






Study with the several resources on Docsity
Earn points by helping other students or get them with a premium plan
Prepare for your exams
Study with the several resources on Docsity
Earn points to download
Earn points by helping other students or get them with a premium plan
Community
Ask the community for help and clear up your study doubts
Discover the best universities in your country according to Docsity users
Free resources
Download our free guides on studying techniques, anxiety management strategies, and thesis advice from Docsity tutors
Effective learning strategies for anatomy and physiology (a&p), emphasizing the importance of both content memorization and skill development. it details various techniques for mastering a&p, including vocabulary building, concept application, and critical thinking. The document also highlights the significance of visual literacy and image translation in understanding anatomical structures and physiological processes. it provides practical examples and strategies for improving comprehension and retention of complex a&p material, such as chunking, retrieval practice, and collaborative learning.
Typology: Study notes
1 / 11
This page cannot be seen from the preview
Don't miss anything!
Chapter 1: e A and Science of Learning in Anatomy and Physiology
1.1 e Science of Learning
1.1aForeign, Familiar, and Maste -Level Understanding
Let’s take an example of a person who is learning a new language. We could also use an example of a spectator t ing to learn about the game of baseball, or a student studying physics, or an architect learning about building construction, but let’s take a new language. Let’s say our learner’s name is Talia. Talia goes to Spanish class for the rst time. e teacher speaks in Spanish and Talia understands none of it. She guesses as to the instructions based on the instructors’ gestures and tone of voice. After a few classes, Talia begins to pick up on some of the vocabula of the class. She is learning Spanish words in her own time, using ashcards, online quizzing apps, recognizing phrases. She eventually becomes ve familiar with Spanish words. After a few years, Talia travels to Mexico. She nds she is able to recognize enough Spanish words to be able to understand signs and ads that are printed in Spanish. However, Talia now sits in a cafe in Mexico City. A friendly stranger approaches her and begins to make conversation in Spanish. Will Talia be able to converse with the stranger?
Probably not, because there is a di erence between being familiar with a language and being able to converse in it. Conversation is a skill, a dynamic skill that involves listening, decoding, recall, comprehension, and creativity. Talia has not yet practiced these skills. She has the content she needs but will need to practice the skill of conversation before she can employ it with ease.
Learning A&P (or really most anything) can be thought of the same way: there is the content of what you are learning, and the skills involved in its maste and application. In terms of A&P, we have vocabula , concepts, functions, structures, and locations, and then we need to learn how to connect ideas and apply knowledge in a new context, analyze new data. For example, if you were to become a clinician and a patient had a pain in their abdomen, it would not be su cient to list o a memorized set of organs in the abdomen. You, the clinician, must apply your knowledge of the area and an understanding of the symptoms that the patient is experiencing and analyze the data from clinical tests to diagnose and treat the patient. You must think critically about the information you know and apply it in a new circumstance, one that may be nuanced or unique. erefore, it is insu cient to simply memorize in A&P; we must learn the life-saving skills of application, analysis, and critical thinking.
Let’s go back to Talia, the Spanish language learner, for a moment. Talia needs to engage in separate processes of memorizing vocabula and practicing the skill of conversation. She cannot dive rst into practicing the skill, nor is it su cient to stop at memorization. If we were to diagram Talia’s learning it would look something like Figure 1.1. Talia’s stage 1 of learning happened in the classroom when she was a beginning learner. She is currently at an advanced level of stage 2; she has a lot of vocabula and is able to understand written text and recall meaning. If she practices the skills involved in conversation, she will reach stage 3 —maste of Spanish—and able to converse with ease.
Figure 1.1Stages of Learning