The following curriculum changes are proposed for the 2003/4 calendar.
Course | Current | Proposed |
---|---|---|
KIN 111 |
None.
|
Prerequisite: Grade 11 chemistry recommended.
|
KIN 212 |
Prerequisite: KIN 110, 111.
|
Prerequisite: KIN 110.
|
KIN 312 |
Prerequisite: KIN 105 (or 205), 110 and 303.
|
Prerequisite: KIN 105 (or 205) and 110.
|
KIN 375 |
Prerequisite: KIN 105 or 205, 142 and 143.
|
Prerequisite: KIN 105 or 205, and KIN 142.
|
KIN 351 |
Prerequisite: students must apply to the
kinesiology co-op co-ordinator at least one semester in advance.
A student may not register for KIN 499 and 351 concurrently.
|
Prerequisite: students must apply to the
kinesiology co-op co-ordinator at least one semester in advance.
|
KIN 352 |
Prerequisite: students must apply to the
kinesiology co-op co-ordinator at least one semester in advance.
They will normally be required to have completed KIN 351.
A student may not register for KIN 499 and 352 concurrently.
|
Prerequisite: students must apply to the
kinesiology co-op co-ordinator at least one semester in advance.
They will normally be required to have completed KIN 351.
|
KIN 451 |
Prerequisite: students must apply to the
kinesiology co-op co-ordinator at least one semester in advance.
A student may not register for KIN 499 and 451 concurrently.
|
Prerequisite: students must apply to the
kinesiology co-op co-ordinator at least one semester in advance.
They will normally be required to have completed KIN 352.
|
KIN 452 |
Prerequisite: students must apply to the
kinesiology co-op co-ordinator at least one semester in advance.
They will normally be required to have completed KIN 451.
A student may not register for KIN 499 and 452 concurrently.
|
Prerequisite: students must apply to the
kinesiology co-op co-ordinator at least one semester in advance.
They will normally be required to have completed KIN 451.
|
KIN 453 |
Prerequisite: students must apply to the
kinesiology co-op co-ordinator at least one semester in advance,
and normally must have completed KIN 452.
A student may not register for KIN 499 and 453 concurrently.
|
Prerequisite: students must apply to the
kinesiology co-op co-ordinator at least one semester in advance,
and normally must have completed KIN 452.
|
The addition of Chem 11 as a prerequisite to KIN 111 will hopefully signal to prospective KIN 111 students that it will help to have some knowledge of chemical symbols, formulae, and simple reactions.
KIN 212 is Food and Society. Its prereqs are KIN 110 (Human Nutrition: Current Issues) and KIN 111 (Food and Food Safety). Students must complete all three of these courses (and others) for the Certificate in Applied Human Nutrition. Those who have taught KIN 212 feel that KIN 111 is not needed as a prerequisite. With only KIN 110 as a prereq, KIN 212 will be more attractive to non-Nutrition Certificate students.
KIN 312 is Nutrition for Fitness and Sport. KIN 303 is Kinanthropometry. When KIN 312 was mounted as a new course we thought that the measurement of body shape, size, and proportion which are covered in KIN 303 would be useful for KIN 312. Those teaching KIN 312 have regularly waived KIN 303 with no apparent effect on the course or the student. Therefore, it does not seem necessary as a prerequisite. Furthermore, KIN 303 is one of seven courses from which those doing our Certificate in Applied Human Nutrition must take three. So, the Certificate students have the opportunity to take KIN 303. If this change is approved those pursuing other courses of study (e.g., Kinesiology major, Bioscience major, PDP major, Kines minor) can take KIN 312 without having to take KIN 303.
KIN 375 is Human Growth and Development. KIN 143 is Exercise Management. KIN 142 (Introduction to Kinesiology) and KIN 105 (Fundamentals of Human Structure and Function) or 205 (Introduction to Human Physiology) are sufficient background for Kin 375.
KIN 351, 352, 451, 452 and 453 are the Co-op practicum courses. KIN 499 is the 12-credit Kinesiology Undergraduate Honors Thesis. Previously we were concerned that it would be too much work for a student to do the honors thesis and a co-op work term in the same semester. Recently Kines faculty have sponsored co-op work terms in their laboratories. Some faculty would like to make the honors thesis work the co-op term. In this case, the thesis research and the Co-op job duties would overlap, and the total work would be manageable.
These are Directed Study I and Directed Study II. Descriptions are changed as follows.
Course | Current | Proposed |
---|---|---|
KIN 496 |
Directed reading and literature research
on topics selected in consultation with the supervising instructor.
This course may not be repeated for additional credit. A student who
has completed KIN 499 may not receive credit for KIN 496. A short
proposal of the project, approved by the course supervisor must be
submitted for approval to the director before the first registration
period for the semester in which the student plans to register.
|
Directed reading and literature research
on topics selected in consultation with the supervising instructor.
