Mobile Learning Labs

Bringing hands-on, standards-based science programs to your location.

life science

Mobile MedLab

Learn about and assess vital signs as an indicator of overall health as you assume professional roles found throughout a medical setting.

Mobile MedLab: For Grades 6–12

  • Location: We travel to you!
  • Capacity: 30 students
  • Duration: 45–60 minutes
  • Cost: $280 (travel fees apply outside of Chicago)
  • Mobile Labs are offered between 8 a.m. and noon and/or between 1 p.m. and 6 p.m.

Skyline Scope & Sequence connection

7th: Chemical Reactions; Populations & Ecosystems
8th: Natural Selection
HS Biology: Unit 1; Unit 2; Unit 3

Next Generation Science Standards

Science and Engineering Practices:

  • Asking questions and defining problems
  • Developing and using models
  • Planning and carrying out investigations
  • Analyzing and interpreting data
  • Using mathematics and computational thinking
  • Constructing explanations and designing solutions
  • Engaging in argument from evidence
  • Obtaining, evaluating and communicating information

Crosscutting Concepts:

  • Patterns
  • Cause and effect
  • Systems and system models
  • Structure and function
  • Stability and change

Disciplinary Core Ideas:

Middle School
LS 1: From Molecules to Organisms: Structures and Processes
— LS1.A: Structure and Function
­LS1.B: Growth and Development of Organisms
ETS2: Links among engineering, technology science and society

High School
LS 1: From Molecules to Organisms: Structures and Processes
— LS1.A: Structure and Function
LS 3: Heredity: inheritance and variation of traits
ETS2: Links among engineering, technology science and society

Lab goals

Students will:

  • Gain a greater understanding of medicine, physiology and anatomy.
  • Learn how personal choices impact community health issues.
  • Gain a greater understanding of, and increased interest in, a range of health and science careers that impact community and individual health.
  • Feel empowered to take initiative in improving personal, family and/or community health.
  • Actively engage in inquiry-based, hands-on science investigation.
  • Work collaboratively with peers.
  • Communicate using terminology/vocabulary accurately.
  • Analyze test results, develop a diagnosis and suggest treatment for illness.

This program was supported by the Office Of The Director, National Institutes Of Health of the National Institutes of Health under Award Number R25OD011192. The content is solely the responsibility of the authors and does not necessarily represent the official views of the National Institutes of Health.