For each, write one sentence: what problem does it solve and roughly how?
  • Sort your list into prevention, diagnosis, and treatment columns.
  • Mark any intervention you are unsure how to classify and flag it with a question mark.
  • Trade lists with a partner and add two interventions you did not have.
  • Write one prediction about which category we will study first and why.
2 · Turn in today

Tracker entry: Three-column intervention inventory (prevention, diagnosis, treatment) with at least ten entries and one written prediction.

Submit on Schoology

Upload by 11:29 PM for full credit.

3 · Who's doing what (team)
TaskWho
List eight interventions you have heard of, from vaccines to antibiotics to gene therapy._______
For each, write one sentence: what problem does it solve and roughly how?_______
Sort your list into prevention, diagnosis, and treatment columns._______
Mark any intervention you are unsure how to classify and flag it with a question mark._______
Trade lists with a partner and add two interventions you did not have._______
Write one prediction about which category we will study first and why._______

Working solo? Put your own name in "Who" for every row.

4 · Words I can use correctly
5 · I'm successful today when I can…
  • You will be able to give examples of prevention, diagnosis, and treatment interventions.
  • You will be able to classify a medical intervention by its purpose.
  • You will be able to connect an intervention to the problem it addresses.
6 · Reflection & next steps
Where are you today?0/9 checked
Pick your period and code first.
Explore

Teacher-posted resources

Classroom documents for this lesson. Ones marked “Open the file” open right here; the rest are posted in Schoology. Use the label on each card to choose the right move.

Use during lessonFor: Everyone
MI Unit 1 Combined First Problem Activities
worksheet/handoutOpens here
Open the file

Open this when the class reaches this activity and use it to complete the required lesson artifact.

Placement rationale

Matched Course launch, safety, SDS, notebook setup by path:Medical-Interventions/Unit-1_How-to-Fight-Infection/00_Unit-Overview; keywords:intervention. Score 130. Visibility: student-schoology (student-facing resource; link through Schoology rather than local path).

Extension / challengeFor: Ready to go deeper
POGIL: Molecular Techniques Food Safety Crisis
reading/referenceOpens here
Open the file

Use this after the required lesson work when you are ready for a harder application or a deeper connection.

Placement rationale

Matched Course launch, safety, SDS, notebook setup by path:Medical-Interventions/Unit-1_How-to-Fight-Infection/00_Unit-Overview; keywords:safety. Score 126. Visibility: student-schoology (student-facing resource; link through Schoology rather than local path).

How to get there: open the CMSD website, click Clever, sign in with your Microsoft (district) account, then open Schoology from Clever.

Lab day

Lab & supplies

Bring / set up
Splash goggles (ANSI Z87)Nitrile glovesLab apronPrinted or online SDS for the assigned chemicalClass set of GHS pictogram referenceKnown location of eyewash, shower, extinguisher, sharps/biohazard bin
OSHA — Hazard Communication & Safety Data Sheets (authoritative)
Words

This unit's vocabulary

interventiondiagnosisprognosisevidencesafetyPPE(Personal Protective Equipment)

Tap the speaker to hear a term. Weekly vocabulary task: add two of these terms to your notebook glossary with a definition and an example in your own words.

Check yourself

WebXam practice

Tap an answer to check it · nothing is recorded or graded
A research protocol requires gloves, a Bunsen burner, bleach, and proper hand-washing before handling samples. These are all examples of what?
In a molecular genetics lab, which required protocol protects both the sample and the researcher?
Under Good Laboratory Practice (GLP), why must every notebook entry be made in permanent ink, signed, and dated?
What does the abbreviation GLP stand for in a regulated biomedical laboratory?
Explore

Where this leads — careers

What today's skills lead to. These are real health-science careers this course builds toward. Tap one to see, on the US Department of Labor's O*NET site, what the job actually involves, what it pays, and how fast it is growing.

Safety net

What to do if you were absent

If YOU are absent

Today is individual PLTW work, so do exactly what we did in class, from home: complete the same PLTW target above, then submit your Tracker entry.

Open Schoology (CMSD) and keep going

How to get there: open the CMSD website, click Clever, sign in with your Microsoft (district) account, then open Schoology from Clever.

If MR. MENDOZA is absent

Class still runs. Complete the online activity above (it's self-guided). Need the concept taught without a teacher? Use this authoritative explainer:

OSHA — Hazard Communication & Safety Data Sheets (authoritative)
How this is graded
For: Tracker entry — Three-column intervention inventory (prevention, diagnosis, treatment) with at least ten entries and one written prediction.
  • Complete
    Every required part of the artifact is present, nothing left blank.
  • Accurate
    The science and the data are correct and match the evidence.
  • Scientific reasoning
    You explain your claim with evidence and reasoning (CER), not just an answer.
  • Professional communication
    Clear, organized, labeled, and written the way a clinician or scientist would.
  • Submitted
    Turned in the right way (Schoology for routine work) and confirmed.
Submission Zone

Drop your Thu, Jan 21, 2027 · Intervention inventory here. Use a clear file name (your initials + project). Routine work still goes to Schoology (via the CMSD portal).

Upload a project