Semester 2 (Spring) Β· Week 2Jan 25–29

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

What to do if absent
Color keyLearn firstGet orientedDo the workLab daySafety netCheck yourself
Quick glossary
CER:
Claim, Evidence, Reasoning β€” make a claim, back it with evidence, explain your reasoning.
SOP:
Standard Operating Procedure β€” 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 β€” you open it through Schoology.
Learn first

Week overview - Framing an Outbreak Investigation

Jan 25–29

Turn a messy set of patient symptoms into an organized outbreak investigation an epidemiologist could act on.

Week arc
  1. 1List the cases. From the patient data your teacher provides, list each patient with their symptoms and onset date.
  2. 2Separate signs from symptoms. Sort each observation into a SIGN (measurable, e.g., fever 39Β°C) or a SYMPTOM (reported, e.g., 'feels tired').
  3. 3Cluster. Group patients who share symptom patterns. Note anything they have in common (place, food, contact).
  4. 4Map relationships. Draw who-contacted-whom and mark likely a reservoir or vector if one appears.
  5. 5Hypothesize. Write a CER: claim (what kind of pathogen), evidence (your clusters), reasoning (why the pattern fits).
By week end
  • β€’ Distinguish signs from symptoms in real patient data.
  • β€’ Build a relationship/line-list map from raw cases.
  • β€’ State a defensible first diagnosis hypothesis with evidence.
The plan

Daily lessons this week

Open any day for its full lesson, the work due that day, and guided notes.

MondayMon, Jan 25
Bioethics debate: isolation vs autonomy

Written CER on mandatory isolation: claim, evidence, reasoning, and a rebuttal addressing one opposing point.

TuesdayTue, Jan 26
Signs vs symptoms

Two-column signs-and-symptoms chart from three patient cases, plus a one-sentence disease category prediction.

WednesdayWed, Jan 27
Pathogen categories

Four-row pathogen comparison table (bacteria, viruses, fungi, parasites) with size, cell status, example disease, treatment, and distinguishing feature columns.

ThursdayThu, Jan 28
Outbreak relationship map

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

FridayFri, Jan 29
Outbreak CER submission

Full CER identifying the outbreak pathogen type and source, with at least three evidence points, a reasoning paragraph, and a proposed confirmatory test.

Get oriented

Quick intro to the week

  • Monday is a Philosophy-for-Kids bioethics debate: isolation vs. autonomy β€” how much can public health limit one person's freedom to protect many?
  • Bring two prepared questions and one CER contribution.
  • By Friday you owe an outbreak relationship map + a CER diagnosis hypothesis.
Do the work

Your PLTW coursework this week

Do this: Advance the PLTW Unit 1 infection case: build the outbreak map and record your initial diagnosis hypothesis as evidence.

Know when done
  • β€’ The difference between a sign and a symptom.
  • β€’ How epidemiologists use line lists and relationship maps.
  • β€’ Pathogen categories (bacteria, virus, fungus, parasite).
Be able to do
  • β€’ Organize raw case data into a usable map.
  • β€’ Write a CER that proposes a pathogen category from evidence.

πŸ“‹ PLTW evidence to log: outbreak relationship map and CER diagnosis hypothesis for the Unit 1 infection case.

All PLTW activities are completed inside the PLTW course environment β€” this page only gives direction.

The plan

This week's PLTW tracker

Your week at a glance. Check off each deliverable as you finish it, then submit so Mr. Mendoza can see how the class is pacing.

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

DayDateFocusKey deliverable
MondayMon, Jan 25Bioethics debate: isolation vs autonomy Written CER on mandatory isolation: claim, evidence, reasoning, and a rebuttal addressing one opposing point.
TuesdayTue, Jan 26Signs vs symptoms Two-column signs-and-symptoms chart from three patient cases, plus a one-sentence disease category prediction.
WednesdayWed, Jan 27Pathogen categories Four-row pathogen comparison table (bacteria, viruses, fungi, parasites) with size, cell status, example disease, treatment, and distinguishing feature columns.
ThursdayThu, Jan 28Outbreak relationship map Node-and-link outbreak relationship map with labeled connections, circled source, and a one-sentence testable hypothesis.
FridayFri, Jan 29Outbreak CER submission Full CER identifying the outbreak pathogen type and source, with at least three evidence points, a reasoning paragraph, and a proposed confirmatory test.
Check off as you finish
  • M: debate prep + outbreak frame
  • T: patient evidence log
  • W: pathogen category notes
  • Th: relationship map
  • F: CER diagnosis hypothesis

Due by week's end: Outbreak relationship map and CER diagnosis hypothesis.

Where are you this week?0/5 checked
Pick your period and code first.
Safety net

What to do when absent

If YOU are absent

Most days, this class is your PLTW coursework β€” and PLTW is online and individual. So being out usually just means doing exactly what we did in class, from home.

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.

Was today a lab or a group activity?

You can't do those from home β€” do this instead: CDC-style line list from teacher data.

If MR. MENDOZA is absent

Class still runs. A substitute will post today's plan β€” complete the online activity above; it's built to be self-guided. Need the concept taught without a teacher? Use this authoritative explainer:

CDC β€” Principles of Epidemiology (self-study)
Words

Vocabulary

pathogensymptomsignoutbreakepidemiologyreservoirvector
Explore

Teacher-posted resources

Classroom documents for this lesson. Ones marked β€œOpen 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.

Aligned to

Standards this week

β€’ Genetics of Disease 072130 Β· 5.8 Biotechnology Research and Experiments
β€’ NGSS argumentation from evidence [N]
Check yourself

WebXam practice

Tap an answer to check it Β· 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?
Submission Zone

Drop your Week 2 here. Use a clear file name (your initials + project). Routine work still goes to Schoology (via the CMSD portal).

Upload a project