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If you are considering doing (or currently do) a rat dissection with your students, don’t forget to include a comparative anatomy element to the lab. The rat’s body structure and organ systems are relatively similar to those of a human. This similarity provides an interesting look into mammalian anatomy and allows students to make comparisons between humans, rats, and other mammals. Before your students start cutting, have them study the external anatomy to garner clues about the organism’s habitat and behavior, and how humans compare.
National Science Education Standards
This activity is appropriate for middle and high school students and addresses the following content standards:
AP® Biology course topics
Students are often eager to start cutting and forget about observing the external features of the organisms they are dissecting. Take time to help them explore the external anatomy. There are many clues to an organism’s habitat that students can find by studying the external features. Preceding your rat dissection activity, generate class discussion by using some of the questions listed below. Answers will vary depending on students’ prior knowledge of rodent characteristics and anatomy.
Figure 1. Rat external anatomy.
Use the students’ findings from this external examination to support or reject the answers to the questions above. Allow the students to justify their answers in an open class discussion. This activity is an excellent way to help enhance observational and reasoning skills.
Now your students are ready to learn about the rat’s internal anatomy—and Carolina’s Rat Dissection BioKit® is a great resource to teach the anatomy of this specimen. The complete kit includes 15 double-injected Carolina's Perfect Solution® white rats, plus a detailed teacher’s manual with dissection instructions, extension activities, reproducible student sheets, background information, glossary of terms, and dissection questions for discussion.
1. Item labeled on Figure 1.
AP® Biology is a registered trademark of the College Board®, which was not involved in the production of, and does not endorse, these products.