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Chapter 10:
Shh: Silencing the Hedgehog Pathway INSTRUCTOR’S GUIDE
As with all the cases in this book, please read the preface, if you have not already done so. In the preface you will find suggestions about using Investigative Case–Based Learning (ICBL) in different instructional situations such as starting a new lecture topic, assessing what students already know, setting a context for lab activities, and so on. The preface also describes ways to use cases in a variety of classroom settings and suggests multiple ways to assess learning with cases. Shh: Silencing the Hedgehog Pathway emphasizes materials found in Chapter 11: Cell Communication, Chapter 18: Regulation of Gene Expression, and Chapter 20: DNA Technology and Genomics of Campbell and Reece’s Biology, 8th edition. The case is about the hedgehog signaling pathway, which plays vital roles in both embryonic development and in the formation of several types of cancers. The hedgehog signaling pathway is one that affects cell division. This case refers directly to information from a peerreviewed research paper on an antagonist to the hedgehog pathway and its role in reducing basal cell carcinoma. There are four strands in this chapter: • Cyclopamine, cell signaling and cancer • Evolution of the hedgehog gene family • Stem cells and cell signaling • Antibodies as research tools The students should complete the Case Analysis immediately following the reading of the case. We strongly suggest that students work in groups to complete the Case Analysis. Actively listening to and challenging the ideas of others can help learners become aware of their own misconceptions, yet value their own and others’ prior knowledge. Five investigations accompany Shh: Silencing the Hedgehog Pathway. Four are “core” investigations relating directly to the facts of the case, and one “additional” open-ended investigation extends beyond the facts of the case. Table IG10.1 describes what students will gain from each investigation.
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