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Health Quests
Overview
In the activity, students visit Web sites that provide information
about the skills and tasks of the sports medicine professional,
as well as requirements for a career in this field. One of
the sites offers a glimpse of team sports medicine professionals
at work, detailing the kinds of knowledge such practitioners
are required to have and the questions they may be asked to
answer. Using this and other information, students then complete
a career checklist.
Objectives
- To assemble a profile of the sports
medicine profession by combining information provided at
several different sites on the World Wide Web.
- To demonstrate an ability to extrapolate
from and compile information derived from different sources.
Getting Started
Provide groups of students with clippings from newspapers
or sports magazines about players in professional sports who
have sustained injuries and are currently on the disabled
list. Ask groups to inspect the clippings for possible generalizations
about the type and nature of injuries associated with contact
sports. Ask: Is it possible to be injured before a game even
begins, and if so, how? Elicit that athletes who fail to take
proper training provisions, including pregame warm-ups, are
susceptible to injury. Note that in the activity, students
learn about a career area whose goal is to help prevent such
injuries--not only among athletes but also among all physically
active people--and to treat such injuries when they arise.
Classroom Follow-up
Invite students to compare and contrast their career checklists,
noting interesting or useful facts they may have missed in
their own research. Students interested in taking the project
a step further might be encouraged to interview a sports medicine
practitioner for his or her personal view on working in this
profession. If students have access to a video or digital
camera and the classroom computer is equipped with a video
capture card, students may consider creating a multimedia
report that contains the text of the interview along with
video stills of useful exercises the professional might demonstrate
to limit injury.
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