| Office Hours Schedule for Spring Semester, 2007 | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Monday | Tuesday | Wednesday | Thursday | Friday |
| 10:00-11:00 AM; 12:00-2:00 PM | 10:00 AM-3:00 PM | 10:00-11:00 AM; 1:00-2:00 PM | 9:30-10:30 AM | 10:00-11:00 AM; 1:00-3:00 PM |
Your instructor welcomes the opportunity to assist students in any possible way. If you have questions, please contact me via e-mail, call me on the telephone, or stop by my office (Caylor 240) during the time periods listed above. Look for me in the adjacent laboratory (Caylor 242) or in Caylor 109 (Zoology lab) if you do not see me in my office during these times. Occasionally, university duties require my presence elsewhere during regularly scheduled office hours; please check the message board on my office door for information about my location as well as my expected return time. Please feel free to leave a message for me on this message board, or leave a message for me with the administrative personnel in the Department of Biological and Sciences office (Walters 150). There is an answering machine at my home telephone number that you may leave messages on, too. If my regular office hours are not convenient for you, please contact me to arrange a meeting at a time that fits both of our schedules.
Required textbooks for BIO 423/523:
Ross, M.H. and W. Pawlina. 2006. Histology: A Text
and Atlas. Fifth edition. Lippincott Williams and Wilkins.
Baltimore, Maryland. 906 pp. (ISBN 0-7817-5056-3)
Your textbook will play an essential role
in the instruction that you receive in BIO 423/523 this semester.
This text
is a combination histology textbook/atlas, so a separate atlas does not need to
be purchased for the laboratory portion of the course. Students should
bring their textbooks to the laboratory sessions, where the books will be used
to guide the student's study of the lab materials.
Additionally, a pocket
medical dictionary may be very helpful to the student in BIO 423/523.
There are several Web sites, listed in the "Internet resources for BIO 423/523
Histology students" section of the Syllabus Contents, that provide text and
images about Histology that can be used by the student via a computer with
Internet access.
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contents
Course description and objectives: Histology (BIO 423/523) is an introduction to the microscopic
anatomy of mammalian cells, tissues, and organs. The emphasis of the
course is on the study of human tissues and organs. The laboratory portion
of BIO 423/523 provides the student with the opportunity to use the light
microscope to study stained and mounted sections of mammalian tissues. The
course is designed to prepare students who are interested in careers in the
health sciences with a rudimentary working knowledge of some of the microscopic
organization of human tissues and organs. Your active participation in the
course should provide you with a basic, contemporary understanding of the
material presented in lecture and laboratory sessions.
Your progress in
learning the course material will be assessed through examinations and exercises
in the lecture and laboratory portions of the course, and you will earn a grade
that will be determined by your performance in these activities.
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Prerequisites for the course:
BIO 300 is a prerequisite for BIO 423/523; BIO 102 and 103, and CHE 101, 102,
103, and 104, are prerequisites for BIO 300 and are therefore prerequisites for
BIO 423/523. If you are a transfer student, see your advisor to make sure
that you have had proper equivalent coursework that fulfills these
requirements. Students should be aware that BIO 423/523 is an upper
division course that is offered for graduate credit to students working toward
the Master of Science in Biological Sciences at DSU. Undergraduate
students who have enjoyed the greatest academic success in BIO 423/523 typically
are seniors, majoring in Biological Sciences, who have completed courses in
anatomy and physiology and invertebrate/vertebrate zoology. In accordance
with Division of Biological and Physical Sciences policy, undergraduate students
who do not have "Full Admission" status in the Division of Biological and
Physical Sciences will not be permitted to enroll in BIO 423/523. Students
who have questions concerning "Full Admission" status should consult their
advisor, the Delta State University Undergraduate Bulletin, and/or the Division of Biological and Physical Sciences
Web site for more information.
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Grading in BIO 423/523: You
will receive a final grade based on the percentage of 400 possible
points that you obtain through your participation in several course
activities. These course activities are (1) Lecture examinations (50% of your final grade), (2) Laboratory examinations (50% of your final grade).
