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This exercise serves as the transition from guided work to more independent experimental reasoning.

Learning goals

  • synthesize ideas from the earlier exercises
  • justify claims with patterns in collected evidence
  • prepare for student-directed investigation

Step-by-step flow

  1. Start with the workspace saved from Exercise 3 or the provided workspace download so everyone begins from the same batch of organisms.
  2. Reduce the selection pressure (penalty/reward) while keeping mutation constant.
  3. Watch how the population drifts or stabilizes over the same number of steps.
  4. Ask: which observed patterns can you attribute to drift versus selection? Support your answer with histogram snapshots or data exports.

Suggested use

Use this near the end of the guided sequence, especially if students will move into an open-ended project afterward.

What students do

  • examine a contrast case where selection is reduced or absent
  • refine claims about what selection does and does not explain
  • prepare to design their own follow-up questions

Legacy lab-book framing

The legacy lab book used this exercise to explore Population Change without Selection, providing a contrast case that helps students refine what selection does and does not explain.

Supporting materials

  • Exercise 4 PDF
  • Exercise 4 workspace file
  • Legacy explainer videos are part of the archived tutorial playlist; add them to docs/videos with transcript-first pages so students can still revisit the contrast cases without requiring the old flash interface.

Estimated time

One class period for the activity, plus additional time if students are expected to develop project ideas immediately afterward.