Question detail
Which option gives the correct cause-and-effect relationship for Variation and evolution, Genetic engineering: students must explain potential benefits and risks of genetic engineering in medicine.
Try the question, check the answer, then read the explanation to understand the curriculum point.
At a glance
MCQ
Type
practice
Style
Topic
Variation and evolution
Question
- A. Correct cause and effect: DNA is the molecule; a gene is a functional section of that molecule. This matches Genetic engineering because students must explain potential benefits and risks of genetic engineering in medicine.
- B. Reversed cause: Treating DNA as if it always means one gene. This would blur DNA vs genes instead of testing Genetic engineering.
- C. Missing link: Calling a gene a whole chromosome. This misses the objective focus on explain potential benefits and risks of genetic engineering in medicine.
- D. Different process: It moves into a neighbouring Unit 4.6 idea rather than Variation and evolution / Genetic engineering.
Answer
The correct option is Correct cause and effect: DNA is the molecule; a gene is a functional section of that molecule. This matches Genetic engineering because students must explain potential benefits and risks of genetic engineering in medicine.. It is the only option that keeps DNA vs genes separate and answers the approved learning objective in Genetic engineering.
Explanation
The correct option is Correct cause and effect: DNA is the molecule; a gene is a functional section of that molecule. This matches Genetic engineering because students must explain potential benefits and risks of genetic engineering in medicine.. Correct cause and effect: DNA is the molecule; a gene is a functional section of that molecule. This matches Genetic engineering because students must explain potential benefits and risks of genetic engineering in medicine. is correct because DNA is the molecule; a gene is a functional section of that molecule. The learning objective says students must explain potential benefits and risks of genetic engineering in medicine, so the answer must stay inside Genetic engineering. The alternative options are wrong because they either treating dna as if it always means one gene., calling a gene a whole chromosome., or drift away from when asking about dna, test molecular structure, base sequence, nucleotides, or genetic information storage..
Common mistake
Genetic engineering common mistake 1
Giving a vague answer instead of directly addressing: Explain potential benefits and risks of genetic engineering in medicine..
Answer by clearly explaining how to explain potential benefits and risks of genetic engineering in medicine..
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