The following scale
will be used to determine your final grade:
| Grade: | A | B | C | D | F |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Percentage of possible points: | 100-90 | 89-80 | 79-70 | 69-60 | <60 |
Lecture examinations: There will be two lecture examinations administered during regularly-scheduled lecture sessions in BIO 423/523 this semester. Each lecture examination will be worth 100 possible points, for a total of 200 possible points. The dates for these examinations are: Exam 1, March 2, 2007 (Friday), and Exam 2, May 8, 2007 (3:00-6:00 PM, Tuesday, during Finals Week).
Lecture examinations require the student to bring a #2 lead pencil with them to the classroom, in order to properly mark Scantron® answer sheets provided by the instructor. Electronic devices such as cellular telephones, personal digital assistants, organizers, digital music players, etc. will not be allowed in the classroom during examinations. Hats, caps, helmets, etc. of any type will not be permitted to be worn during an examination.
Your
instructor recognizes that university-excused absences may sometimes fall on
dates in the course in which an examination is scheduled. Please inform your
instructor at the earliest possible date so that accommodations can be made to
resolve this conflict.
Students who arrive to take an examination after any other students have already
completed the same examination will not be issued a test and an answer sheet,
and will receive a grade of "0" for the exam.
Laboratory examinations:
Two laboratory practical examinations will be given during
regularly-scheduled laboratory sessions in BIO 423/523 this semester. Each
laboratory examination will be worth 100 possible points, for a total of 200
possible points. The dates for these examinations are: Laboratory Exam
1, March 5, 2007, and Laboratory Exam 2, April 30, 2007.
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A reminder to all majors in the Division of Biological Sciences:
Department policy requires Biological Sciences majors to maintain good academic
standing after "full admission" status is attained. Whenever an
undergraduate student receives a grade below "C" in an upper division course,
the student must retake the course. If the grade in the course is not
improved to "C" or better within 2 semesters, the student will be placed on
probationary status and will not be permitted to advance in their Biological
Sciences course work until the deficiency has been corrected. Delta State
University requires undergraduate students to maintain a 2.0 quality point
average for all major course work. See the Delta State University
Undergraduate Bulletin for further explanation of the undergraduate academic
requirements of the Division
of Biological and Physical Sciences. Graduate students must earn a grade of "B" or
higher in all course work attempted at DSU. Graduate students should
consult the Delta State University Graduate Bulletin for more details about
graduate degree requirements.
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contents
Class attendance policy: The
following statement concerning course attendance is taken from the
Undergraduate Bulletin of Delta State University.
"Class
Attendance
Regular and punctual attendance at all scheduled classes and
activities is expected of all students and is regarded as integral to course
credit. University policy holds that students must attend a minimum of 75
percent of all scheduled classes and activities. When a student
accumulates absences for any reason greater than 25 percent of the scheduled
meetings of class, the student receives a grade of F in the class.
Particular policies and procedures on absences and makeup work are
established for each class and are announced in writing at the beginning of the
term. Each student is directly responsible to the individual professor for
absences and for making up work missed. A student absent from class when a
test is scheduled is entitled to a makeup test if evidence is presented to the
instructor that absence was due to illness or death in the immediate family.
Official absences are granted to students required by the University to
miss class for events such as athletics, performing groups, and student
government groups. Commuting students are excused from classes during
periods of time when the Weather Bureau has issued a weather advisory of
hazardous driving conditions. For these absences which are authorized by
the Vice President for Academic Affairs, students are entitled to make up any
work missed.
A student who has been reported as having excessive
absences has the right to appeal the Attendance Committee and may continue to
meet class with the permission of the Committee during the period of
appeal. For more information about the appeal process, contact the Vice
President for Academic Affairs."
