Thursday, July 14, 2022

Microscopy in Anatomy & Physiology - Central Nervous System Lesson


 Following up on my last post regarding microscopy as a teaching tool, I want to share with you some of the work my Anatomy and Physiology 2 students completed this semester with prepared slides of nervous system tissues - spinal cord and brain. Once students have successfully focused the microscope slides, I encourage them to use their cell phones to capture photographs of their views.  

Cerebellum - student cell
phone photograph 
Cerebellum - Student drawing 

    

With many years of experience, as the teacher, you are very familiar with the tissues and their appearances that your students are working with, and what to expect when you look at their drawings. I've seen several lovely drawings of water bubbles (wet mount slide preparations by students) or dust specks. A couple of years ago I would have asked the students to step aside and let me take a look through their scope to assess their focusing skills. During COVID, I did not check looking through the scopes as we were practicing distancing. (When students were done working, I had them use alcohol pads to wipe down the eyepieces and knobs) That's what makes the use of phone camera shots in the lab another good assessment tool.  In addition, you can zoom in on the photographs and see even more details. Plus the students will have a record of the slides that they can refer to and study from should you plan on a lab practical. 

For this lesson, I wanted the students to identify key features of the tissues under observation. I generated the lab sheet below with the instructions for coloring and labeling. Students had the list of vocabulary terms that needed to be labeled. 

Central Nervous System Microscopy Lab Sheet 
Student Work Sample 


Tuesday, July 05, 2022

Under the Microscope

 

Dandelion under the microscope
pollen grains visible

One of the most enjoyable skills for me to teach to students is the use of the microscope. It seems to garner the most student "wows" and "ah-ha" moments. Through lecture, textbook reading, and other activities we teach our students about cellular structure, have them label the parts, draw or sketch the organelles, model with clay or other materials, but seeing them up close and personal seems to make it real. 

To scrape the inside of your cheek and smear it on a slide, add a drop of stain and a coverslip and then look through the eyepiece and see a piece of you can have a major impact on a student. This photo was the result of a brain/mask break last fall. A walk around the track and a student's lovely gesture of plucking and presenting me with a dandelion blossom. When we returned to the lab, they continued to work on their Gram staining technique, and I made a wet mount slide.