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주당 수업 50 분 시간보고계신 지문은 자동 번역 되었습니다
수업 소개
영어레벨 - A2
미국 4학년 - 7학년 학년
About the Class: -Each week we will discuss a medical or nursing specialty (or related fields such as physical therapy or dentistry). -My teaching week runs Monday to Sunday (so on Sunday, I'm covering the same topic as I was the week previous and change to a new topic on Monday). -We will start with an opening question that relates to the organ/area of interest that day. -My classes are always interactive so I encourage learners to keep their cameras on for discussion. -We will talk about what it's like to be in a particular career (a specific type of doctor, nurse, or physical or occupational therapist or different places where someone might work), and the necessary training. -We'll discuss the reasons someone might want to go into this career. This will be age appropriate to the group. -During the class, we'll discuss the part of the body that people in the particular career care for (for example, when discussing dentistry, we'll also discuss teeth). -We might also cover some common problems, diagnoses, procedures, exams, or other activities a professional might do in their day. -We will watch a few minutes of a video during the class so learners can see what the working environment is actually like rather than just hear me talk about it. -This will give us further points of discussion as we finish up our time together. --> Learners will explore the wide variety of options available to them as well as the huge variety of helpers who take care of people! Upcoming Topics: Week of August 26: Pathology Week of Sept 2 : Obstetrics/Midwifery Week of Sept 9: Pediatric Specialties Week of Sept 16: Interventional Radiology Week of Sept 23: General Surgery Week of Sept 30: Anesthesiology Week of Oct 7: Surgical Assisting and OR nurses Week of Oct 14: Pre-Op and Post-Op (from pre-op clearance to the pre-op area etc) Week of Oct 21: Podiatrists vs Orthopedists Week of Oct 28: Oral surgeons vs ENTs Week of Nov 4: Epidemiology and Public Health Week of Nov 11: Dentistry Week of Nov 18: Sports Medicine Week of Nov 25: Sleep Medicine (how they diagnose and treat all sorts of sleep problems like sleep walking, dreams, sleep apnea, narcolepsy, and more) Week of Dec 2: Ophthalmology and Procedures on EYEBALLS! Week of Dec 9: Immunology and Virology Past topics: Pediatrics, caring for children in the hospital or community office General surgery and cardiothoracic surgery Medical equipment (if you have it, bring your stethoscope!)--we'll also talk about sphygmomanometers, ophthalmoscopes, otoscopes, reflex hammers, tuning forks, and other equipment ICU Nursing Dentistry Parasitology and related Immunology Sports Physical Therapy, keeping everyone active Geneticist Neurosurgery Pharmacist How to Diagnose Someone Cardiology and cardiothoracic surgery (comparing medicine vs surgery tracks) Neonatologist Nephrology General surgery Occupational Therapy (from kids to Google) Pulmonology Exam equipment neurologists use Psychiatry Radiology Nephrology and Interventional Nephrology Dental specialities Anesthesiology Family Medicine Autism Specialties Neurology/Epileptology Pathology Virology Pulmonology Providers Who Care for People with Video Game Addiction Anesthesiology Speech-Language Pathologist Optometry vs Ophthalmology Veterinary Medicine (taking care of animals) Emergency Medicine Treating Disease with Diet Sleep Medicine Wilderness Medicine Infectious Disease March 14-20: Neurosurgery and the Brain and Spinal Cord March 21-March 27: Geneticists and Genetics March 28-April 3: Neonatology, Neonatal Nursing, and How Babies are Different from Kids and Grown ups April 4-April 10: Physical therapy and muscles, bones, nerves Week of April 11: Medical instruments Week of April 18: Cardiology Week of April 25: Anesthesiology Week of May 2: Hematology Week of May 9: Nephrology Week of May 16: All the tests you take to become a doctor (MCAT, USMLE, boards) and how to study Week of May 23: Gastroenterology Week of May 30: Dentistry Week of June 6th: RN, PA, NP & MD Week of June 13th: Sutures, joint injections, spinal taps Week of June 20th: Pathology Week of June 27th: Optometry vs ophthalmology Week of July 4: Wilderness Medicine Week of July 11: Family Medicine Week of July 18: ICU nursing, Equipment used in an ICU Week of July 25: Different roles in surgery Week of August 1: How to Diagnose Someone Week of August 8: Radiology Week of August 15: Medical care on cruise ships Week of August 22: Nephrology vs Urology Week of August 29: Anesthesiology Week of September 5: Veterinarians Week of September 12: General surgery Week of September 19: Neurology Week of September 26: Brain surgery Week of October 3: Pediatrics Week of October 7: Speech-Language Pathology Week of October 14: Dental Specialties Week of Oct 21: Technology in medicine (robotic surgery, remote patient monitoring, 3d printing, improved communication between doctors, virtual visits for patients, patient portals) Week of Oct 30: NICU Week of Nov 6: Strokes Week of Nov 13: Geneticist Week of Nov 20: Eye surgeries Week of Nov 27: Radiology techs, Medical assistants, and others who need 2 years or less of training Week of Dec 4: All the people who care for patients with seizures Week of Dec 11: Labwork, what it is and what it means and why it's done Week of Dec 18: All the other people who work in a hospital to keep it running Week of Dec 25: Dermatology and Dermatopathology Week of Jan 1: Otolaryngology Week of Jan 8: Physical medicine and rehabilitation and physical therapy Week of Jan 15: Public health Week of Jan 22: Urology Week of January 29: Medical language Week of February 5: The parts of a hospital and how they work together Week of February 12: Gastroenterology Week Feb 19: Cardiovascular surgery (esp vessels and valves) Week of February 26: Anesthesia Week of March 5: All the different kinds of surgeons Week of March 12: The