Asked by Gerald
what are 8 websites that arent .com that talk about photosynthesis and cellular respiration
and give me notes about the websites (that focuses on photosynthesis and cellular respiration)
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Here are 8 non-.com websites that cover photosynthesis and cellular respiration, with brief notes focused on the relevant content and how each site is useful.
1) Khan Academy — khanacademy.org
- What it has: clear video lessons + short articles on "Photosynthesis" and "Cellular respiration" (glycolysis, Krebs cycle, oxidative phosphorylation).
- Level: middle/high school → introductory college.
- Useful for: step-by-step explanations, guided practice problems, quizzes and mastery tracking.
2) HHMI BioInteractive — biointeractive.org
- What it has: high-quality animations, short films, interactive modules and classroom activities that illustrate light reactions, Calvin cycle, ATP/NADPH flow, and cellular respiration pathways.
- Level: upper middle school → college.
- Useful for: visualizations and classroom-ready activities with teacher guides.
3) OpenStax — openstax.org (Textbooks: Biology, Principles of Biology)
- What it has: peer-reviewed textbook chapters on cellular energetics (photosynthesis, cellular respiration) with figures, summaries, and end-of-chapter problems.
- Level: high school AP / college intro.
- Useful for: free downloadable textbook chapters and practice questions for deeper reading.
4) NCBI Bookshelf (National Library of Medicine) — ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/books
- What it has: full textbooks and review chapters (e.g., biochemistry and cell biology texts) detailing molecular mechanisms — light reactions, electron transport chains, chemiosmosis, ATP synthase.
- Level: college → graduate / professional.
- Useful for: authoritative, citation-rich, in-depth mechanistic explanations and references.
5) BBC Bitesize — bbc.co.uk/bitesize
- What it has: concise topic pages for GCSE and A-Level (UK) on photosynthesis and respiration, with short animations, summaries, and practice questions.
- Level: middle → high school (GCSE/A-level).
- Useful for: rapid review, simple diagrams, exam-style practice.
6) MIT OpenCourseWare — ocw.mit.edu
- What it has: lecture notes, problem sets, exams and sometimes video lectures from MIT biology/biochemistry courses covering photosynthesis and cellular respiration.
- Level: undergraduate → graduate.
- Useful for: full course materials for self-study and advanced problems.
7) LibreTexts Biology — libretexts.org (Biology & Biochemistry libraries)
- What it has: modular open-access chapters on cellular energetics (photosynthesis, glycolysis, Krebs, oxidative phosphorylation) with figures and practice items.
- Level: high school AP → college.
- Useful for: easily navigable, editable textbook-style content and supplemental practice.
8) TeachEngineering — teachengineering.org
- What it has: lesson plans, hands-on activities and labs that connect photosynthesis/cellular respiration concepts to engineering challenges and NGSS standards.
- Level: K–12 (mostly elementary → high school).
- Useful for: classroom activities, worksheets, and assessments for teachers.
If you want, I can:
- Give direct page titles/paths to find the exact pages on each site, or
- Pick 3 of these and pull key diagrams/explanations (summarized) for photosynthesis and cellular respiration. Which would you prefer?
1) Khan Academy — khanacademy.org
- What it has: clear video lessons + short articles on "Photosynthesis" and "Cellular respiration" (glycolysis, Krebs cycle, oxidative phosphorylation).
- Level: middle/high school → introductory college.
- Useful for: step-by-step explanations, guided practice problems, quizzes and mastery tracking.
2) HHMI BioInteractive — biointeractive.org
- What it has: high-quality animations, short films, interactive modules and classroom activities that illustrate light reactions, Calvin cycle, ATP/NADPH flow, and cellular respiration pathways.
- Level: upper middle school → college.
- Useful for: visualizations and classroom-ready activities with teacher guides.
3) OpenStax — openstax.org (Textbooks: Biology, Principles of Biology)
- What it has: peer-reviewed textbook chapters on cellular energetics (photosynthesis, cellular respiration) with figures, summaries, and end-of-chapter problems.
- Level: high school AP / college intro.
- Useful for: free downloadable textbook chapters and practice questions for deeper reading.
4) NCBI Bookshelf (National Library of Medicine) — ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/books
- What it has: full textbooks and review chapters (e.g., biochemistry and cell biology texts) detailing molecular mechanisms — light reactions, electron transport chains, chemiosmosis, ATP synthase.
- Level: college → graduate / professional.
- Useful for: authoritative, citation-rich, in-depth mechanistic explanations and references.
5) BBC Bitesize — bbc.co.uk/bitesize
- What it has: concise topic pages for GCSE and A-Level (UK) on photosynthesis and respiration, with short animations, summaries, and practice questions.
- Level: middle → high school (GCSE/A-level).
- Useful for: rapid review, simple diagrams, exam-style practice.
6) MIT OpenCourseWare — ocw.mit.edu
- What it has: lecture notes, problem sets, exams and sometimes video lectures from MIT biology/biochemistry courses covering photosynthesis and cellular respiration.
- Level: undergraduate → graduate.
- Useful for: full course materials for self-study and advanced problems.
7) LibreTexts Biology — libretexts.org (Biology & Biochemistry libraries)
- What it has: modular open-access chapters on cellular energetics (photosynthesis, glycolysis, Krebs, oxidative phosphorylation) with figures and practice items.
- Level: high school AP → college.
- Useful for: easily navigable, editable textbook-style content and supplemental practice.
8) TeachEngineering — teachengineering.org
- What it has: lesson plans, hands-on activities and labs that connect photosynthesis/cellular respiration concepts to engineering challenges and NGSS standards.
- Level: K–12 (mostly elementary → high school).
- Useful for: classroom activities, worksheets, and assessments for teachers.
If you want, I can:
- Give direct page titles/paths to find the exact pages on each site, or
- Pick 3 of these and pull key diagrams/explanations (summarized) for photosynthesis and cellular respiration. Which would you prefer?
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