Crash Course Biology Activities and Assessments for High School
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Teachers often use Crash Course Biology because the videos are clear and engaging, but classroom success depends on what students do before, during, and after watching. Biology activities should move students from video notes to evidence, models, vocabulary, and explanation.
What strong Biology video activities should include
- Vocabulary support without turning the activity into a word list
- Short-answer prompts that ask students to apply concepts
- Graph and model questions that require interpretation
- Multiple-choice items that use scenarios instead of obvious definitions
- Assessment options that work in print or digital formats
How the full bundle organizes activities
The full Biology curriculum pairs episode Teacher Guides with weekly, unit, and final assessments. Students repeatedly practice explaining biological processes across scales, from molecules and cells to ecosystems, inheritance, body systems, reproduction, and behavior.
Google Classroom and print workflow
Editable DOCX files can be used in Google Docs or printed for classroom packets. Assessment formatting supports Google Forms and student assessment slide workflows, while teachers can also shorten or adapt assignments for local pacing.
Preview the planning structure: free Biology planning guide.
See the full set of episode and assessment materials: Crash Course Biology Full Curriculum Bundle.
Videos and affiliation note
Crash Course videos are not included. These teacher-created materials are designed to support use of publicly available Crash Course Biology videos and are not affiliated with or endorsed by Crash Course, Complexly, YouTube, or BioInteractive.