Topic:Physiology
From Wikiversity
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Welcome to the Wikiversity Department of Physiology, part of the Basic sciences Division of the School of Medicine.
Physiology is a branch of science that deals with the functioning of living organisms. Physiologists study cells, tissues, organs, and the whole body in an attempt to understand how organisms function. The Department of Physiology is a content development project for Wikiversity. Participants collaborate to develop learning resources for physiology.
[edit] Students
Take a look at the Human Physiology Wikibook. If you have questions or want to suggest additional areas of study, add your ideas below:
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[edit] See also
- Physiology - at Wikipedia
- Human Physiology Wikibook
- Medical Physiology Wikibook
- Wikipedia: Human physiology
[edit] Learning projects
See: Learning Projects and the Wikiversity:Learning model.
Learning materials and learning projects are located in the main Wikiversity namespace. Simply make a link to the name of the learning project (learning projects are independent pages in the main namespace) and start writing! We suggest the use of the learning project template, by doing {{subst:Template:Learning project boilerplate}} on the new page.
Learning materials and learning projects can be used by multiple departments. Cooperate with other departments that use the same learning resource.
Remember, Wikiversity has adopted the "learning by doing" model for education. Lessons should center on learning activities for Wikiversity participants. We learn by doing.
[edit] Department news
- 15 August 2006 - Department founded!
[edit] Active participants
Active participants in this Learning Group
The histories of Wikiversity pages indicate who the active participants are. If you are an active participant in this department, you can list your name here (this can help small departments grow and the participants communicate better; for large departments a list of active participants is not needed).
- User:JWSchmidt - maybe we could select individual pathological conditions and explore the basic physiology involved
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