Scientific Method Week of March 19: Caring for sensory systems (sense of temperature, pain, visual, smell, taste, hearing, balance) Week of March 26: How to take a patient history Week of April 3: Technology in medicine Week of April 10: How to write a SOAP note Week of April 17: Dermatologists (eczema, acne, infection, skin cancer) Week of April 24: How premature babies are cared for and what's done to help them not be premature Week of May 1: Pediatric ER physicians and nurses (emergencies) and how that's different from adults Week of May 8: Pediatric Cardiologists (hearts and heart problems kids have) and how that's different from adults Week of May 15: Pediatric Nephrologists (kidneys and kidney problems kids have) and how that's different from adults Week of May 22: Pediatric Pulmonologists (lungs and lung problems kids have) and how that's different from adults Week of May 29: Infectious Disease Specialists (germs) Week of June 5: Pediatric Dentists Week of June 12: Orthodontists (braces) Week of June 19: Pediatric Otolaryngologists (ear nose and throat) and how that's different from adults Week of June 26: Pediatric Orthopedic Surgeons (bones and joints) and how that's different from adults Week of July 3: Pediatric Dermatologists (skin) and how that's different from adults Week of July 10: Pediatric Sports Medicine (athletes) and how that's different from adults Week of July 11: Pediatric Anesthesiology (keeping people asleep during surgery and treating pain) Week of July 18: Pediatric Speech-Language Pathologists (how to talk, talk clearly, etc) Week of July 25: Pediatric Neurology (nerves, brains) Week of September 4: All about wheelchairs and the people who use them to go places! Week of Sept 11: Medicine (invention, production, prescription, dispensing) Week of Sept 18: Urology Week of Sept 25: ICU nurses Week of October 2: Doctors and scientists who take care of cells: What's inside cells and how does it work and how can it go wrong and who takes care of those problems? (lysosomal storage diseases, mitochondrial diseases, blood cells diseases) Week of October 9: Hematology Week of October 16: Approaches to video game "addiction" and how it's different from addiction to cigarettes Week of October 23: Wound Care (Doctors, Nurses, and Technology) Week of October 30: Occupational medicine (Keeping workers healthy and being a medical detective when they aren't) Week of November 8: Infusion centers and infusion nurses (when people need treatments that can't be taken as a pill) Week of November 15: Health departments (the hidden heros of public health) Week of November 22: Oral and maxillofacial surgery (dentists? doctors? they do a lot!) Week of November 29: Flight nurse (because even in the air, people need medical care) Week of December 6: Medical research and MD-PhD (can't decide? Do both!) Week of December 13: Sleep medicine (more eventful than it sounds... Dreams, sleep disorders, and more) Week of December 20: Registered Dietician (because food isn't medicine but what we eat does matter) Week of December 27: Family medicine (because Dr. Robin was a solo physician in a family medicine practice before teaching on Outschool!) Week of Jan 1: Allergist (more than sniffles!) Week of Jan 8: Hospitalist (describes where they practice rather than their specialty) Week of Jan 15: DOs vs MDs (two different degrees, all doctors) Week of Jan 22: The science of how MRI, CT, and ultrasound all work Week of Jan 29: The history of vaccines Week of Feb 5: How researchers research Week of Feb 12: Medical terminology Week of Feb 19: Spine surgeons Week of Feb 26: Cardiac electrophysiology (fixing the electricity in the heart) Week of March 4: Micrographic surgery (a very special skin surgery!) Week of March 11: Rheumatology Week of March 18: Neonatal/Perinatal Medicine (babies!) Week of March 25: Vascular surgery Week of April 1: Recent advances in genetics Week of April 8: Endocrinology (including thyroid, diabetes, growth hormone) Week of April 15: Pediatric intensivist Week of April 22: Hand surgery Week of April 29: Liver transplant Week if May 6: Pediatric Neurology Week of May 13: Undersea and Hyperbaric Medicine Week of May 20: All about glasses and vision Week of May 27: General surgery Week of June 3: Where healthcare professionals work (types of hospitals, clinics, procedure centers, and more) Week of June 10: Urology Week of June 17: Neurology Week of June 24: Pediatrics and Pediatric Nurse Practitioner Week of July 1: ENT Week of July 8: Dermatology Week of July 15: Cardiology Week of July22: Pulmonology Week of July 29: Gastroenterology Week of August 5: Rheumatology Week of August 12: Infectious Disease Week of August 19: Nephrology
학습 목표
Students will be exposed to a variety of medical and nursing specialties and healthcare careers and the training to get there and learn about the related organs and diseases.
그 외 세부 사항
학습 요구
Please message me so I can support your learner's needs. For example: calling on them without a raised hand, knowing that receptive language is ahead of expressive, not expecting participation.
학부모 가이드
Nothing in this class will be or is intended to be medical advice. This is merely educational in nature and will be a surface-level overview. Your student will not be coming out of this class knowing anything about how to diagnose or treat these conditions and we will not be discussing any personal medical questions/needs. Students should come with general questions about the topic.
수업 진행 언어
영어 (레벨: A2)
교사 전문성 및 자격증
2 정도
박사 학위 Unviersity of Colorado School of Medicine부터
학사 학위 과학 University of Denver에서
As a family physician with a decade in private practice, I love teaching young people about how their bodies work. I believe that people who understand their bodies will take better care of them. I've now taught over 2000 learners on Outschool and love spending my time with young people!
리뷰
실시간 그룹 수업
매주
US$25
주당 1회
50분
434 명의 학생이 수업을 완료함
실시간 화상 수업
연령: 9-14
수업당 학습자 2-14 명