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#35 Translation - How RNA Gets Translated into Protein Power | Crash Course Biology (2024) YouTube Video Lesson

#35 Translation - How RNA Gets Translated into Protein Power | Crash Course Biology (2024) YouTube Video Lesson

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Classroom Use at a Glance

No-prep Crash Course Biology (2024) YouTube video lesson for Grades 8-12. Focuses on translation, ribosomes, codons, tRNA, anticodons, amino acids, polypeptides, and protein folding with vocabulary, chronological questions, discussion prompts, answer key, quiz, and Google Classroom support.

Resource type
YouTube Video Lesson
Grade band
Grades 6–8 Grades 9–12
Rating
Not Rated
Runtime
10–15 minutes
Time required
20–45 minutes
Prep level
No prep
Subject
Science
Classroom use
Sub plans Guided video lesson Biology review Science literacy Google Classroom assignment Flipped lesson Absent-student makeup work
Includes
Teacher guide Student worksheet Answer key Vocabulary questions Time-stamped short-answer questions End-of-video questions Multiple-choice quiz Google Forms quiz Google Slides/PPTX Start Here PDF
Tech format
Printable PDF Google Slides PowerPoint/PPTX Google Forms Google Docs Google Classroom ready ZIP file

Make Translation easier to teach with a no-prep YouTube video lesson focused on translation, ribosomes, codons, tRNA, anticodons, amino acids, polypeptides, and protein folding.

Students learn how ribosomes read mRNA codons, how tRNA brings amino acids, and how a chain of amino acids becomes a protein that can affect cell function and organism traits.

Use this video guide for Grades 8-12 biology, NGSS review, science literacy, sub plans, Google Classroom assignments, flipped lessons, absent-student makeup work, or review. Use this lesson during translation lesson, protein synthesis lesson, codon and tRNA practice, central-dogma review, or molecular biology unit support. The questions help students move beyond memorizing terms and toward explaining biology concepts with evidence, vocabulary, and concise science writing.

Crash Course Biology playlist: Teachers and students access the public video separately on YouTube. Open the Crash Course Biology playlist here.

Try it free first: Will this lesson meet your needs? Try #1 Introduction to Biology FREE and preview the format before purchasing this lesson.

Full series bundle: This lesson is part of the Crash Course Biology (2024) YouTube Video Lesson Bundle - All 50 Episodes.

Guidance & Summary

  • Translation - How RNA Gets Translated into Protein Power: Crash Course Biology #35 is a short educational YouTube lesson designed to help students build biology knowledge through clear explanations, examples, vocabulary, and evidence-based questions.
  • Students learn how ribosomes read mRNA codons, how tRNA brings amino acids, and how a chain of amino acids becomes a protein that can affect cell function and organism traits.

Differentiation Options

The teacher guide includes a written-response path and a multiple-choice quiz path.

  • Use the written worksheet when students are ready to explain vocabulary, evidence, systems, cause and effect, and science concepts in more detail. Use the 10-question multiple-choice quiz when students need fewer writing demands, a faster assessment, or a more accessible review option.
  • Support options include reading questions aloud, offering small-group testing, allowing extended time, previewing vocabulary, or having students explain selected answers orally.

What's Included

Student Materials

  • Rigorous short-answer questions (chronological, time-stamped)
  • End-of-video reflection and challenge questions
  • 10-question multiple-choice quiz (Google Forms compatible)

Teacher Materials

  • Teacher's guide and lesson plan
  • Worksheet and MC quiz answer key
  • NGSS and CCSS science literacy alignment
  • Pre- and post-viewing discussion questions
  • 20-minute, 30-minute, and 45-minute pacing options

Digital & Print Options

  • All materials include Google Classroom and print options

Flexible Lesson Pacing

  • 20-Minute Quick Clip: best for tight schedules, bell-ringers, early finisher blocks, or short sub plans
  • 30-Minute Flexible Mini-Lesson: best for teachers who want the full short-answer guide while keeping the lesson compact
  • 45-Minute Full Mini-Lesson: best for classes that need guided discussion, vocabulary support, and in-class writing time
  • The teacher guide includes these pacing paths, plus options for written responses or the multiple-choice quiz as an alternate assessment.

Skills Addressed

  • Explain how ribosomes translate mRNA into amino-acid chains
  • Connect codons, tRNA, anticodons, and amino acids
  • Relate protein structure to biological function
  • Use translation vocabulary in context
  • Write concise protein-synthesis explanations
  • Vocabulary in context: translation, ribosome, codon, tRNA
  • Evidence-based written response
  • Science literacy and academic discussion
  • CCSS Anchor alignment connects vocabulary, evidence, discussion, and supported interpretation to NGSS HS-LS1-1.

Frequently Asked Questions

Can I use this as a sub plan?

Yes. The video guide includes structured questions, answer keys, flexible pacing options, and a multiple-choice quiz, so it can work as a planned science lesson or a reliable sub plan.

Does this include a digital version?

Yes. The resource includes Google Classroom-friendly materials, including digital worksheet and quiz options.

Is there an answer key?

Yes. The teacher guide includes worksheet answers and the multiple-choice quiz answer key.

How long does the resource take?

Plan for the video runtime plus about 20-45 minutes for questions, discussion, vocabulary, and written work. This episode is listed as approximately 13 minutes in the workflow manifest.

How is this differentiated?

Students can complete the written-response video guide or use the 10-question multiple-choice quiz as an alternate assessment with more accessible language.

Copyright & Trademark Disclaimer: This independent, educator-created video companion is a supplemental classroom resource for discussion, comprehension, and educational analysis. It is not affiliated with, endorsed by, sponsored by, or authorized by Crash Course, Complexly, YouTube, or any related rights holders. Teachers and students access the public video separately through lawful classroom viewing methods. All trademarks and copyrights remain the property of their respective owners.

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