This course may not be repeated for additional credit. A student who
has completed KIN 499 may not receive credit for KIN 496. A short
proposal of the project, approved by the course supervisor, [insert comma]
must be submitted for approval to the Chair of the Undergraduate
Program Committee by the end of the first week of classes of the
semester.
|
KIN 498 |
Directed study and research selected in
consultation with the supervising instructor. A short proposal of the
project approved by the course supervisor must be submitted for
approval to the director of kinesiology before the first registration
period of the semester in which the student plans to register.
|
Directed study and research selected in
consultation with the supervising instructor. A short
proposal of the project, approved by the course supervisor, [insert comma]
must be submitted for approval to the Chair of the Undergraduate
Program Committee by the end of the first week of classes of the
semester.
|
The changes reflect current practice in the School of Kinesiology. The Chair of the UPC approves the proposals. Proposals rarely arrive by the registration period. We have approved proposals up to the first week of classes. This has presented no administrative problem, and has not affected the quality of the directed studies.
The provisions under the heading Internal Transfer are changed as follows.
Current | Proposed |
---|---|
Internal TransferSimon Fraser students applying for admission to the School of Kinesiology must complete the following courses with a grade of C- or better: BISC 101-4 General BiologyCHEM 121-4 General Chemistry and Laboratory I CHEM 122-2 General Chemistry II CHEM 281-4 Organic Chemistry I KIN 142-3 Introduction to Kinesiology MBB 221-3 Cellular Biology and Biochemistry one of MATH 151-3 Calculus I MATH 154-3 Calculus I for the Biological Sciences one of MATH 152-3 Calculus II MATH 155-3 Calculus II for the Biological Sciences one of PHYS 101-3 General Physics I PHYS 120-3 Modern Physics and Mechanics one of PHYS 102-3 General Physics II PHYS 121-3 Optics, Electricity and Magnetism one of PHYS 130-2 General Physics Laboratory A PHYS 131-2 General Physics Laboratory B Applicants are selected based on an admission GPA calculated over these 11 required courses together with any of the following four courses taken. KIN 201-3 BiomechanicsKIN 205-3 Introduction to Human Physiology KIN 207-3 Information Processing in Human Motor Systems STAT 201-3 Statistics for the Life Sciences Students may apply for admission as soon as the 11 required courses have been completed. Unsuccessful applicants may take any of the four additional courses to improve the admission GPA. Students who do not meet the kinesiology admission GPA upon completion of all four additional courses will be advised regarding alternative degree options. |
Internal TransferSimon Fraser students applying for admission to the School of Kinesiology must complete the following courses with a grade of C- or better: BISC 101-4 General BiologyCHEM 121-4 General Chemistry and Laboratory I KIN 142-3 Introduction to Kinesiology one of MATH 151-3 Calculus I MATH 154-3 Calculus I for the Biological Sciences one of PHYS 101-3 General Physics I PHYS 120-3 Modern Physics and Mechanics Applicants are selected based on an admission GPA calculated over these 5 required courses together with any of the following 10 courses taken. CHEM 122-2 General Chemistry IICHEM 281-4 Organic Chemistry I MBB 221-3 Cellular Biology and Biochemistry KIN 201-3 Biomechanics KIN 205-3 Introduction to Human Physiology KIN 207-3 Information Processing in Human Motor Systems one of MATH 152-3 Calculus II MATH 155-3 Calculus II for the Biological Sciences one of PHYS 102-3 General Physics II PHYS 121-3 Optics, Electricity and Magnetism one of PHYS 130-2 General Physics Laboratory A PHYS 131-2 General Physics Laboratory B STAT 201-3 Statistics for the Life Sciences Students may apply for admission as soon as the 5 required courses have been completed. Unsuccessful applicants may take any of the 10 additional courses to improve the admission GPA. A C- or better is required in each course used for the admission application. Students who do not meet the kinesiology admission GPA upon completion of all four additional courses will be advised regarding alternative degree options. |
This change would allow students to apply to be approved as Kines majors earlier via internal transfer (i.e. those who are admitted into another program at SFU and subsequently transfer to Kines): 17 credit hours over 5 courses vs. current requirement of 34 credit hours over 11 courses. Students who are not able to be approved at this stage can apply later.
A typographical error in the requirements for the Kinesiology Minor is corrected under the heading Program Requirements, as follows.
Current | Proposed |
---|---|
plus 12 additional credit hours or upper division kinesiology courses
|
plus 12 additional credit hours of
upper division kinesiology courses
|
The typo may lead to a misinterpretation of requirements.
The first sentence under Post Baccalaureate Diploma in Kinesiology is changed as follows.
