Dragon Genetics - Logistics

Time
Students may spend anywhere between 1-8 hours playing with dragon genetics. There are 12 activities total. Each activity takes students between 20-50 minutes to complete depending on how quickly the child works. The full sequence is as follows:

  • Introduction – What do dragons look like and why?
  • Rules – What’s the relationship between genotype and phenotype?
  • Meiosis – Why don’t family members look the same?
  • Horns Dilemma – Can 2 horned parents have a hornless baby?
  • Monohybrid – What can you learn from pedigrees?
  • X Linkage – What happens if a gene is part of the X chromosome?
  • Mutations – A unicorn dragon! What happened?
  • Mutations 2 – What happens if you change the DNA?
  • Dihybrid cross – How likely is it for 2 traits to be inherited together?
  • Scales – How do you study the inheritance of a new mutation?
  • Invisible dragons – Dan you determine the genotype of parent dragons just by looking at the phenotypes of the offspring?
  • Plates – How are plates inherited?

It is not necessary or even recommended to complete every activity. My middle school students completed the abbreviated sequence below in 4 class periods. Students who finished early could continue on to the other activities.

  • Introduction – What do dragons look like and why?
  • Rules – What’s the relationship between genotype and phenotype?
  • Meiosis – Why don’t family members look the same?
  • Monohybrid – What can you learn from pedigrees?
  • Mutations – A unicorn dragon! What happened?

Grouping
Individual although students working in pairs on the same computer is also fine.

Materials
Computer lab with at least one computer for every 2 students
Optional: For later modules, you may want to provide or have students create a paper “Dragon Genetics Rules” handout listing each of the traits and a phenotype to genotype translation (HH = horns, Hh = horns, hh = no horns).

Setting
Computer lab.