Honors Physics and Honors Anatomy Class Blog

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Anatomy Scientific Processes

(B) exhibit the ability to cooperate, contribute, and collaborate as a member of a team; and.
(1)
The student demonstrates professional standards/employability skills as required by business and industry. The student is expected to:
(A)demonstrate verbal and non-verbal communication in a clear, concise, and effective manner;
(B) exhibit the ability to cooperate, contribute, and collaborate as a member of a team; and.
(C)investigate necessary skills for heath careers related to anatomy and physiology.
(2)
Scientific and engineering practices. The student, for at least 40% of instructional time, asks questions, identifies problems, and plans and safely conducts classroom, laboratory, and field investigations to explain phenomena, or design solutions using appropriate tools and models. The student is expected to:
(A)ask questions and define problems based on observations or information from text, phenomena, models, or investigations;
(B)apply scientific practices to plan and conduct descriptive, comparative, and experimental investigations and use engineering practices to design solutions to problems;
(C)use appropriate safety equipment and practices during laboratory, classroom, and field investigations as outlined in Texas Education Agency-approved safety standards;
(D)use appropriate tools such as lab notebooks or journals, calculators, spreadsheet software, data-collecting probes, computers, standard laboratory glassware, microscopes, various prepared slides, stereoscopes, metric rulers, meter sticks, electronic balances, micro pipettes, hand lenses, Celsius thermometers, hot plates, timing devices, Petri dishes, agar, lab incubators, dissection equipment, models, diagrams, or samples of biological specimens or structures, reflex hammers, pulse oximeters, stethoscope, otoscope, sphygmomanometers, pen lights, and ultrasound equipment;
(E)collect quantitative data using the International System of Units (SI) and United States customary units and qualitative data as evidence;
(F)organize quantitative and qualitative data using lab reports, labeled drawings, graphic organizers, journals, summaries, oral reports, and technology-based reports;
(G)develop and use models to represent phenomena, systems, processes, or solutions to engineering problems; and
(H) distinguish among scientific hypotheses, theories, and laws.
(3)Scientific and engineering practices. The student analyzes and interprets data to derive meaning, identify features and patterns, and discover relationships or correlations to develop evidence- based arguments or evaluate designs. The student is expected to:
(A)identify advantages and limitations of models such as their size, scale, properties, and materials;
(B)analyze data by identifying significant statistical features, patterns, sources of error, and limitations;
(C) use mathematical calculations to assess quantitative relationships in data; and (D) evaluate experimental and engineering designs.
(4)Scientific and engineering practices. The student develops evidence-based explanations and communicates findings, conclusions, and proposed solutions. The student is expected to:
(A)develop explanations and propose solutions supported by data and models and consistent with scientific ideas, principles, and theories;
(B)communicate explanations and solutions individually and collaboratively in a variety of settings and formats; and
(C)engage respectfully in scientific argumentation using applied scientific explanations and empirical evidence.
(5)Scientific and engineering practices. The student knows the contributions of scientists and engineers and recognizes the importance of scientific research and innovation on society. The student is expected to:
(A)analyze, evaluate, and critique scientific explanations and solutions by using empirical evidence, logical reasoning, and experimental and observational testing, so as to encourage critical thinking by the student;
(B)relate the impact of past and current research on scientific thought and society, including research methodology, cost-benefit analysis, and contributions of diverse scientists and engineers as related to the content; and
(C)research and explore resources such as museums, libraries, professional organizations, private companies, online platforms, and mentors employed in a science, technology, engineering, and mathematics (STEM) or health science field in order to investigate careers.

Protected: Solar Eclipse Reading

There is no excerpt because this is a protected post.

Honors Physics Week Ahead: 4/1-4/5

If you are going to be out this week the assignments are posted. You have the rotational dynamics problems and the solar eclipse reading to complete by Thursday. If you have not done the lab from last week, you need… Continue Reading →

Honors Anatomy Week Ahead: 4/1-4/5

This week we will continue our study of the conduction system of the heart and how EKG tests are used as a diagnostic tool. You should have the EKG stations finished by the end of class on Tuesday by discussing… Continue Reading →

Protected: Lab Activities for AP

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Honors Physics Week Ahead: 3/25-3/29

**1st Period students and anyone absent on Friday: The Angular Momentum/Inertia questions are due on Tuesday when you come to class as well as the Torque Mystery Puzzle if you have not turned it into me Monday: Topics: Rotational Dynamics… Continue Reading →

Honors AP Week Ahead: March 25-March 29

We will continue our study of the cardiovascular system this week by looking at the electrical conduction system of the heart and disease states. If you are absent, check the password protected posts for links to the lab information for… Continue Reading →

Protected: Torque Mystery Puzzle

There is no excerpt because this is a protected post.

Honors Physics Week Ahead: 3/18-3/22

Monday: Rotational Dynamics Activities: Individual Practice: Complete Rotational Dynamics notes **We started this before the break, you should complete the rest of the questions HW: Torque Problems (due Wed 3/20) Tuesday: Rotational Dynamics Activities: Discussion: Rotational Dynamics Partner Practice: Lab:… Continue Reading →

Protected: Circulatory System Stations for Absent students

There is no excerpt because this is a protected post.

Honors Anatomy Week Ahead: 3/18-3/22

Welcome Back! This week we will continue our study of the circulatory system with a look at the heart. Look ahead to check out your assignments for the week. I will pass out all the handouts for the week on… Continue Reading →

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