Current | Proposed |
---|---|
This program is available for students who have already completed a degree.
|
This program is normally available
for students who have completed a degree other than kinesiology.
|
The PBD was designed for those from another discipline. Kines students who want an additional credential could be directed toward the Certificates, the Honors program, or the Graduate program.
Within the Major Program section, the subsection Program Requirements is revised as follows.
Current | Proposed |
---|---|
Program RequirementsPlease read descriptions of required courses before enrolling in
the major or honors program (see "Kinesiology KIN" on page 269).
The basic credit hour requirements underlying the major are as follows. |
Degree RequirementsPlease read descriptions of required courses before enrolling in
the major or honors program (see "Kinesiology KIN" on page 269).
The following is a summary
outline of the general degree requirements for
a Bachelor of Science
(Kinesiology). |
The overall degree requirements are not technically part of the major; it is possible to do a Kinesiology major in conjunction with another degree program. The revised wording reflects the intent of this section to reflect the overall requirements for the B.Sc.(Kinesiology). In addition, two numerical errors in the current calendar listing are corrected.
The Certificate in Health and Fitness Studies should be modified to add KIN 340, drop KIN 320 and change the footnoting, as follows.
Current | Proposed |
---|---|
Students must complete all of
KIN 105-3 Fundamentals of Human Structure and Function* KIN 110-3 Current Topics in Nutrition* KIN 140-3 Contemporary Health Issues* KIN 142-3 Introduction to Kinesiology* KIN 143-3 Exercise Management* and one of KIN 342-3 Active Health* KIN 343-3 Active Health: Assessment and Promotion
Students must also complete nine credit hours (three courses) of electives chosen from the following.
Students must have a minimum 2.00 GPA calculated on courses counting toward the certificate, and a current cardiopulmonary resuscitation (CPR) certificate at time of completion. The certificate is normally completed within five years of admission to the certificate program. |
Students must complete all of
KIN 105-3 Fundamentals of Human Structure and Function* KIN 110-3 Current Topics in Nutrition* KIN 140-3 Contemporary Health Issues* KIN 142-3 Introduction to Kinesiology* KIN 143-3 Exercise Management* and one of KIN 342-3 Active Health* KIN 343-3 Active Health: Assessment and Promotion+
Students must also complete nine credit hours (three courses) of electives chosen from the following. Students must have a minimum 2.00 GPA calculated on courses counting toward the certificate, and a current cardiopulmonary resuscitation (CPR) certificate at time of completion. The certificate is normally completed within five years of admission to the certificate program. Credits applied to one certificate may not be applied to another certificate or diploma. |
KIN 340 is a new course with the 2002/3 calendar and is relevant to the certificate. KIN 320 is no longer offered.
Footnoting is added to identify those courses with prerequisites beyond the listed lower division courses.
The Certificate in Applied Human Nutrition should be modified to add KIN 340 and add footnoting, as follows.
Current | Proposed |
---|---|
Students must complete one of
KIN 105-3 Fundamentals of Human Structure and Function KIN 205-3 Introduction to Human Physiology and all of KIN 110-3 Human Nutrition: Current Issues KIN 111-3 Food and Food Safety KIN 212-3 Food and Society KIN 311-3 Applied Human Nutrition and three of GERO 302-3 Health Promotion and Aging GERO 407-3 Nutrition and Aging KIN 303-3 Kinanthropometry KIN 312-3 Nutrition in Fitness and Sport KIN 375-3 Human Growth and Development KIN 430-3 Human Energy Metabolism KIN 431-3 Environmental Carcinogenesis Students must have a minimum 2.00 GPA calculated on all required courses. The certificate is normally completed within five years of admission to the certificate program. |
Students must complete one of
KIN 105-3 Fundamentals of Human Structure and Function* KIN 205-3 Introduction to Human Physiology and all of KIN 110-3 Human Nutrition: Current Issues* KIN 111-3 Food and Food Safety* KIN 212-3 Food and Society* KIN 311-3 Applied Human Nutrition and three of GERO 302-3 Health Promotion and Aging+ GERO 407-3 Nutrition and Aging+ KIN 303-3 Kinanthropometry+ KIN 312-3 Nutrition in Fitness and Sport* KIN 340-3 Active Health: Behaviour and Promotion KIN 375-3 Human Growth and Development*+ KIN 430-3 Human Energy Metabolism+ KIN 431-3 Environmental Carcinogenesis+ *courses available by distance education +courses which have additional prerequisites Students must have a minimum 2.00 GPA calculated on all required courses. The certificate is normally completed within five years of admission to the certificate program. |
Footnoting is added to identify courses available by distance education and also to identify those courses with prerequisites beyond the listed lower division courses.
The course title for KIN 340 change spelling from "Behavior" (American) to "Behaviour" (Canadian). This change should be made both in the course calendar description and in the list of upper division courses for the major. Note that the Psychology department uses the Canadian spelling (e.g., PSYC 381, 386).