Biology 236: Human Anatomy and Physiology
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General: No smoking, eating or drinking in the lab. Please be on time.
Your lab partners depend on your input and assistance with the exercises. We hate to be interrupted after lab has begun.
Read the lab manual and any notes posted on the web before
coming to class, so you can work quickly and more effectively. Use your lecture text and the Atlas of the Human Skeleton to prepare
yourself for the model work you will conduct in class.
Safety in the lab: No
sandals, shorts, or open-toed shoes will be permitted in lab at any time. You will use toxic and caustic chemicals
(preserving fluids, weak acids and bases) and should exercise caution when pouring or
working with these. The hazards of all
chemicals will be explained before each use. When
dissecting preserved animal materials, you are
required to wear goggles . Chemistry
goggles are fine, or you can buy a pair at the bookstore.
For your protection, we also require that you wear gloves during
dissections -- non-latex gloves are used exclusively.
Be especially careful using sharp dissection tools--in biology labs, the
most common injury is a self-inflicted laceration, something we hope you will avoid by
working carefully while dissecting. NOTE: All these safety requirements above apply equally
to regularly scheduled lab sessions and open-lab review sessions. Teaching assistants and faculty instructors alike
will have the authority to ask uncooperative students to leave the lab.
Evaluation:
Two practical lab exams will be held, see
syllabus below.
In lecture, on day 1 of each cycle, I will make an
assignment that is due at the beginning of your scheduled lab session the
following cycle-- late assignments
will not be accepted since the purpose of these is to help you prepare yourself for lab. These assignments can be written
questions, virtual experiments from the Physioex CD that accompanies
the lab manual, or assignments from your lab manual. Written assignments
not on the lab manual will
be posted on this page.
During some lab sessions you will also be given an exercise that
you must complete on an individual basis before leaving the lab. The combination of each pre-lab and in-lab
exercise counts for 10 points.
Two written lab exercises will deal with the cardiovascular and respiratory adjustments to exercise lab and the control of urine formation lab. You will work on this exercise in groups of two students and turn in one copy per group.
Cycle | Lab topics |
Exercises** |
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1 | No labs | |
2 | Blood | LM Ex29 |
3 | Cardiovascular 1 -- heart and blood vessel anatomy | LM Ex 30, LM Ex 32 |
4 | Cardiovascular 2 -- EKG and blood pressure OR frog cardiovascular physiology | LM Ex 31 and 33A OR LM Ex 34A |
5 | Lab practical 1 | |
6 | Cardiovascular and respiratory adjustment to exercise I | Posted materials |
7 | Cardiovascular and respiratory adjustment to exercise II; respiratory anatomy | Analysis of data; LM Ex 36; written exercise due 3/26/01 |
8 | Digestive system anatomy | LM Ex 38 |
9 | Control of urine formation I; Urinary system anatomy | Posted materials; LM Ex 40 |
10 | Control of urine formation II; reproductive system anatomy | Analysis of data; LM Ex 42; written exercise due 4/24/01 |
11 | Reproductive system anatomy and physiology | LM Ex 43 |
12 | Lab practical 2 |
** Only the major readings are listed in this syllabus; at the beginning of each cycle a set of lab guidelines will be posted in the lab materials page outlining all required and optional preparation tools for that specific lab; lab manual (LM).
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as of 1/9/02 |