The HAPS blog site has been created to promote HAPS members sharing personal accounts of topics relevant to the HAPS membership and the larger community. The blog is the perfect place to publish content on a wide variety of topics, from teaching tips to A&P related camps or experiences. Ideal blog posts are between 300-500 words and contain a few images. As a blog author, you just need to provide your text and images – the HAPS Blog team will take care of editing and publication.
We invite everyone to join in the conversation and become part of the community. If you are an active HAPS member, you can become a blogger on HAPSblog in just a few easy steps:
1) Review the HAPS Blog guidelines.
2) Think up a topic that will be interesting to HAPS members. Topics that are likely to be interesting include the story of your first year teaching, integrating new methods in the classroom with real-time evaluation of how it is going, a multi-part series on a specific topic ranging from teaching to testing to building a new lab.
3) Propose your topic and timeframe in a short email to the HAPS Blog Master by emailing hapsblog@hapsconnect.org.
4) Start blogging!
More on Repositories, Musing on Games
As I continue my exploration of online repositories, I get recommendations from other HAPS members. For example, Hiranya Roychowdhury,…
HAPS Web 6- A Message From Your HAPS-Ed Team!
This week, the Communications Committee brings you a message from the co-editors of the HAPS EDucator, Jennelle Malcos and…
Competency in A&P
I wrote last week about attending the SoftChalk User Conference in Baltimore. At the end of 2 days of…
HAPS Web 5- The Central Regional Meeting
It isn’t too late to register for the HAPS Central Regional Meeting on October 17-18 in Minneapolis, MN. The conference…
The First Ever SoftChalk User Conference
Hello from Baltimore. I managed to convince both my dean and my distance ed director to stake my trip…
HAPSweb 4: The HAPS EDucator
Last week we posted about how HAPS members have access to the journal from the American Association of Anatomists.…
Repositories, Reviewed
Over the last two weeks, I’ve describe my online resources, and voiced a concern that my assets may not…
HAPSweb 3: Anatomical Sciences Education (ASE)
Did you know that HAPS members have free access to the bimonthly publication from the American Association of Anatomists? Anatomical Sciences Education…
In Pursuit of Animations and Videos
Have you ever thought, ‘Gee, I bet I can knock out an animation of that process in no time!’…
HAPSweb 2: The Email Listserv
The HAPS email listserv is where some of the most interesting conversations in A&P are taking place! The listserv is…
A Cautionary Tale about Online Repositories
When I first pondered what I would share in the HAPS blog, I considered my prior forays into online…
HAPSweb 1: Become a Member!
Welcome back to another semester of Anatomy and Physiology fun. This semester, the Communications Committee will share a series of posts…