Human Skin Color: Evidence For Selection
Human Skin Color: Evidence For Selection
Human Skin Color: Evidence For Selection
Activity
Educator Materials
OVERVIEW
This activity supports the viewing of the short film The Biology of Skin Color. Students watch the film in segments
and use real data to propose hypotheses, make predictions, and justify claims with evidence.
KEY CONCEPTS
• Within a population, heritable traits that provide a survival and reproductive advantage in a particular
environment are more likely than other traits to be passed on to the next generation and thus tend to
become more common over time. These traits are known as adaptations.
• Human populations living in different parts of the world have different sets of evolutionary adaptations.
These include wide-ranging variations in the way people look, especially with respect to skin color.
• Evidence from different disciplines can inform what makes a human trait beneficial or harmful in a particular
environment.
• Evolution involves tradeoffs; a change in a gene that results in an adaptation to one aspect of the
environment may be linked to a disadvantage with respect to another aspect of that same environment.
CURRICULUM CONNECTIONS
Standards Curriculum Connection
NGSS (2013) HS-LS1-1, HS-LS4-1, HS-LS4-2, HS-LS4-4
AP Bio (2015) 1.A.1, 1.A.2, 1.A.4, 1.C.3, 3.C.1, 4.C.2, SP1, SP5, SP6
IB Bio (2016) 5.1, 5.2, D.1
AP Env Sci (2013) II.C, III.B.1
IB Env Systems and Societies (2017) 8.1
Common Core (2010) ELA.RST.9-12.4, WHST.9-12.9
Vision and Change (2009) CC1, CC2
KEY TERMS
evolution, folate, human evolution, melanin, natural selection, skin, ultraviolet (UV) radiation, vitamin D
TIME REQUIREMENTS
• Two 50-minute class periods or one 90-min block period.
SUGGESTED AUDIENCE
• High School Biology (General, AP/IB)
• College-level introductory biology, human biogeography, genetics and anatomy and physiology.
PRIOR KNOWLEDGE
Students should have a basic understanding of evolution and natural selection.
TEACHING TIPS
• You may want to watch each clip of the short film as a class and address any questions students might have
after each viewing. Students can then work independently or in small groups to examine the figures and
answer the associated questions.
ANSWER KEY
REFERENCE
This lesson was adapted from the case study “The Evolution of Human Skin Color” by Dr. Annie Prud’homme-Généreux published by the
National Center for Case Study Teaching in Science. http://sciencecases.lib.buffalo.edu/cs/collection/detail.asp?case_id=584&id=584
AUTHOR
Reviewed by Annie Prud’homme-Généreux, PhD, Quest University, Canada.
Edited by Laura Bonetta, PhD, HHMI, Melissa Csikari, HHMI, and Stephanie Keep, consultant.