Subject:
Chemotherapy
Mitosis: Why do
chemotherapy drugs, given to fight cancer, cause a
person’s hair to fall out?
Answers:
- Level
1: “I know that
the drugs do this, but I don't have the
slightest idea why. There is
probably a simple explanation that I am
overlooking.” (4%)
- Level 2: (minimal accurate prior
knowledge) “I think it is because the drugs
are trying to kill all of the
bad cells and hair is dead
cells, so the drugs just see hair as bad cells
and gets rid of them.” (30%)
- Level 3: (moderate
accurate prior knowledge) “The chemotherapy
drugs used to fight cancer attempt to kill off
the living cancer cells. Hair cells are
not nearly as hard to kill as
cancer cells and this results in the killing off
of many cells with the ultimate goal of killing
the cancer cells.” (44%)
-
Level
4: (answers correctly and
completely) “Chemotherapy poisons
all body cells to some extent,
but particularly rapidly dividing cells
undergoing mitosis such as cancer cells. It
also affects other rapidly dividing cells (hair
follicles, cells lining the stomach, and red
blood cells) which causes some of the common
side effects.” (22%)
n= 169, Biology N100, Spring
2002
More about Warm Up responses and
analysis can be found in Marrs, Blake and
Gavrin, Journal of College Science Teaching,
September 2003
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