I have attached the genetic codes list and the worksheet.
Transcribe the "gene" at the top of the worksheet using the genetic code provided in the handout or the one in your textbook. Write your transcribed mRNA molecule directly underneath the "gene" on your worksheet in large letters (so you have room to translate underneath it). Transcribe the gene using complementary base-pairing rules and write the correct mRNA (with 5' and 3' labels as directed) below the gene. Make sure your RNA nucleotides line up under each DNA nucleotide and that your mRNA contains U, not T when pairing with A. Label this new mRNA with a 5' on the left side and the 3' on the right side because your DNA gene was shown 3' to 5' and all nucleic acids pair up in an anti-parallel (opposing directions) way.
Step 4: Use the genetic code key to translate your mRNA. If you transcribed correctly, the first 3 nucleotides on your mRNA should be A-U-G, which translates (using the genetic code) to the amino acid Methionine (often abbreviated Met or just "M"). This A-U-G is also the start codon that tells you to get started translating. For each amino acid, write down only the one-letter abbreviation (so "M" for methionine).