Description
Introduce students to bioengineering through a 27-page printable workbook chapter with readings, diagrams, scenario-based activities, engineering design challenges, a Scientist Spotlight, chapter review, assessment, and teacher answer key. Students investigate prosthetics, medical devices, biomaterials, tissue engineering, artificial organs, clean water tools, sustainable growing systems, and biosensors while learning how engineers design with users and communities.
Help students explore how biology and engineering work together to solve real-world problems. This printable Bioengineering Workbook Chapter introduces students to prosthetics, medical devices, biomaterials, tissue engineering, artificial organs, environmental bioengineering, biosensors, and the engineering design process through accessible readings, diagrams, applied activities, and student-centered design challenges.
This chapter works well for middle school science, biology enrichment, STEM education, homeschool science, high school biology preparation, and engineering design units. The resource was designed for students ages 13–15, but teachers can also use it to support review, independent practice, science electives, after-school STEM programming, and interdisciplinary project-based learning.
Students do more than read about bioengineering. They compare ideas, analyze diagrams, examine realistic scenarios, evaluate design decisions, define user needs, plan a prototype, create a testing plan, and identify ways to improve a design using evidence.
This chapter uses an asset-based approach. Students examine how strong bioengineering solutions grow from listening to users, respecting community knowledge, testing ideas carefully, and designing with people rather than making assumptions for them.
WHAT IS INCLUDED
This resource includes 27 student workbook pages and a teacher answer key.
Students explore:
• What bioengineering is and how it connects biology, engineering, design, evidence, and community needs
• The engineering design process: define, research, imagine, plan, build, test, improve, and communicate
• How bioengineers identify problems, users, criteria, and constraints
• How bones, muscles, joints, nerves, and balance affect movement
• How prosthetics support movement, daily activities, comfort, and participation
• How engineers compare prosthetic materials based on strength, weight, flexibility, comfort, and function
• How medical devices measure the body, including thermometers, glucose monitors, heart monitors, and pulse oximeters
• How medical devices support or treat body functions, including hearing aids, pacemakers, braces, inhalers, and insulin pumps
• Why medical devices must be tested for accuracy, safety, reliability, and accessibility
• How biomaterials work with the body in implants, contact lenses, dental tools, heart valves, and joint replacements
• How bioengineers evaluate body compatibility, durability, flexibility, comfort, safety, and usefulness
• How tissue engineering uses cells, scaffolds, and signals to support tissue repair
• How artificial organs and organ-support devices can help pump blood, filter waste, or support breathing
• How environmental bioengineering supports clean water, soil health, plant monitoring, sustainable growing systems, and food systems
• How biosensors detect pollution, microbes, and plant stress
• How ethics, access, disability inclusion, cultural fit, environmental impact, cost, and community voice shape responsible design
SCIENTIST SPOTLIGHT
Students connect each scientist’s work to the chapter concepts and reflect on how bioengineering can support health and community life.
ACTIVE LEARNING ACTIVITIES
Students complete a variety of activities
FOUR-PART ENGINEERING DESIGN CHALLENGE
Students apply what they learned through a structured bioengineering design challenge:
- Choose a health, body, environmental, or community problem.
- Define the user and identify the criteria for success.
- Sketch, label, and explain a prototype plan.
- Create a testing plan, analyze evidence, and redesign the solution.
Students consider safety, access, comfort, affordability, user goals, community knowledge, and environmental impact throughout the design process.
PERFECT FOR
• Middle school life science
• Grades 7–9 science
• Biology readiness
• Biomedical engineering lessons
• STEM enrichment
• Engineering design process units
• Project-based learning
• Homeschool biology
• Science centers or stations
• Independent work
• Substitute teacher plans
• After-school STEM programs
• Summer learning
• Science review
• Gifted and talented enrichment
SEARCH KEYWORDS
Bioengineering worksheet, bioengineering workbook, biomedical engineering, engineering design process, prosthetics lesson, medical devices worksheet, biomaterials lesson, tissue engineering worksheet, artificial organs lesson, biosensors worksheet, environmental engineering, clean water STEM activity, soil health lesson, plant monitoring, sustainable food systems, STEM design challenge, biology enrichment, middle school biology, life science workbook, homeschool science, project-based learning, science assessment, engineering activity, community-centered STEM, anatomy and physiology, biology review, high school biology preparation
Bioengineering Workbook Chapter | Engineering Design Challenges | Answer Keys
Highlights
Save even more with bundles
Description
Introduce students to bioengineering through a 27-page printable workbook chapter with readings, diagrams, scenario-based activities, engineering design challenges, a Scientist Spotlight, chapter review, assessment, and teacher answer key. Students investigate prosthetics, medical devices, biomaterials, tissue engineering, artificial organs, clean water tools, sustainable growing systems, and biosensors while learning how engineers design with users and communities.
