Science Circulatory System
Science Circulatory System
Science Circulatory System
GUIDE
CARD
CIRCULATORY
SYSTEM
THE HUMAN
HEART
What is the job of the Circulatory System?
The Circulatory System is responsible for
transporting materials throughout the entire body.
It transports nutrients, water, and oxygen to your
billions of body cells and carries away wastes such as
carbon dioxide that body cells produce. It is an
amazing highway that travels through your entire
body connecting all your body cells. The following
are the three major parts of the circulatory system,
with their roles:
The Heart
Arteries
Arteries are blood vessels that carry oxygen rich blood
AWAY from the heart. Remember, A A Arteries Away, A A
Arteries Away, A A Arteries Away.
Capillaries
Capillaries are tiny blood vessels as thin or thinner than the
hairs on your head. Capillaries connect arteries to veins.
Food substances (nutrients), oxygen and wastes pass in and
out of your blood through the capillary walls.
Veins
Veins carry blood back toward your heart.
Let’s now have the different types of
circulation. We have 3 types and they are
Pulmonary Circulation, Coronary Circulation and
Systemic Circulation.
Pulmonary Circulation
Movement of blood from
the heart, to the lungs, and
back to the heart.
Coronary Circulation
Movement of blood
through the tissues of the
heart.
Systemic Circulation
Movement of blood from
the heart to the rest of the
body, excluding the
lungs.
The heart has four chambers: two atria and two
ventricles.
Lungs
The lungs are the main organs of the
respiratory system. In the lungs oxygen is
taken into the body and carbon dioxide is
breathed out. The red blood cells are
responsible for picking up the oxygen in
the lungs and carrying the oxygen to all
the body cells that need it. The red blood
cells drop off the oxygen to the body cells,
then pick up the carbon dioxide which is
a waste gas product produced by our
cells. The red blood cells transport the
carbon dioxide back to the lungs and we
breathe it out when we exhale.
Trachea
The trachea (TRAY-kee-uh} is sometimes called the windpipe. The
trachea filters the air we breathe and branches into the bronchi.
Bronchi
The bronchi (BRAHN-ky) are two air tubes that branch off of the
trachea and carry air directly into the lungs.
Diaphragm
Breathing starts with a dome-shaped muscle at the bottom of the
lungs called the diaphragm (DY-uh-fram). When you breathe in,
the diaphragm contracts. When it contracts it flattens out and pulls
downward. This movement enlarges the space that the lungs are in.
This larger space pulls air into the lungs. When you breathe out, the
diaphragm expands reducing the amount of space for the lungs and
forcing air out. The diaphragm is the main muscle used in breathing.
Station 2:
Activity
Card
Activity Card #1:
RESPIRATORY SYSTEM
WORD HUNT
In this activity, find the
respiratory words below
in the grid to the left.
air
bronchi
carbon
dioxide
cough
diaphragm
exhale
gills
hiccups
inhale
lungs
mouth
nose
oxygen
pharynx
sneeze
trachea
water vapor
windpipe
yawn
Activity Card #2: In this
activity: You need to make
a pattern; it can be a line,
vertical, horizontal or
diagonal. The winner is
determined when the
player completed the
winning bingo pattern
which states a brief
description of each word.
Activity Card #3: Find the respiratory system words
below in the grid below.
1
2 3
4 5 6
8 9
10
11 12 13
14 15
16
17 18
19
Across Down
2. One of two places where air enters your 1. This prevents food from going down your
body. lungs.
4. When we exhale we breathe this plus 3. All animals need this gas to make energy
carbon dioxide. from food.
7. You do this when something irritates 5. Scientific name for the windpipe.
your nose.
6. Inhale and exhale.
8. You do this when you don't get enough
9. Common name for the trachea.
oxygen to your blood.
10. Fish have these instead of lungs.
11. A gas that you breathe out. It is a waste
gas. 11. You do this when something irritates
your trachea or bronchi.
14. The place where oxygen enters the
blood. 12. Two tubes that connect the trachea to
the lungs.
16. You do this when something irritates
your diaphragm. 13. Breathe in.
17. Breathe out. 15. One of two places where air enters your
body.
19. Large muscle that controls the lungs.
18. What we breathe.
Activity Card #4:
Station 3:
Assessment
Card
Assessment #1: Label the
diagram of the heart and of
the circulatory system and
in the table provided, name
the structures and their
functions.
Assessment Card #2:
Enrichment
Card
ENRICHMENT CARD #1:
Identification: Identify the structure of the
respiratory system that is being described.
Diaphragm Cardiac Notch
Bronchi Larynx
Trachea Alveoli
Bronchioles Pleura
1. It is responsible for producing voice and
helps in swallowing and breathing.
2. It is where the lung is deficient going to the
bulge of the heart.
3. It is the main muscle of respiration and it is
a dome shaped sheet of muscle and
tendon.
4. It is a closed space within which the lungs
has grown.
5. Airsacs that allow gas exchange in the
lungs.
6. Hairlike tubes that connect to the alveoli.
7. Two branching tubes that connect trachea
to the lungs.
8. Empty tube that serves as passageways.
ENRICHMENT CARD #2:
Identification: Identify the structure of the circulatory
system that is being described.
Arteries Tricuspid Valve Veins
Bicuspid Valve
Systemic Circulation
Coronary Circulation
Pulmonary Circulation
Reference
Card
http://hes.ucfsd.org/gclaypo/circulatorysy
s.html
http://science.lotsoflessons.com/humanbo
dy/human-circulatory-system.html
http://www.proteacher.org/c/392_Circula
tory_System.html
http://users.rcn.com/jkimball.ma.ultranet
/BiologyPages/P/Pulmonary.html
http://www.livescience.com/22616-respiratory-
system.html
http://hes.ucfsd.org/gclaypo/repiratorysys
.html
http://bogglesworldesl.com/respiratorysys
tem.htm
http://www.theeducationcenter.com/stor
age/thumbnails/101792_0_MD.jpg
http://www.onlinenursingdegrees.org/nur
singfacts/circulatory-sytem-for-kids.htm
http://www.clker.com/clipart-circulatory-
system-no-labels.html
* Coronary Vessels - supply the heart muscle with its blood supply
* Bicuspid Valve - (mitral valve) valve between the left atrium and
the left ventricle.
* Tricuspid Valve - valve between the right atrium and the right
ventricle.
II.
1. Pulmonary Circulation
2. Coronary Circulation
3. Systemic Circulation
All in all, if you
got…
Perfect Score
7-9
5-6
4 and
below