Small but mighty 

🚘 “How does our Knowledge of cell biology contribute to public health?🚘

In this blog post, I will be showing what I did in the assignment we did and I will show my progress on it and how I felt about it

Field journal 

In this project we grew bacteria in a little Petri dish and I added water and dirt into one and after a while it looked like this we also had to make a hypothesis and prediction my was PREDICTION I think they will react the same way but one will take longer to react the while the other is faster.HYPOTHESIS this will react the same way and one will take longer then the other but end up the same

Immune cards

In this project we had to design cards for bacteria like Pokemon cards it was so fun here are mine right hereJkff

I had a lot of fun making this I could have made it more detailed and do a bit better on drawing but overall this was pretty good

I think in this I did really well but I could have added a bit more details to it but overall I did so good

This is the last project I did it was an ad we had to make about why there weren’t microchips in vaccines and we had to research about why there wasn’t chips inside them and we had to make ads about our research on them and here are my ads

This was my research on them

theres no way for the technology like a microchip to fit throw the needle if there were it would get stuck in the needle or not even go throw the needle.

The idea that COVID-19 vaccines contain microchips is not realistic. For one thing, microchips that can track or identify people need a power source and are way too big to fit into the tiny needles used for vaccinations. RFID technology and GPS trackers just can’t be made small enough to be included in a vaccine shot. It’s simply not feasible with current technology

 

 

 

 

 

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