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What Makes You, You?

Introduction to Traits and Genes

📚 Science 🎓 Grade 7 ⏱️ 60 minutes

Learning Objectives

  • Define and distinguish between inherited traits and acquired traits

  • Explain the relationship between genes, DNA, and chromosomes

  • Describe how traits are passed from parents to offspring

Progress 6 sections
1

What Makes You, You?

~5 minutes

What Makes You, You?

Look around your classroom. Every person you see is unique—different heights, different hair colors, different eye colors, different faces. Yet if you've ever met identical twins, you know that two people can look almost exactly alike. What explains both our differences AND our similarities?

The answer lies in heredity—the passing of traits from parents to their offspring. In this lesson, you'll discover how tiny molecules inside your cells carry instructions that help determine everything from your eye color to whether you can roll your tongue.

Essential Question: How do organisms pass traits to their offspring?

📖 Key Term: Heredity

Heredity is the biological process by which traits are transmitted from parents to their offspring. It explains why children often resemble their parents and why certain characteristics 'run in families.' The scientific study of heredity is called genetics.

2

Understanding Traits

~15 minutes

Understanding Traits

What is a Trait?

A trait is any characteristic of an organism that can be observed or measured. Traits include:
Physical features you can see (hair color, eye color, height)
Physiological characteristics (blood type, ability to digest lactose)
Behavioral tendencies (activity levels in some animals)

Traits can be organized into two major categories based on how they are acquired.

Inherited Traits

Inherited traits are characteristics passed from parents to offspring through genetic information. You received half of your genetic information from your biological mother and half from your biological father. These traits were determined before you were born and cannot be changed by your environment or choices.

Examples of inherited traits:

TraitPossible Variations
Natural hair colorBlack, brown, blonde, red
Hair textureStraight, wavy, curly
Eye colorBrown, blue, green, hazel
Earlobe attachmentAttached or detached (free-hanging)
Tongue rollingCan roll into tube or cannot
Widow's peakV-shaped hairline or straight hairline
DimplesPresent or absent
Blood typeA, B, AB, or O

Heredity: Crash Course Biology

Acquired Traits

Acquired traits are characteristics that develop during an organism's lifetime due to environment, experiences, learning, or choices. These traits are NOT passed to offspring because they do not change the organism's genetic information.

Examples of acquired traits:
• Scars from injuries
• Muscles developed from exercise
• Knowledge and skills learned in school
• Language(s) you speak
• Dyed hair color
• Tattoos or piercings
• A suntan
• Playing a musical instrument
• Fears or phobias developed from experiences

💡 The Critical Distinction

Inherited traits are determined by genes and CAN be passed to offspring.

Acquired traits develop during life and CANNOT be passed to offspring.

A bodybuilder's children are not born with large muscles. A person who learns French does not pass that knowledge to their children through genetics. Only genetic information is inherited.

3

From DNA to Traits: The Genetic Blueprint

~15 minutes

From DNA to Traits: The Genetic Blueprint

The Building Blocks of Heredity

Inside nearly every cell of your body is a control center called the nucleus. Within the nucleus are long, thread-like structures called chromosomes. Humans have 46 chromosomes arranged in 23 pairs—you inherited 23 chromosomes from your mother and 23 from your father.

Chromosomes are made of an amazing molecule called DNA (deoxyribonucleic acid). DNA looks like a twisted ladder—scientists call this shape a double helix. The 'rungs' of this ladder are made of chemical bases that spell out instructions, like letters in an instruction manual.

The Genetic Hierarchy

Think of it like a library:
DNA = The entire library (all genetic information)
Chromosomes = Individual books in the library (46 in humans)
Genes = Chapters or recipes in each book (~20,000-25,000 total in humans)
Traits = The finished products those recipes create

DNA, Chromosomes, Genes, and Traits: An Introduction to Heredity
📖 Key Term: Gene

A gene is a segment of DNA that contains the instructions for building a specific protein or controlling a specific trait. Think of genes as individual 'recipes' within the larger DNA 'cookbook.' Humans have approximately 20,000-25,000 genes spread across their 46 chromosomes.

How Genes Work

When a cell needs to perform a specific function—like making the pigment that colors your eyes—it reads the appropriate gene and follows its instructions to build the necessary protein.

