Thu, Jan 28, 2027Spring (Semester 2) · Week 2Day 8 of 6780-min block

Outbreak relationship map

Today's target

Build a relationship map linking patients, places, and times to find how an outbreak might be spreading.

Due today · Notebook check Required

Node-and-link outbreak relationship map with labeled connections, circled source, and a one-sentence testable hypothesis.

Your 4 steps today
  1. 1
    Do this
    Build a relationship map linking patients, places, and times to find how an outbreak might be spreading.
  2. 2
  3. 3
    Submit this
    Notebook check: Node-and-link outbreak relationship map with labeled connections, circled source, and a one-sentence testable hypothesis.
  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) › Outbreak investigation, symptom clusters, pathogen categories, evidence maps. Monday debate: isolation vs. autonomy. › Notebook check
    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 · Outbreak relationship map
WebXam domain
Bio-Molecular Technology
Evidence to produce
Notebook check
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 epidemiologists use patient data to trace a disease back to its source?

  1. 0-10 minLay out the case data table: patient names, onset dates, and locations visited
  2. 10-30 minDraw the node-and-link map: one node per patient, link any who shared a place or event
  3. 30-45 minMark the earliest cases (index cases) and highlight shared exposures in a second color
  4. 45-58 minCircle the most likely source location; label each link with the shared exposure
  5. 58-72 minWrite the hypothesis: one sentence naming the source and route of spread
  6. 72-80 minPartner compare: do your maps agree on the source? Discuss any differences
Mr. Mendoza's 5-minute intro
  • During a foodborne outbreak, public health investigators have hours, not weeks, to find the source before more people get sick.
  • The relationship map is the visual tool they use to spot the pattern hidden in patient data.
  • Today you play that investigator role with a real-style dataset.
  • Exit goal: a completed relationship map with one circled likely source and a hypothesis sentence.
Do this, step by step
  1. 1Lay out the case data: who got sick, when, and where they had been.
  2. 2Draw each patient as a node and connect any patients who shared a place or event.
  3. 3Mark the earliest cases and look for a common exposure they all share.
  4. 4Circle the most likely source location based on the shared connections.
  5. 5Add a short label on each link explaining the connection (same restaurant, same day).
  6. 6Write a one-sentence hypothesis naming the likely source and route of spread.
You'll be able to
  • You will be able to organize outbreak data into a relationship map.
  • You will be able to identify a likely common source of exposure.
  • You will be able to state a testable hypothesis about spread.
Know by the end
  • Epidemiologists look for the index case (first known patient) and shared exposures to identify the source.
  • A relationship map (also called an exposure network or epi-link map) visualizes connections between cases to reveal transmission chains.
  • A hypothesis in epidemiology is testable: it names a specific source and a specific route of spread.
📺 Tutor me: CDC: How an Outbreak Is Investigated
Do the work

Your PLTW work today

Open this PLTW section today

Outbreak investigation, symptom clusters, pathogen categories, evidence maps. Monday debate: isolation vs. autonomy. · Outbreak relationship map

Day 4 of this lesson. Open this exact section in myPLTW (reached through Schoology), then do the work below.

Do this: Use the case data in Activity 1.1.2 Investigating an Outbreak in myPLTW to build your outbreak relationship map.

Complete

Complete the node-and-link map with labeled connections and a hypothesis sentence.

How far to get

Pathogen table should be done (Wednesday); relationship map due today.

Upload as evidence

Relationship map with labeled links and circled source in notebook.

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.

Outbreak investigation, symptom clusters, pathogen categories, evidence maps. Monday debate: isolation vs. autonomy.Day 4 of this projectSee the full week plan
Today's PLTW target

Outbreak investigation, symptom clusters, pathogen categories, evidence maps. Monday debate: isolation vs. autonomy. · Outbreak relationship map

Use the case data in Activity 1.1.2 Investigating an Outbreak in myPLTW to build your outbreak relationship map.

Pathogen table should be done (Wednesday); relationship map 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 relationship map linking patients, places, and times to find how an outbreak might be spreading.

