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The Five-Kingdom Classification System. Danielle A. Cook EDT 347: Monday 6:30 – 8:00 4 th Grade Lesson. The Five Kingdoms Important Vocabulary Words. Kingdom : The highest level of classification of organisms based on similarities and common ancestry.
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The Five-Kingdom Classification System Danielle A. Cook EDT 347: Monday 6:30 – 8:00 4th Grade Lesson
The Five KingdomsImportant Vocabulary Words Kingdom: The highest level of classification of organisms based on similarities and common ancestry. Organism: a life form with a body made up of organs, organelles, or other parts. Examples include plants, animals, bacteria, protists, or fungi. Classification (in Biology): grouping organisms based on structure or evolution and taxonomy. Click here for a FUN Quiz!
The Five Kingdom Breakdown Kingdom: members • Kingdom Monera: unicellular or colony-celled bacteria • Kingdom Protista: multi-cellular bacteria • Kingdom Fungi: fungi (multi-cellular) • Kingdom Plantae: plants (multi-cellular) • Kingdom Animalia: animals (multi-cellular)
Are you ready for Quiz Time? Which kingdom is uni-cellular? • Kingdom Plantae • Kingdom Fungi • Kingdom Monera • Kingdom Protista
Way to Go! You are correct! The Kingdom Monera consists of uni-cellular organisms! Great Job! Click here for Information About your teacher
Sorry, nice try. Go back and review the information again. Click here to review the information and try again
Bio Page • I am an Elementary School major at Western Michigan University in my third year of the program. • I am the vice president of a service/leadership organization called Circle K that volunteers around our community. • In my spare time, I love to volunteer and spent time with my family and friends.
Reference Information: Pictures from Clipart • http://www.usoe.k12.ut.us/curr/science/sciber00/7th/classify/sciber/5king1.htm • http://waynesword.palomar.edu/trfeb98.htm • http://images.google.com/imgres?imgurl=http://www.seinan-gu.ac.jp/~djohnson/natural/kingdoms • http://www.seinan-gu.ac.jp/~djohnson/natural/kingdoms.gif • whyfiles.org/ 022critters/phylogeny.html