UNIVERSITY OF NEVADA RENO School of Public Health HE 370 Exercise Physiology FALL 2006 Instructor: Nora Constantino, Ph.D. Office: Lombardi Recreation, 218 Office Hours: by appt. Phone: 784-4041, ext. 236 e-mail: nlc@unr.edu Class web page: http://unr.edu/homepage/nlc/he370.html or http://wolfweb.unr.edu/homepage/nlc/he370.html _____________________________________________________________________ Mission of Health Ecology The Department of Health Ecology is committed to the exploration, understanding, and promotion of health and wellness across the life span through education, research, and community outreach to assist with the improvement of the health of our university, our community, our state, our nation, and our world. Objectives: 1. 2. To understand the human body as an engine. To apply the basic principles of physiology to various exercise conditions. Students Responsibilities Read, sign and submit: Memorandum of Understanding (Appendix A) Attend all class sessions Be prepared for class (readings, written assignments, etc.) Participate in class Provide and consider feedback Submit all assignments on time Cooperate with classmates Demonstrate ethical behavior Honor and respect others (which includes giving your peers, the instructor and guests, your full attention) Faculty’s Responsibilities Be on time and prepared for all classes Provide consultation, advisement and/or problem-solving time for students Provide clear instructions regarding assignments and expectations Be prepared to provide and consider feedback Honor and respect students Demonstrate ethical behavior Course Requirements 1) Texts: McArdle, Katch, & Katch, Exercise Physiology, Lippincott, Williams and Wilkins, 2007 Michael, Biochemistry for Exercise Science Human Kinetics, 2006 Adams, Exercise Physiology Laboratory Manual, McGraw Hill, 2002 Supplement is available for purchase as a packet in the bookstore 2) Memorandum of Understanding (Appendix A): You must read and sign the Memorandum of Understanding. It is due at the time specified. 3) Reading Cards: 3 x 5 index cards (15 – 30, one for each lecture). You must turn in a reading card at the beginning of class when there is reading assigned for that day. A reading card should either comment on the reading or ask a specific question regarding the reading. Reading cards are accepted until 10 minutes after the hour. No late cards accepted for attendance, but you may turn them in if you have questions. Questions asked and answered from the reading cards are potential exam material. If you did not have time to do the reading, state so on your card. This is an opportunity for you to ask questions that you might not otherwise ask. 4) Attendance and Participation (10% points) (Appendix B): This course focuses on both content and process. You must be present to learn and actively participate in class. See policy below. In addition, you will have ~10 “pop” quizzes at the end of lecture, for 10 points each (see #5). 5) Scantrons: You will need the small scantrons for ~10 question quizzes and the larger ones for the 4 in-class exams. You will have periodic end of class quizzes over that specific day’s topic. These quizzes count as part of your participation grade. Attendance/Participation Policy 1) It is imperative that you make an effort to attend every class. There is no such thing as an excused absence. Emergencies may arise, such as sickness, family issues, hospitalization, etc. When any emergency occurs, you are expected to inform the instructor as soon as possible. Emergency absences shall amount to no more than 10% of the total class sessions or 2 classes. Students missing more than 2 classes may receive an “F” for the course. To avoid this consequence, you must discuss any attendance problems with the instructor before this becomes an issue. 2) If you exceed the number of absences and have not spoken with the instructor regarding problems, or decide not to return to class, it is your responsibility to withdraw from the course. If your name appears on the final grade roster, a grade of “F” will be recorded. 3) Classes begin at the exact times specified in the schedule. If you are late twice, it will be counted as an absence. Six times will result in your reaching the total number of allowed absences for the course. 4) Coming to class prepared is part of participation. Read Appendix B to understand what is meant by participation. You must complete the readings prior to coming to class. You are also expected to stay for the entire class unless there is some compelling reason to leave early and you have discussed this with the instructor. 5) A cell phone, while a great convenience, does not belong in the classroom. Because we are a family for 50 minutes, 3 times a week, and anyone can answer the phone at home, if your cell phone rings the instructor will answer it and keep it for the remaining class time. Laboratory This class has a laboratory section included as part of the course. This is an exciting opportunity for you to apply the theory that we discuss in class. You cannot learn from the laboratory if you do not participate. Attendance to labs is mandatory. There may be some labs that you may not be able to participate in due to an illness or injury. If this is the case, you must notify the lab instructor in advance. You will turn in 8 written labs. The labs will include analysis of data collected in the laboratories. Please refer to the section on this syllabus regarding plagiarism. The laboratory section of the course will be graded separately from the exams. Your laboratory grade is calculated as part of your overall course grade. Course Policies 1) Make-up Policy: Instructors must be notified in advance if you are unable to take an exam. Make-up exams will only be given with instructor approval. All students must be present for final exam. No one will be excused for leaving campus early. Inform your family now that you will not leave campus until all your final exams are completed. 2) Ethical Behavior: (Appendix C) all writing assignments and examinations must be your original work. This department enforces the university policy on acts of academic dishonesty (ranging from failure in the course to suspension from the University). 