Coin Toss Genetics

Materials: ★☆☆ Easy to get from supermarket or hardware store
Difficulty: ★☆☆ Can be easily done by most teenagers
Safety: ★☆☆ Minimal safety procedures required

Categories: Genetics and DNA

Alternative titles: Genetic Probability with Coins

Summary

Students use coin tosses to simulate allele segregation during meiosis and fertilization. By representing dominant and recessive alleles with coin sides, they explore probability, monohybrid inheritance, and variation between predicted and observed genetic ratios.

Procedure

  1. Begin with probability exercises: predict the chance of heads or tails in single and double coin tosses, then test and record results.
  2. With a partner, toss two coins simultaneously to simulate gametes combining. Record results as possible genotypes (AA, Aa, aa).
  3. Repeat coin tosses until 100 results are obtained, then total the genotypes.
  4. Combine class results for larger data sets.
  5. Determine phenotypic ratios: dominant phenotype (AA + Aa) versus recessive phenotype (aa).
  6. Compare actual ratios with the predicted Mendelian 3:1 ratio.
  7. Discuss sources of variation between predicted and observed results.

Coin Flip Heredity Video Explanation - Robert Woodruff:


📄 Coin Toss Genetics - Southern Biological: https://www.southernbiological.com/coin-toss-genetics/?srsltid=AfmBOop-S1S90zzuPRzqqxtA5uaHmZ9pa81wlcJeid4R_mXFvTdbaPBU

Variations

Safety Precautions

Questions to Consider