Question detail
Which option avoids the common misconception in this objective for Classification of living organisms, Classification of living organisms: students must describe the three-domain system developed by Carl Woese using evidence from chemical analysis.
Try the question, check the answer, then read the explanation to understand the curriculum point.
At a glance
MCQ
Type
practice
Style
Topic
Classification of living organisms
Question
- A. Misconception avoided: Classification can be updated when DNA evidence changes understanding of evolutionary links. This matches Classification of living organisms because students must describe the three-domain system developed by Carl Woese using evidence from chemical analysis.
- B. Common misconception: Ignoring that classification is evidence-based grouping, not inheritance itself. This would blur Evolution vs classification instead of testing Classification of living organisms.
- C. Partial misconception: Treating classification as the process that causes species to change. This misses the objective focus on describe the three-domain system developed by Carl Woese using evidence from chemical analysis.
- D. Terminology mix-up: It moves into a neighbouring Unit 4.6 idea rather than Classification of living organisms / Classification of living organisms.
Answer
The correct option is Misconception avoided: Classification can be updated when DNA evidence changes understanding of evolutionary links. This matches Classification of living organisms because students must describe the three-domain system developed by Carl Woese using evidence from chemical analysis.. It is the only option that keeps Evolution vs classification separate and answers the approved learning objective in Classification of living organisms.
Explanation
The correct option is Misconception avoided: Classification can be updated when DNA evidence changes understanding of evolutionary links. This matches Classification of living organisms because students must describe the three-domain system developed by Carl Woese using evidence from chemical analysis.. Misconception avoided: Classification can be updated when DNA evidence changes understanding of evolutionary links. This matches Classification of living organisms because students must describe the three-domain system developed by Carl Woese using evidence from chemical analysis. is correct because Classification can be updated when DNA evidence changes understanding of evolutionary links. The learning objective says students must describe the three-domain system developed by Carl Woese using evidence from chemical analysis, so the answer must stay inside Classification of living organisms. The alternative options are wrong because they either ignoring that classification is evidence-based grouping, not inheritance itself., treating classification as the process that causes species to change., or drift away from do not ask a classification question with natural selection as the best answer unless the stem explicitly asks for mechanism..
Common mistake
Classification of living organisms common mistake 1
Giving a vague answer instead of directly addressing: Describe the three-domain system developed by Carl Woese using evidence from chemical analysis..
Answer by clearly explaining how to describe the three-domain system developed by Carl Woese using evidence from chemical analysis..
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