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  1. windpipe. Your trachea is divided into two air passage tubes. One leads to your left lung. The other leads to your right lung. Inside your lungs, oxygen is removed from the air you breathe and pumped into blood cells. Your lungs also get rid of harmful carbon dioxide from these cells. This process takes place inside hundreds of millions of tiny ...

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    • Teacher’s Guide
    • Quiz: Lungs & Respiratory System
    • Asthma and Sports Special Needs Factsheet
    • Exercise-Induced Asthma Special Needs Factsheet
    • Discussion Questions
    • Standards
    • Activities for Students
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    This guide includes: Standards Related Links Discussion Questions Activities for Students Reproducible Materials Take a deep breath, feel your chest bulge, and exhale. That's your body’s respiratory system in action! These activities will help your students understand the parts of the respiratory system and their functions.

    KidsHealth.org/en/kids/rsquiz.html When Sinuses Attack! KidsHealth.org/en/kids/sinuses.html

    KidsHealth.org/en/parents/asthma-sports-factsheet.html

    KidsHealth.org/en/parents/exercise-asthma-factsheet.html

    Note: The following questions are written in language appropriate for sharing with your students. What is breathing? Why is it important for your body? What are the body parts that help you breathe? Describe the role each part plays in helping your respiratory system do its job. What can affect how well the respiratory system works? What can you do...

    This guide correlates with the following National Health Education Standards: Students will: Comprehend concepts related to health promotion and disease prevention to enhance health. Demonstrate the ability to access valid information and products and services to enhance health. Demonstrate the ability to use interpersonal communication skills to e...

    Note: The following activities are written in language appropriate for sharing with your students.

    Students will: Identify and describe the parts of the respiratory system Demonstrate knowledge of the paths that oxygen and carbon dioxide take during inhalation and exhalation

    Computer with Internet access Balls (other item to toss and catch) "Respiratory Relay" handout

    [Note to instructor: Organize students into groups of 6, sitting in a circle on the floor or at tables. Shuffle the Respiratory Relay cards, and give one to each student.] First, we're going to check out KidsHealth.org for information on how the respiratory system and lungs work. You can make notes on the back of your card, especially about the par...

    Students will: • Explain and describe the respiratory system, including all the body parts associated with inhaling and exhaling

    Computer with Internet access Pencils or pens "Take a Deep Breath! Board Game" handout, "Breath Cards" handout Dice

    %UHDWKFDUG %UHDWKFDUG %UHDWKFDUG %UHDWKFDUG %UHDWKFDUG %UHDWKFDUG %UHDWKFDUG Human Body Series Respiratory System

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  2. respiratory system. When you breathe in, you take in _____ from the air. 2. When you breathe out, you get rid of _____. 3. The long tube by which air is carried to and from the lungs is trachea, or called the _____. 4. What are the two tubes called that lead to the lungs?

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  3. What Are the Lungs and Respiratory System? The lungs and respiratory system allow us to breathe. They: Bring oxygen into our bodies (called inspiration, or inhalation). Send carbon dioxide out (called expiration, or exhalation). This exchange of oxygen and carbon dioxide is called respiration. How Do the Lungs and Respiratory System Work?

  4. These activities will help your students understand how the respiratory system works. Why Does My Nose Run? What's a Booger? Note: The following questions are written in language appropriate for sharing with your students. 1. During a check-up, a doctor asks you to take a deep breath in and then let it out. What is a breath? What is breathing?

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  5. Fill in the table with the structure name and function. Read pg. 103 – 105 in your textbook and answer the following questions. 1) What keeps food from going down our windpipe? 2) What role do red blood cells play in respiration? 3) How are plants our partners in breathing?

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  7. This Lungs KS2 worksheet is great to test students with their learning and how much they've processed so far. Students overall, will learn new facts about the lungs at KS2 by learning to label their different parts.

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