3) Failure to present for lab appropriately dressed will result in dismissal from the lab with no possibility of a make-up. A missed lab will result in loss of credit for that lab. 4) This Department does not post grades. Grades will not be given by phone. 5) If you have a disability for which you will need accommodations, please contact me or Mary Zabel, Director of the UNR Disability Resource Center (784-6000 or mzabel@unr.edu) or go by the Disability Resource Center (Thompson 107) as soon as possible to arrange for appropriate accommodations. 6) It is the policy in the department of Health Ecology that all written assignments be graded on content, clarity, and synthesis of ideas, as well as writing style, including organization, works cited, grammar, punctuation, and spelling. A percentage of your laboratory grade in this class will be writing style, including organization, works cited, grammar, punctuation, and spelling. 7) Plagiarism is stealing the words, thoughts, ideas, organization, or data of another person without giving proper credit. Plagiarism includes taking ideas without credit, copying words without quote marks and citations, paraphrasing without giving credits, and using facts, statistics, graphics, etc. that is not common knowledge without giving credit. Plagiarism can be avoided by putting all direct quotes (including sentences, phrases, and author-coined words) in quotes and adding a citation; using your own words when discussing someone else’s work (this also shows the instructor that you know what the writing was about), and always giving credit when using other people’s ideas and data. Instructors have electronic tools for detecting plagiarism. As is the policy of the Department of Health Ecology, an assignment that has been plagiarized (in part or in whole) will receive a grade of F for the assignment on first offense. If there should be a second case of plagiarism, the student will receive an F for the course and be reported to University officials (Klugman, 2002). If an individual copies his/her laboratory from another person, both people will earn the same consequence. See pages 34 – 35 in the student handbook for further explanation. 8) Late work: see the laboratory handout for the policy on late work. Grading: 50% Exams (n = 4) 10% Quizzes, Class Participation, and Attendance 40% Laboratory All exams will be a combination of true/false, multiple choice, calculations, and short essay. Exams will be returned to the instructor after an in-class evaluation. If the exam is not returned, the student will fail the course. There will be 10 "pop" quizzes. All grading will be with the +/- system. Tentative Schedule* Date Topic 8/29 Introduction, Schedule, Energy Requirement 8/31 Energy Requirement 9/5 Energy Transfer in the Body & Exercise 9/7 Energy Transfer in the Body & Exercise 9/12 Energy Transfer in the Body & Exercise 9/14 Muscle Energy Expenditure 9/19 Endocrine System and Exercise 9/21 Pulmonary Structure & Function Introduction 9/26 Exam 1 (Energy Transfer) 9/28 Pulmonary Structure & Function Continued 10/3 Pulmonary Structure & Function Continued 10/5 Pulmonary Structure & Function Continued 10/10 Cardiovascular Structure & Function 10/17 Cardiovascular Structure & Function 10/19 Cardiovascular Structure & Function Skeletal Muscle: Structure & Function 10/24 Skeletal Muscle: Structure & Function 10/26 Exam 2 (Pulmonary and Cardiovascular) 10/31 Skeletal Muscle: Structure & Function 11/2 Fiber Types & Muscle Biopsy Reading/Assignment MKK: Ch. 5, H: Ch. 2 & 4 MKK: Ch. 5, H: Ch. 2 & 4 MKK: Ch. 6, H: Ch. 5 & 6 MKK: Ch. 6 & 7, H: Ch. 6 MKK: Ch. 6, H: Ch. 7 & 8 MKK: Ch. 9 & 10 MKK: Ch. 20 MKK: Ch. 13 MKK: Ch. 13 MKK: Ch. 14 MKK: Ch. 14 MKK: Ch 15 & 16 MKK: Ch. 17 MKK: Ch. 17 MKK: Ch 18 MKK: Ch 18 MKK: Ch 18 MKK: Ch. 18 11/7 11/9 11/14 11/16 11/21 11/23 11/28 11/30 12/5 Neural Control of Human Movement MKK: Ch. 19 Muscle Soreness & Strength Training MKK: Ch. 22 Training for Aerobic & Anaerobic Power MKK: Ch. 21 Ergogenic Aids MKK: Ch. 23 Exam 3 (Skeletal Muscle to Ergogenic) No class, Holiday Body Composition Assessment MKK: Ch. 28 Obesity and Weight Control MKK: Ch. 30 Exercise at Medium & High Altitude & Sport MKK: Ch. 24 & 26 Diving 12/7 Exercise & Thermal Stress MKK: Ch. 25 12/12 Exam 4 (Body Comp. to Thermal Stress) 12/14 Final Meeting noon – 2 p.m. * This schedule is tentative. We may finish a section earlier and have exams earlier. If an exam is rescheduled it will be for a Tuesday, allowing you the potential extra time on the weekend to study. MKK: McArdle, Katch, and Katch, Exercise Physiology H: Houston, Biochemistry Primer for Exercise Science Instructor’s Idiosyncracies: I have certain attitudes towards learning. The most important is that YOU are active learners. It is up to you to learn the material and question when you do not understand. I am here to assist you, but not to learn for you. The field of exercise physiology has lots of people giving out lots of information. Some are worth listening to and others are not. I do not expect you to become an expert, but I do have the expectation that you will question what you hear and attempt to understand the information from a scientific perspective rather than just “it’s popular.” We may not always agree on topics. I ask that you support your beliefs with scientific data, not hearsay or rumor. People will be looking to you for advice. Be informed! I also have a very sarcastic sense of humor. If my teasing or humor offends you, please let me know, or if you want to remain anonymous, leave a note. I also talk fast, especially when I’m excited about something. The field of exercise physiology is very exciting to me. Sometimes, my passion can overtake my tongue. Stop me and ask me to SLOW down. I won’t be offended. Please ask questions when you don’t understand a concept. Many times there are other students in the class who have the same questions and are too shy to speak out. The only stupid question is the one you don’t ask. If I don’t know the answer, I will tell you what I do know. I have a few pet peeves. One pet peeve is students who pick for points. When I grade, I try to grade everything as blindly as I can. I do not have any idea whose test I am grading or whose papers I am grading. Therefore, I try to be as fair as I can. Because we have so much to learn from each other, it is expected that you will attend class and actively participate.