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Sara Schley; Mel Chua; Joseph Le Doux; Veronica van Montfrans; Todd Fernandez – Biomedical Engineering Education, 2023
Human bodies vary widely: height, weight, blood volume, handedness, strength, and variations from disabilities, trauma, genetics, etc. Engineers must be trained to include human variance when designing human-interactive systems. Typically, this is not incorporated into mathematical and modeling focused courses. In the spring of 2019, one of three…
Descriptors: Human Body, Biomechanics, Cooperative Learning, Problem Solving
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Ryo Takamizawa; Leanne Kenway – Research Studies in Music Education, 2024
Playing-related musculoskeletal disorders (PRMDs) are highly prevalent among concert pianists due to the unique sociological and historical predispositions of the instrument. Although current literature explores PRMD risk factors in isolation, few studies have explored the complex interdependencies that exist between the procedural and postural…
Descriptors: Music Education, Musical Instruments, Performance, Music Teachers
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Lee, Victor R. – Journal of Science Education and Technology, 2015
Biomechanics, and specifically the biomechanics associated with human movement, is a potentially rich backdrop against which educators can design innovative science teaching and learning activities. Moreover, the use of technologies associated with biomechanics research, such as high-speed cameras that can produce high-quality slow-motion video,…
Descriptors: Biomechanics, Human Body, Motion, Science Instruction
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Hoyek, Nady; Collet, Christian; Di Rienzo, Franck; De Almeida, Mickael; Guillot, Aymeric – Anatomical Sciences Education, 2014
Three-dimensional (3D) digital animations were used to teach the human musculoskeletal system to first year kinesiology students. The purpose of this study was to assess the effectiveness of this method by comparing two groups from two different academic years during two of their official required anatomy examinations (trunk and upper limb…
Descriptors: Anatomy, Visual Aids, Animation, Technology Uses in Education
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Cloud, Beth A.; Youdas, James W.; Hellyer, Nathan J.; Krause, David A. – Anatomical Sciences Education, 2010
The action of muscles about joints can be explained through analysis of their spatial relationship. A functional model of these relationships can be valuable in learning and understanding the muscular action about a joint. A model can be particularly helpful when examining complex actions across multiple joints such as in the digital extensor…
Descriptors: Biomechanics, Models, Demonstrations (Educational), Human Body
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Simonson, Shawn R.; Shadle, Susan E. – Journal of STEM Education: Innovations and Research, 2013
Process Oriented Guided Inquiry Learning (POGIL) uses specially designed activities and cooperative learning to teach content and to actively engage students in inquiry, analytical thinking and teamwork. It has been used extensively in Chemistry education, but the use of POGIL is not well documented in other physical and biological sciences. This…
Descriptors: Educational Strategies, Cooperative Learning, Teaching Methods, Biological Sciences
Broekhoff, Jan, Ed. – 1976
The papers included in this publication encompass research studies in physical fitness, the physiology of exercise, anthropometry, motor learning, teaching methodology, and personality. Many of these papers accentuate physical components; others identify different variables in the composite of personality such as the mental, social, and emotional…
Descriptors: Athletics, Biomechanics, Exercise (Physiology), Human Body
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Krovar, Susan K.; And Others – Strategies, 1992
To give definitive feedback, physical education teachers must be able to teach basic kinesiological and mechanical principles of movement and how they apply to specific sports skills. The article includes a chart with common kinesiological and mechanical principles applied to particular movements. Appropriate teaching cues are noted. (SM)
Descriptors: Biomechanics, Elementary Secondary Education, Exercise Physiology, Feedback