The above policy will be adhered to
by your instructor in BIO 423/523 this semester. Makeup examinations are
offered only when the student's absence is excused, due to documented illness,
death in the immediate family, and/or any official absence granted to the
student by the Vice President for Academic Affairs of Delta State
University. The student should contact the Vice President for Academic
Affairs office for the proper procedures in documenting illness or death in the
immediate family. When a student becomes aware that a circumstance may
interfere with the student's ability to attend any course examination, the
student should inform the instructor of the situation as soon as possible, via
telephone, FAX, e-mail, or in person. Course materials (such as handouts)
may be provided occasionally by the instructor during class meetings, on a
one-time-only basis, and the instructor will not provide to students these
materials that were not obtained as a consequence of an unexcused class
absence. Punctuality is encouraged; if late arrival to class is
unavoidable, the student should enter the classroom in a manner that creates as
little disruption as possible. Students who are chronically late, or whose
late arrival disrupts the class, will be asked to meet with the instructor
outside of regular class hours to discuss the situation.
Students with perfect
attendance in lecture and laboratory sessions this semester will have an
additional 3 percentage points added to their final point percentage total.
The student's presence in class will be recorded through the passing around
class of a sign-in sheet; it is the student's responsibility to sign this sheet
each and every class session, in order to be noted as "present" for lectures and
labs. A student who arrives either 10 minutes late to class, or later than the
instructor (in those rare instances when the instructor is late to class), will
be considered "absent" for that class session.
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contents
Official holidays recognized
by Delta State University, during which class is regularly scheduled to meet,
but will not, are: Martin Luther King, Jr. Holiday (Monday, 1/15/2007); Spring Holiday
(3/12-3/16/2007); Easter Holiday (Friday, 4/6/2007).
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contents
A note to all graduating seniors: If you are a senior at DSU
graduating at the end of Spring, 2007 semester, please inform the instructor of
this situation as soon as possible. Graduating seniors do not take final
exams during Final Exam Week, and alternative dates must be scheduled for these
individuals. The sooner that you as a graduating senior inform your
instructor of your impending graduation, the sooner that alternative dates for
your final examinations can be established. Failure to arrange alternative
dates for your final examinations in BIO 423/523 could produce problems that
might interfere with your graduation, so do not overlook this matter. It
is your responsibility to contact the instructor concerning your graduation.
Academic dishonesty: Academic
dishonesty, in any form, will not be tolerated by your instructor, and any case
of academic dishonesty that is detected will be dealt with according to Delta
State University's regulations. The official DSU policy concerning
cheating and plagiarism is found in the Undergraduate
Bulletin of Delta State University.
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contents
Students with disabilities:
If a student has a disability that qualifies under the Americans with
Disabilities Act and requires accommodation, he/she should contact the Academic
Support Lab for information on appropriate policies and procedures.
Back
to the contents
General comments related
to the lecture portion of BIO 423/523: Student behavior, such as excessive
talking in class, that disrupts lecture/discussion sessions will not be
tolerated by the instructor. You should insure that the volume of the
incoming call signal of your cell phone does not disturb class.
Students may make audio recordings of lecture/discussion sessions for their personal use during the semester; the instructor assumes no responsibility for the student's personal equipment related to audio recording.
The student should bring sharpened #2 lead pencils to scheduled lecture examinations in BIO 423/523 in order to mark answers on the Scantron® answer sheet provided by the instructor.
General comments related to the laboratory portion of BIO 423/523: No food or drink will be permitted at any time in Caylor 112. This regulation will be strictly enforced by your instructor, because it exists for your safety. Consumption of food and beverages in the vicinity of biological and chemical hazards could be detrimental to your health. If you develop an acute need to eat and/or drink, please do so outside of Caylor 112.
A light microscope will be assigned to each student in BIO 423/523 during the first laboratory session. The student's name and the number of the microscope assigned to this student will be posted on the door of the storage cabinets in the back wall of Caylor 112. Do not use any other microscope while performing laboratory work in BIO 423/523 without the permission of your instructor. Problems with the function of your microscope should be promptly brought to the attention of your instructor, in order to correct the problem as soon as possible.
