Semester 1 (Fall) Β· Week 12Nov 16–20

Unit 3.1 Cardiopulmonary Connection: Cardiovascular and respiratory systems, blood vessels, heart structure, EKG interpretation.

What to do if absent
Color keyLearn firstGet orientedDo the workLab daySafety netCheck yourself
Quick glossary
CER:
Claim, Evidence, Reasoning β€” make a claim, back it with evidence, explain your reasoning.
SOP:
Standard Operating Procedure β€” the exact steps to follow (especially in a lab).
Tracker:
Your PLTW progress log where you record completed evidence.
myPLTW:
The PLTW course site where you do the online activities β€” you open it through Schoology.
Learn first

Week overview - Cardiopulmonary Connection: heart structure and reading an EKG

Nov 16–20

Trace blood flow through the four chambers of the heart and interpret the basic features of an EKG tracing across the cardiac cycle.

Week arc
  1. 1Label the atria, ventricles, and major vessels on a heart diagram or model.
  2. 2Define artery, vein, and capillary and describe what each type of vessel does.
  3. 3Trace one drop of blood from the body through the heart, lungs, and back out to the body.
  4. 4Identify the parts of the cardiac cycle and connect them to a heartbeat you can feel as a pulse.
  5. 5Examine a sample EKG and locate the repeating pattern that marks each beat.
  6. 6Compare a normal EKG to an irregular one and describe one visible difference.
By week end
  • β€’ You will be able to trace blood flow through the four heart chambers.
  • β€’ You will be able to distinguish arteries, veins, and capillaries by function.
  • β€’ You will be able to identify the repeating pattern in an EKG tracing.
The plan

Daily lessons this week

Open any day for its full lesson, the work due that day, and guided notes.

MondayMon, Nov 16
Heart transplant allocation debate

Written ranking of transplant allocation criteria with a one-sentence justification for the top criterion and acknowledgment of one tradeoff.

TuesdayTue, Nov 17
Heart structure and cycle

Annotated heart diagram with blood path traced from right atrium through the pulmonary and systemic circuits, labeled with chamber names, major vessels, and cardiac cycle phases.

WednesdayWed, Nov 18
Heart model and EKG

Annotated EKG trace with P, QRS, and T waves labeled and linked to cardiac cycle phases, plus a data table recording resting pulse and blood pressure with units.

ThursdayThu, Nov 19
Cardiac data CER analysis

Written CER comparing EKG and blood-pressure data to normal reference ranges: specific claim, two measurement evidence entries, mechanism-based reasoning, and one factor that could alter readings.

FridayFri, Nov 20
Submit tracker and evidence

Completed weekly progress tracker showing submission status for the blood-path diagram, EKG trace, and CER, plus a written reflection naming one mastered concept and one to revisit.

Get oriented

Quick intro to the week

  • Hook: your heart beats about 100,000 times a day, and an EKG lets a clinician read every one of those beats.
  • Today's goal: trace blood through the heart and read the basic shape of an EKG.
  • This week's Monday bioethics debate: who should get priority for a heart transplant when organs are scarce?
  • Reminder: your graded cardiovascular data check lives in the PLTW course shell, not on loose paper.
Do the work

Your PLTW coursework this week

Do this: Advance the PLTW Cardiopulmonary Connection benchmark by completing the online evidence on heart structure and EKG interpretation in the course shell.

Know when done
  • β€’ Blood flows through the heart in a fixed path between atria, ventricles, lungs, and body.
  • β€’ Arteries, veins, and capillaries each play a distinct role in circulation.
  • β€’ An EKG records the electrical activity of the cardiac cycle as a repeating pattern.
Be able to do
  • β€’ Trace blood flow through the chambers of the heart.
  • β€’ Identify the basic features of a normal EKG tracing.

πŸ“‹ PLTW evidence due: cardiovascular data check tracing heart blood flow and labeling EKG features, submitted in the course shell.

All PLTW activities are completed inside the PLTW course environment β€” this page only gives direction.

The plan

This week's PLTW tracker

Your week at a glance. Check off each deliverable as you finish it, then submit so Mr. Mendoza can see how the class is pacing.

Use the code Mr. Mendoza gave you, not your name. Saved on this device.

DayDateFocusKey deliverable
MondayMon, Nov 16Heart transplant allocation debate Written ranking of transplant allocation criteria with a one-sentence justification for the top criterion and acknowledgment of one tradeoff.
TuesdayTue, Nov 17Heart structure and cycle Annotated heart diagram with blood path traced from right atrium through the pulmonary and systemic circuits, labeled with chamber names, major vessels, and cardiac cycle phases.
WednesdayWed, Nov 18Heart model and EKG Annotated EKG trace with P, QRS, and T waves labeled and linked to cardiac cycle phases, plus a data table recording resting pulse and blood pressure with units.
ThursdayThu, Nov 19Cardiac data CER analysis Written CER comparing EKG and blood-pressure data to normal reference ranges: specific claim, two measurement evidence entries, mechanism-based reasoning, and one factor that could alter readings.
FridayFri, Nov 20Submit tracker and evidence Completed weekly progress tracker showing submission status for the blood-path diagram, EKG trace, and CER, plus a written reflection naming one mastered concept and one to revisit.
Check off as you finish
  • M: Philosophy for Kids / John Carroll bioethical debate
  • T: teacher background notes + PLTW launch task
  • W: lab / data or model work
  • Th: analysis / CER or design revision
  • F: submit tracker + weekly evidence

Due by week's end: Cardiovascular data check.

Where are you this week?0/5 checked
Pick your period and code first.
Lab day

Lab day β€” what to bring & watch

Equipment you'll need
Heart model or detailed heart diagramEKG sensor or printed EKG stripsStethoscopeStopwatch for pulse countingColored markers for oxygenated and deoxygenated bloodLab notebook
MedlinePlus: Electrocardiogram (EKG/ECG)

This explainer accompanies the PLTW lab protocol β€” watch it before lab.

Safety net

What to do when absent

If YOU are absent

Most days, this class is your PLTW coursework β€” and PLTW is online and individual. So being out usually just means doing exactly what we did in class, from home.

Open Schoology (CMSD) and keep going

How to get there: open the CMSD website, click Clever, sign in with your Microsoft (district) account, then open Schoology from Clever.

Was today a lab or a group activity?

You can't do those from home β€” do this instead: Teacher-posted data/model packet, same objective. Supplemental: Khan: circulatory system; EKG basics teacher-selected.

If MR. MENDOZA is absent

Class still runs. A substitute will post today's plan β€” complete the online activity above; it's built to be self-guided. Need the concept taught without a teacher? Use this authoritative explainer:

MedlinePlus: Electrocardiogram (EKG/ECG)
Words

Vocabulary

arteryveincapillaryatriumventricleEKGcardiac cyclepulse
Aligned to

Standards this week

β€’ Human Anatomy & Physiology 072040 Β· 2.1 Human Anatomy, Physiology & Pathophysiology
β€’ 072040 Β· 2.2 Evaluate Body Systems
Check yourself

WebXam practice

Tap an answer to check it Β· nothing is recorded or graded
Which chambers of the heart receive blood returning to the heart?
Arteries differ from veins in that arteries:
Gas and nutrient exchange between blood and body tissues occurs in the:
Blood pressure is typically reported as two numbers representing:
Submission Zone

Drop your Week 12 here. Use a clear file name (your initials + project). Routine work still goes to Schoology (via the CMSD portal).

Upload a project