Help students explore how biology and engineering work together to solve real-world problems. This printable Bioengineering Workbook Chapter introduces students to prosthetics, medical devices, biomaterials, tissue engineering, artificial organs, environmental bioengineering, biosensors, and the engineering design process through accessible readings, diagrams, applied activities, and student-centered design challenges.
This chapter works well for middle school science, biology enrichment, STEM education, homeschool science, high school biology preparation, and engineering design units. The resource was designed for students ages 13–15, but teachers can also use it to support review, independent practice, science electives, after-school STEM programming, and interdisciplinary project-based learning.
Students do more than read about bioengineering. They compare ideas, analyze diagrams, examine realistic scenarios, evaluate design decisions, define user needs, plan a prototype, create a testing plan, and identify ways to improve a design using evidence.
This chapter uses an asset-based approach. Students examine how strong bioengineering solutions grow from listening to users, respecting community knowledge, testing ideas carefully, and designing with people rather than making assumptions for them.
WHAT IS INCLUDED
This resource includes 27 student workbook pages and a teacher answer key.
Students explore:
• What bioengineering is and how it connects biology, engineering, design, evidence, and community needs
• The engineering design process: define, research, imagine, plan, build, test, improve, and communicate
• How bioengineers identify problems, users, criteria, and constraints
• How bones, muscles, joints, nerves, and balance affect movement
• How prosthetics support movement, daily activities, comfort, and participation
• How engineers compare prosthetic materials based on strength, weight, flexibility, comfort, and function
• How medical devices measure the body, including thermometers, glucose monitors, heart monitors, and pulse oximeters
• How medical devices support or treat body functions, including hearing aids, pacemakers, braces, inhalers, and insulin pumps
• Why medical devices must be tested for accuracy, safety, reliability, and accessibility
• How biomaterials work with the body in implants, contact lenses, dental tools, heart valves, and joint replacements
• How bioengineers evaluate body compatibility, durability, flexibility, comfort, safety, and usefulness
• How tissue engineering uses cells, scaffolds, and signals to support tissue repair
• How artificial organs and organ-support devices can help pump blood, filter waste, or support breathing
• How environmental bioengineering supports clean water, soil health, plant monitoring, sustainable growing systems, and food systems
• How biosensors detect pollution, microbes, and plant stress
• How ethics, access, disability inclusion, cultural fit, environmental impact, cost, and community voice shape responsible design
SCIENTIST SPOTLIGHT
Students connect each scientist’s work to the chapter concepts and reflect on how bioengineering can support health and community life.
ACTIVE LEARNING ACTIVITIES
Students complete a variety of activities
FOUR-PART ENGINEERING DESIGN CHALLENGE
Students apply what they learned through a structured bioengineering design challenge:
- Choose a health, body, environmental, or community problem.
- Define the user and identify the criteria for success.
- Sketch, label, and explain a prototype plan.
- Create a testing plan, analyze evidence, and redesign the solution.
Students consider safety, access, comfort, affordability, user goals, community knowledge, and environmental impact throughout the design process.
PERFECT FOR
• Middle school life science
• Grades 7–9 science
• Biology readiness
• Biomedical engineering lessons
• STEM enrichment
• Engineering design process units
• Project-based learning
• Homeschool biology
• Science centers or stations
• Independent work
• Substitute teacher plans
• After-school STEM programs
• Summer learning
• Science review
• Gifted and talented enrichment
SEARCH KEYWORDS
Bioengineering worksheet, bioengineering workbook, biomedical engineering, engineering design process, prosthetics lesson, medical devices worksheet, biomaterials lesson, tissue engineering worksheet, artificial organs lesson, biosensors worksheet, environmental engineering, clean water STEM activity, soil health lesson, plant monitoring, sustainable food systems, STEM design challenge, biology enrichment, middle school biology, life science workbook, homeschool science, project-based learning, science assessment, engineering activity, community-centered STEM, anatomy and physiology, biology review, high school biology preparation





