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Activities may be standalone, or part of lessons or curricular units. TE Activity: The Beat Goes On
Learning Objectives (Return to Contents) After this activity, students should be able to:
Materials List (Return to Contents) For each group:
For entire class to share:
Introduction/Motivation (Return to Contents) Have you ever heard your heart beating? The doctor listens to your heartbeat when you have a check-up or other visit. What is that sound the doctor is hearing? What exactly makes your heart beat? Well, the heart creates a beat because it works like a pump. The heart is similar to a water pump that brings water to the sinks all around your house. Instead of water, however, the heart pushes blood through your body in blood vessels. This pumping action causes high-pressure power surges of blood that travel from the heart through the body, in a pulse. Each power surge repeats itself almost every second. In order to detect the power surge, or feel your pulse, a vessel carrying the pumped blood, such as an artery, must be near the surface of your skin. Some vessels are better than others for feeling your pulse; however, we can find pulse points (locations where a vessel is close to the surface) all over the body for measuring heart rates. Some examples of good pulse points include: the radial artery in the wrist, the anterior tibial artery on the front of the ankle, the popliteal artery in the back of the knee, the femoral artery in the groin, the brachial artery in the inside of the elbow, and the carotid artery in the neck. Don't worry, you do not need to remember the names of all these points, but it is good to know where they are located. The lub-dub sound you are hearing when you listen to your hearth is the sound of the valves in your heart opening and closing. ("Lub" is when the two upper chambers, or the atriums, are pumping the blood into the ventricles, and "dub" is when the ventricles are pumping the blood to either the lungs or the body.) The harder your body is working (i.e., exercising), the faster your heart pumps blood through your body. Size is another thing that affects how fast the heart beats. Very large mammals can have a heartbeat of 20 to 30 BPM (beats per minute) and very small animals can have heart rates exceeding 500 BPM. The average human heart rate is around 60-100 BPM (resting), which means it beats more than 30 million times per year and about 2.5 billion times in a 70-year lifetime. The pulse is used as a guide for the health of the heart, and detecting irregularities helps to predict if arteries are clogged (which may lead to heart attacks). If an ambulance is called to help someone who is injured, the medical technicians immediately check the person's pulse to see how they are doing. If the pulse is too fast or too slow, it can be a sign that something is very wrong and can determine the next course of action. Engineers help doctors by developing devices to detect heartbeats such as stethoscopes and image devices (little cameras) that allow doctors to see clogged blood vessels. Engineers also develop machines that monitor the heart rate of a person when they are sick or exercising. In this activity, we test our heart rates by counting our pulses after certain activities. Then, we will think like engineers to come up with ideas on how to monitor how healthy our heart is using our heart rate. Procedure (Return to Contents) Before the Activity
With the Students
Attachments (Return to Contents) Troubleshooting Tips (Return to Contents) Make sure that students are checking their pulse correctly. It may help to demonstrate process to the students first. Students must keep their wrist still to see the pulse movements with the toothpick. If they move their hand around a lot, they may get a false reading. Students should get a number between 70 - 140 beats per minute for each trial. Some students may have a weak pulse. Try to move the pulse meter around enough to get the toothpick to move. If this does not work, try to measure the pulse from the neck. You can also pick the person in the group who has the strongest pulse to use the pulse meter. Assessment (Return to Contents) Pre-Activity Assessment Class discussion: Solicit, integrate and summarize student responses.
Prediction: Have the students predict their heart rate when they are sitting still and record predictions on the board. Activity Embedded Assessment Worksheet: Have the students record measurements and follow along with the activity on their Heartbeat Worksheet. After students have finished their worksheet, have them compare answers with their peers. Post-Activity Assessment Prediction Analysis: Have students compare their initial predictions with their test results, as recorded on the worksheets. Ask the students to explain why their prediction was correct or incorrect. Discuss reasons why their predictions were either too high or too low. Math Worksheet: Have students work through the Heartbeat Math Worksheet to calculate their heart rate. Students should answer the challenge questions on the bottom of the data sheet and discuss. If available, bring in an empty gallon of milk or water to show how much blood is pumped in 1 minute (1.7 gallon). Activity Extensions (Return to Contents) Create a large table of data with the heart rates of the entire class. Repeat this activity with the students taking their pulse in other areas of the body such as, wrist and underarm. Repeat the procedure for even more various activities; i.e., running in place for one minute, eating lunch, first thing in the morning, at the end of the school day, etc. Compare this data to data recorded earlier. Have the students take the heartbeat of other family members (possibly even pets) and compare the results to their own for homework. Activity Scaling (Return to Contents) For older students, discuss what causes the heart rate to increase: stress, exercise, clogged blood vessels. Discuss the link to blood pressure. Blood pressure equals the Cardiac output multiplied by the total peripheral resistance. Cardiac output is heart rate multiplied by stroke volume, or the amount of blood pumped with each beat. Total peripheral resistance is a measure of the blood vessels resistance to flow. For younger students: It may be easier to time one minute as a class and have the students start and stop counting together. Also, the math worksheet may be best as a class activity on the board. The challenge questions could be given to advanced math students. Owner (Return to Contents) Integrated Teaching and Learning Program and Laboratory, University of Colorado at BoulderContributors Jessica Todd, Sara Born, Denali Lander, Malinda Schaefer Zarske, Janet YowellCopyright © 2004 by Regents of the University of ColoradoThe contents of this digital library curriculum were developed under a grant from the Fund for the Improvement of Postsecondary Education (FIPSE), U.S. Department of Education and National Science Foundation GK-12 grant no. 0226322. However, these contents do not necessarily represent the policies of the Department of Education or National Science Foundation, and you should not assume endorsement by the federal government. Last Modified: August 30, 2006
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