Important facts about genes:
• You have TWO copies of every gene (one from mom, one from dad)
• Your unique combination makes you different from everyone else
• Siblings share parents but receive different gene combinations
• Only identical twins have the exact same genes

This explains why you might have your mother's eye color but your father's hair texture, or your grandmother's nose shape.

What is a Gene?
4

Traits in Families

~10 minutes

Traits in Families

The Martinez Family: A Case Study

Let's examine how traits pass through a family:

Parents:
• Maria Martinez: Brown eyes, curly hair, attached earlobes, can roll tongue, has dimples
• Carlos Martinez: Brown eyes, straight hair, detached earlobes, cannot roll tongue, no dimples

Children:
• Sofia (age 14): Brown eyes, wavy hair, detached earlobes, can roll tongue, has dimples
• Miguel (age 11): Brown eyes, curly hair, attached earlobes, cannot roll tongue, no dimples

Observations:
• Both children have brown eyes like both parents
• Sofia has wavy hair (a blend between curly and straight)
• Miguel has curly hair like his mother
• Each child received different combinations of traits
• Neither child is identical to either parent

💡 Family Trait Activity

Think about your own family! Can you identify which traits you might have inherited from each parent or grandparent? Create a family trait chart listing 5 traits for yourself and your family members.

Observable Human Traits

Here are several inherited traits you can easily observe in yourself and others:

TraitVariation 1Variation 2
EarlobesAttached (connected to head)Detached (free-hanging)
Tongue RollingCan roll into tube shapeCannot roll
HairlineWidow's peak (V-shape)Straight hairline
DimplesPresent when smilingAbsent
FrecklesPresentAbsent
Hand ClaspingLeft thumb naturally on topRight thumb naturally on top
Cleft ChinPresent (dimple in chin)Absent
These variations exist because different versions of genes produce different results. In Lesson 2, you'll learn that these different versions are called alleles.

Human Inherited Traits
5

Summary

~5 minutes

Summary

Key Concepts Review

Heredity is the process by which traits are passed from parents to offspring through genetic information.

Traits are observable characteristics that come in two types:
Inherited traits: Determined by genes, passed from parents (eye color, blood type, natural hair color)
Acquired traits: Develop during life, NOT passed to offspring (scars, learned skills, dyed hair)

The Genetic Hierarchy:
DNA: Double helix molecule containing all genetic instructions
Chromosomes: Organized structures of DNA (46 in humans, in 23 pairs)
Genes: Specific segments of DNA controlling specific traits (~20,000-25,000 in humans)

Why Family Members Are Similar But Not Identical:
• Each person receives 50% of genes from each biological parent
• The random combination creates unique individuals
• Siblings share parents but receive different gene combinations
• Only identical twins have the same genetic makeup

6

Check Your Understanding

Question 1

Which of the following is the BEST definition of heredity?

Question 2

Maria has naturally curly hair. She straightens it every day with a flat iron. If Maria has children, what type of hair will they most likely inherit?

Question 3

Which of the following is an INHERITED trait?

Question 4

A bodybuilder has very large muscles from years of training. His newborn son will most likely:

Question 5

How many chromosomes does a typical human body cell contain?

Question 6

Which statement BEST describes the relationship between genes and traits?

Question 7

Why do siblings from the same parents often look different from each other?

Question 8

In the Martinez family case study, Sofia has wavy hair even though her mother has curly hair and her father has straight hair. This is BEST explained by:

Question 9

Match each term with its correct definition:

DNA
Chromosome
Gene
Trait
Question 10

Classify each trait as INHERITED or ACQUIRED:

Blood type (A, B, AB, O)
Speaking English
Widow's peak hairline
Scar from surgery
Ability to roll tongue
Playing piano
Question 11

Match each structure with its quantity in humans:

Chromosomes
Genes
Chromosomes from mother
Chromosomes from father
Question 12

Which of the following are TRUE statements about genes? (Select ALL that apply)

Select all that apply.

Question 13

Arrange the following from SMALLEST to LARGEST:

⋮⋮ Gene
⋮⋮ Nucleus
⋮⋮ Chromosome
⋮⋮ Cell
Drag items to reorder, then confirm