Boxes containing prepared microscope slides (designated as "loan slides") will be available for study during laboratory sessions in BIO 423/523. These loan slide sets should not be removed from Caylor 112. Students are responsible for the care of these slides during the semester. Keep in mind that you are sharing these slides with some of your classmates. You and your laboratory bench partner (the person sitting at the same laboratory bench as yourself) may want to coordinate the usage of loan slides. Please work cooperatively with your classmates in the laboratory, in a mature, civilized manner.
Students will find it necessary to work in Caylor 112 outside of the regularly scheduled laboratory session hours. During regular business hours at DSU (between 8:00 AM-4:30 PM), the student may enter Caylor 112 as long as another class is not meeting in this laboratory. If the door to Caylor 112 is found to be locked by the student from 8:00 AM-4:30 PM, the student may obtain entry either by asking the Division of Biological and Physical Sciences administrative personnel for help in entering the room, or by requesting assistance from either myself or another DSU faculty member. A list of the names of students enrolled in BIO 423/523 has been submitted to the DSU Police; if the student requires access to Caylor 112 outside of normal building hours (Monday-Friday, 8:00 AM-10:00 PM), the student must contact the DSU Police in order to obtain entry. The student should be prepared to show identification to the DSU Police when requesting permission to enter Caylor 112. Whenever the student departs Caylor 112 outside of normal building hours, the student is responsible for contacting the DSU Police to insure that the doors to this room are locked. Students who enter Caylor 112 after normal building hours will sign the log sheet for the room, indicating the time of entry and departure.
| Lecture # | Date | BIO 423/523 Lecture/Discussion Topic |
|---|---|---|
| 1 | 1/10/07 (W) |
Introduction to BIO 423/523 Histology Lecture; What is histology? General structure of eukaryotic cells (nucleus, organelles). |
| 2 | 1/12/07 (F) |
General structure of eukaryotic cells, continued (organelles). |
| 1/15/07 (M) Martin Luther King, Jr. Holiday (Class does not meet) | ||
| 3 |
1/17/07 (W) |
General structure of eukaryotic cells, continued (organelles, cell membrane). |
| 4 | 1/19/07 (F) |
Introduction to four general types of tissues; Epithelium |
| 5 | 1/22/07 (M) |
Epithelium, continued |
| 6 | 1/24/07 (W) |
Epithelium, continued; Connective tissues (connective tissue proper) |
| 7 | 1/26/07 (F) |
Connective tissues, continued: Cartilage |
| 8 | 1/29/07 (M) |
Connective tissues, continued: Bone |
| 9 | 1/31/07 (W) |
Connective tissues, continued: Bone marrow & Blood |
| 10 | 2/2/07 (F) |
Connective tissues, continued: Blood |
| 11 | 2/5/07 (M) |
Muscular tissues: Smooth muscle, striated skeletal muscle |
| 12 | 2/7/07 (W) |
Muscular tissues, continued: striated skeletal muscle, striated cardiac muscle |
| 13 | 2/9/07 (F) |
Nervous tissue |
| 14 | 2/12/07 (M) |
Nervous tissue, continued |
| 15 | 2/14/07 (W) |
The lymphatic system |
| 16 | 2/16/07 (F) |
The lymphatic system, continued |
| 17 | 2/19/07 (M) |
The lymphatic system, continued |
| 18 | 2/21/07 (W) |
The cardiovascular system; The heart |
| 19 | 2/23/07 (F) |
The cardiovascular system, continued; Blood vessels |
| 20 | 2/26/07 (M) |
The respiratory system; Upper respiratory tract |
| 21 | 2/28/07 (W) |
The respiratory system, continued; Lower respiratory tract |
| 22 | 3/2/07 (F) |
Lecture Examination I |
| 23 |
3/5/07 (M) |
The respiratory system, continued; Lower respiratory tract |
| 24 | 3/7/07 (W) |
The integumentary system |
| 25 |
3/9/07 (F) |
The integumentary system, continued |
| 3/12-3/16/07 (M, W, F) Spring Holiday (Class does not meet) | ||
| 26 | 3/19/07 (M) |
The digestive system; Oral cavity, teeth, and pharynx |
| 27 | 3/21/07 (W) |
The digestive system, continued; Esophagus & gastrointestinal tract |
| 28 | 3/23/07 (F) |
The digestive system, continued; Gastrointestinal tract |