  • Lay out the case data: who got sick, when, and where they had been.
  • Draw each patient as a node and connect any patients who shared a place or event.
  • Mark the earliest cases and look for a common exposure they all share.
  • Circle the most likely source location based on the shared connections.
  • Add a short label on each link explaining the connection (same restaurant, same day).
  • Write a one-sentence hypothesis naming the likely source and route of spread.
2 · Turn in today

Notebook check: Node-and-link outbreak relationship map with labeled connections, circled source, and a one-sentence testable hypothesis.

Submit on Schoology

Upload by 11:29 PM for full credit.

3 · Who's doing what (team)
TaskWho
Lay out the case data: who got sick, when, and where they had been._______
Draw each patient as a node and connect any patients who shared a place or event._______
Mark the earliest cases and look for a common exposure they all share._______
Circle the most likely source location based on the shared connections._______
Add a short label on each link explaining the connection (same restaurant, same day)._______
Write a one-sentence hypothesis naming the likely source and route of spread._______

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 organize outbreak data into a relationship map.
  • You will be able to identify a likely common source of exposure.
  • You will be able to state a testable hypothesis about spread.
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.

Catch-up / reteachFor: Need extra support
MI Study Guide (Lessons 1.1 and 1.2)
worksheet/handoutOpens here
Open the file

Use this if you were absent, got stuck, or need another pass before you submit the lesson artifact.

Placement rationale

Matched Outbreak investigation and case framing by path:Medical-Interventions/Unit-1_How-to-Fight-Infection/1.1_The-Mystery-Infection; keywords:outbreak, pathogen. Score 142. Visibility: student-schoology (student-facing resource; link through Schoology rather than local path).

Catch-up / reteachFor: Need extra support
MI 1.1.6 Final Diagnosis - Outbreak Day 3 resource sheet
worksheet/handoutOpens here
Open the file

Use this if you were absent, got stuck, or need another pass before you submit the lesson artifact.

Placement rationale

Matched Outbreak investigation and case framing by path:Medical-Interventions/Unit-1_How-to-Fight-Infection/1.1_The-Mystery-Infection; keywords:outbreak, case. Score 138. Visibility: student-schoology (student-facing resource; link through Schoology rather than local path).

Extension / challengeFor: Ready to go deeper
POGIL: DNA Detective - BLAST Pathogen ID
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 Outbreak investigation and case framing by path:Medical-Interventions/Unit-1_How-to-Fight-Infection/00_Unit-Overview; keywords:outbreak, pathogen. Score 134. 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.

Words

This unit's vocabulary

pathogen/PATH-uh-jen/symptomsignoutbreakepidemiology/ep-ih-dee-mee-OL-uh-jee/reservoirvector

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 client's temperature, heart rate, blood pressure, and rash can all be measured and recorded by the provider. What are these called?
An epidemiology team investigating an outbreak wants to find the root cause and identify who was exposed. Finding the first person infected at a site is important because it helps determine what?
After culturing a suspected pathogen, you inoculate a healthy test subject. Under Koch's Postulates, what should you observe?
Which microbiology principle states that one specific organism causes a specific disease and can be isolated from a host who has that disease?
Check yourself

Cumulative WebXam review

A quick mixed-review pulling questions from earlier units plus today, so the WebXam material stays fresh.

Tap an answer to check it · nothing is recorded or graded
[Review: Lab Safety & the Safety Data Sheet (SDS)] What does the abbreviation GLP stand for in a regulated biomedical laboratory?
A client's temperature, heart rate, blood pressure, and rash can all be measured and recorded by the provider. What are these called?
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 Notebook check.

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:

CDC — Principles of Epidemiology (self-study)
How this is graded
For: Notebook check — Node-and-link outbreak relationship map with labeled connections, circled source, and a one-sentence testable hypothesis.
  • 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 28, 2027 · Outbreak relationship map here. Use a clear file name (your initials + project). Routine work still goes to Schoology (via the CMSD portal).

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