Here's an example of what's due today

Submit data table

Tue, Mar 9, 2027 · Week 8 · Biotechnology for Health (Biomedical Innovations)

Today's goal: Submit a complete, organized physiology data table ready for analysis.

Learn first

What a finished product looks like

This is a model of the work you should turn in today. Use it to check your own: match the structure and the level of detail, do not copy it. Your data and wording should be your own.

Complete physiology data table with summary statistics and reliability note
Completes: Completes the Problem 2 finalized dataset: every trial labeled with conditions and units, mean and SD per condition, and an honest one-line reliability assessment.

Final physiology data table (heart rate, bpm):

Baseline rest, trials 1-5: 72, 70, 74, 71, 73 (mean = 72, SD = 1.6)

After stepping, trials 1-5: 96, 99, 94, 101, 98 (mean = 97.6, SD = 2.7)

Error check: I scanned for typos and impossible values. No reading is below 40 or above 200 bpm, and no value is far from its group, so there are no obvious outliers to flag.

Reliability note (one line): The data is reliable because conditions were controlled and the low standard deviations (under 3 bpm) show the repeated readings agreed closely with each other.

ConditionMean (bpm)SD (bpm)Trials
Baseline rest72.01.65
After stepping97.62.75
Summary statistics table: baseline rest mean 72.0 SD 1.6, after stepping mean 97.6 SD 2.7, five trials each.

Also due today: Submit the physiology data table to the Schoology weekly summative assignment before the end of Friday class.

Check yourself

WebXam problem for today's skill

One exam-style question that uses exactly what you practiced today. Try it before you reveal the answer, then read why each choice is right or wrong.

WebXam-style domain: Laboratory Standard Operational ProceduresSelf-check skill: Checking a dataset for an outlier before analysis
A resting heart-rate dataset reads: 72, 70, 74, 71, 730 bpm. Following data-quality SOP, what is the most likely problem and the correct action?

Tap an answer to see the full explanation. Nothing is recorded or graded.