| 29 | 3/26/07 (M) |
The digestive system, continued; Gastrointestinal tract |
| 30 | 3/28/07 (W) |
The digestive system, continued; Pancreas |
| 31 | 3/30/07 (F) |
The digestive system; Pancreas, continued; Liver |
| 32 | 4/2/07 (M) |
The digestive system; Liver, continued |
| 33 | 4/4/07 (W) |
The urinary system: Kidney |
| 4/6/07 (F) Easter Holiday (Classes do not meet) | ||
| 34 | 4/9/07 (M) |
The urinary system: Kidney, continued |
| 35 | 4/11/07 (W) |
The male reproductive system |
| 36 | 4/13/07 (F) |
The male reproductive system, continued |
| 37 | 4/16/07 (M) |
The female reproductive system |
| 38 | 4/18/07 (W) |
The female reproductive system, continued |
| 39 | 4/20/07 (F) |
The endocrine system I |
| 40 | 4/23/07 (M) |
The endocrine system II |
| 41 | 4/25/07 (W) |
The endocrine system III |
| 42 | 4/27/07 (F) |
Organs of special sense: Eye |
| 43 | 4/30/07 (M) |
Organs of special sense: Eye, continued |
| 44 | 5/2/07 (W) |
Organs of special sense: Ear |
| 45 | 5/4/07 (F) |
Organs of special sense: Ear, continued |
| 46 | Lecture Examination II (Finals Week) | |
| Lab # | Date (Week of) | BIO 423/523 Laboratory Session Focus & Activities | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1/15/07 Martin Luther King, Jr. Day Holiday (Class does not meet) | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
| 1 | 1/22/07 | Introduction to Histology Laboratory; Laboratory policies; Microscopy review; Introduction to 4 basic tissues. | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||
| 2 | 1/29/07 | Epithelia, Connective Tissues I (Connective Tissue Proper, Cartilage) | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||
| 3 | 2/5/07 | Connective Tissues II (Bone and Bone Formation); Connective Tissues III (Bone Marrow & Blood) | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||
| 4 | 2/12/07 | Muscle, Nervous Tissue I | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||
| 5 | 2/19/07 | Nervous Tissue II | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||
| 6 | 2/26/07 | Lymphatic System, Cardiovascular System | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||
| 7 | 3/5/07 | Laboratory Practical Examination I | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||
| 3/12/07 Spring Holiday (Class does not meet) | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
| 8 | 3/19/07 |
Respiratory System, Integument, Oral cavity, Teeth, & Pharynx |
|||||||||||||||||||||||||||
| 9 | 3/26/07 | Digestive System: Esophagus & Gastrointestinal Tract | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||
| 10 | 4/2/07 | Digestive System: Pancreas, Liver; Endocrine System I | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||
| 11 | 4/9/07 | Endocrine System II, Urinary Tract | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||
| 12 | 4/16/07 | Reproductive Tract I (Female Reproductive Tract) | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||
|
13 |
4/23/07 |
Reproductive Tract II (Male Reproductive Tract) | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||
| 14 | 4/30/07 | Laboratory Practical Examination II | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Internet Resources for BIO 423/523: Listed below are several Web sites that may be useful to students taking BIO 423/523. Click on the site's name to go there from here.
University of Western
Australia Department of Anatomy and Human Biology Histology Course Notes
(Excellent website, with very useful text and high quality images.)
Loyola
University Medical Education Network (LUMEN) Histology Slide Series
(Good images accompanied by good text descriptions; useful practical quiz
section.)
University of Florida
College of Medicine Histology Tutorial
(Images, text, study questions
and useful quizzes.)
In addition to these links, students in BIO 423/523 can find "Google Book
Search" to be a useful tool in looking at classic works on human histology.
The best results are obtained when you search for books on histology in "full
view mode", many of which are able t be downloaded as pdf files.
Click here to go to Google Book Search.