TEPE102-12S1 (C) Semester One 2012

Introduction to Human Anatomy and Physiology

15 points

Details:
Start Date: Monday, 20 February 2012
End Date: Sunday, 24 June 2012
Withdrawal Dates
Last Day to withdraw from this course:
  • Without financial penalty (full fee refund): Sunday, 4 March 2012
  • Without academic penalty (including no fee refund): Sunday, 20 May 2012

Description

This course is designed to provide students with a foundational understanding of anatomy and physiology as each relates to physical education and sports performance. The course develops an understanding of the structure and function of the human body, and how systems interact to maintain homeostasis.

Learning Outcomes

Upon successful completion of this course, participants will be able to:
1. Identify the levels of organisation in the body
2. Describe the structure and function of cells
3. Explain the concept of homeostasis and the function of homeostatic control mechanisms
4. Describe planes, joint & muscle actions using anatomical terminology in physical education context
5. Describe the structure and function of the cardiovascular, respiratory, nervous, endocrine,  muscular, and skeletal systems
6. Analyse data sets to extract means and standard deviations of distributions using SPSS and create charts using Excel

Restrictions

Equivalent Courses

Course Coordinator / Lecturer

Jenny Clarke

Lecturer

Clive Moon

Assessment

Assessment Due Date Percentage  Description
TEPE102 Final Exam 50%
TEPE102 Mid Course Test 30 Apr 2012 50% test

Textbooks / Resources

Required Texts

Martini, Frederic. , Ober, William C., Nath, Judi Lindsley; Visual anatomy & physiology ; Benjamin Cummings, 2011.

Recommended Reading

Draper, Nick , Hodgson, Chris; Adventure sport physiology ; Wiley-Blackwell, 2008.

Floyd, R. T; Manual of structural kinesiology ; 17th ed; McGraw-Hill, 2009.

Martini, Frederic. , Nath, Judi Lindsley., Bartholomew, Edwin F; Fundamentals of anatomy & physiology ; 8th ed; Pearson Education Inc, 2009.

McArdle, William D. , Katch, Frank I., Katch, Victor L; Exercise physiology : nutrition, energy, and human performance ; 7th ed; Lippincott Williams & Wilkins, 2010.

Wilmore, Jack H. , Costill, David L., Kenney, W. Larry; Physiology of sport and exercise ; 4th ed; Human Kinetics, 2008.

Recommended Reading:

Raeburn,P., Dascombe,B., Reed,R., Weyers,J., & Jones, A.(2011). Practical skills in Sport and Exercise Science. Pearson.

Tortora, G.J. and Derreckson, B. (2009). Principles of anatomy and physiology (12th Ed). New Jersey: Wiley.

Electronic resources available through the University of Canterbury Libraries such as MasterFile 1000, Sport Discus and the Internet.

Additional Course Outline Information

Academic integrity

All forms of cheating and dishonest practice are taken seriously and penalties will result. Students should refer to General Course and Examination Regulation J: Dishonest Practice and Breach of Instructions and
the Assessment Guidelines for Students: Assessment, Referencing and Written Assignment Preparation for Physical Education and BSpC, Courses, 2010

Assessment and grading system

Grading Scale
Final results for this course will be reported using:
A+, A, A-, B+, B, B-, C+, C, C-, D and E

Assessment against progressive standards of achievement
In this course students are assessed against defined standards that describe progressive levels of achievement.  

The final grade for the course is calculated by averaging the grades obtained for each assessment task and taking into account the weighting assigned to each piece of work.  

In order to obtain on overall passing grade students are required to obtain a C grade or above for ALL assessment tasks in the course. See the Assessment Guidelines for Students: Assessment, Referencing and Written Assignment Preparation for Physical Education and BSpC Courses, 2011 for further information on grades and criteria.

In this course student performance is assessed in relation to defined standards that describe progressive levels of achievement.

The criteria used to assess students’ work vary according to the type of assessment but usually include the quality of organisation, evidence of wide reading, the ability to select appropriate material, the clarity and relevance of argument and evidence, originality and style.

For individual pieces of assessment, lecturers will generally use more specific criteria.  

However, the following broad definitions of grades on the scale may help students understand the standards used by lecturers.
A/A+ = Excellent
Work is of outstanding quality in all respects.

B+/A- = Very Good
Work is of a very high quality in most respects. It may fail to be outstanding in several criteria.

B = Good
Work is of a reasonably high quality, meeting all of the criteria to a satisfactory standard.

B-/C+/C = Fair to reasonable
Work at this level is acceptable and just meets most or all of the criteria.  

D/E grades = Very Weak
Work which is clearly deficient in almost all respects
When the required work has not been done or is not submitted by the specific deadline.

Grade GPA  Marks
  A+   9 90 – 100
  A   8 85 – 89
  A-   7 80 – 84
  B+   6 75 – 79
  B   5 70 – 74
  B-   4 65 – 69
  C+   3 60 – 64
  C   2 55 – 59
  C-   1 50 – 54
  D   0 40 – 49
  E   -1 0 – 39

Attendance

Any absence must be explained. Some assessments require attendance at particular sessions in order to complete the assessment task. Failure to meet the attendance requirement may affect your final grade.

Evaluation

Students will be asked to complete Course and Teacher Evaluations using UCTL evaluative instruments. The Faculty of Education will conduct regular graduate surveys under the direction of the Dean of Education.

Grade moderation

All course assessments are moderated within courses and selected courses assessments are moderated externally. A sample of your work may be used as part of the internal and external moderation process. Regular Validation Meetings monitor the distribution of final grades in courses and adjustments are made if necessary to ensure reasonable consistency and comparability of course grades.

Late submission of work

Unless prior arrangements are made through correct extension procedures, late assignments will not be accepted.

Notes

Additional course costs: nil

Other notes
Students should refer to the booklet Assessment Guidelines for Students: Assessment, Referencing and Written Assignment Preparation for Physical Education and BSpC for further information on course assessment

Other specific requirements

Each assessment requires a: cover sheet (available on line), word count and APA referencing.

Requests for extensions

Extensions are reserved for exceptional circumstances only and are not granted automatically.

Other than exceptional circumstances, applications for extension are required 24 hours prior to the original due date. Applications must be made in person with the completed application form (obtainable from Forms and Policies) to the lecturer. If circumstances make this impossible, telephone or email contact may be used.

Resubmissions

Students will have the opportunity to resubmit one piece of assessment for this course.  To be eligible for a resubmission a student must have passed all other assessment tasks for the course and the failed assessment task must have received a mark between 40% - 49%.  The resubmission will receive a maximum pass grade of 50%.

Aegrotat Considerations

Students should refer to General Course and Examination Regulation H: Aegrotat Consideration and Aegrotat Consideration: Procedures in the UC Policy Library

Where to submit and collect work

Assessment work is to be submitted on-line via email or Learn.

Indicative Fees

Domestic fee $718.00

International fee $3,350.00

* All fees are inclusive of NZ GST or any equivalent overseas tax, and do not include any programme level discount or additional course-related expenses.

For further information see School of Sport and Physical Education .

All TEPE102 Occurrences

  • TEPE102-12S1 (C) Semester One 2012