Genetics Doodle Notes |verified| -
The "Dual Coding Theory" suggests that our brains process visual and verbal information through separate channels. When you combine the two, you create more pathways for retrieval. In a subject as abstract as genetics, this is a game-changer.
This is often the hardest part of genetics. Use a "factory" or "recipe book" analogy in your doodles. Draw the nucleus as the "vault" and the ribosome as the "kitchen" where the protein is baked. 4. Pedigrees and Heredity genetics doodle notes
Teaching genetics can often feel like trying to explain a complex code using only a dry instruction manual. From the intricacies of Meiosis to the mathematical puzzles of Punnett squares, students often get bogged down in the heavy vocabulary of alleles, phenotypes, and genotypes. The "Dual Coding Theory" suggests that our brains
You can’t see a gene or a nitrogenous base with the naked eye. Doodle notes allow students to color-code DNA strands, shade in dominant vs. recessive traits, and physically map out the journey from chromosome to protein. This is often the hardest part of genetics