Welcome,
Guest
.
Login
.
Türkçe
NİNOVA
COURSES
HELP
ABOUT
Where Am I:
Ninova
/
Courses
/
Department of Physical Education
/
BEB 102
/
Course Informations
Return to Faculty
Home Page
Course Information
Course Weekly Lecture Plan
Course Evaluation Criteria
Course Information
Course Name
Turkish
Yüzme Teknikleri Becerisi Öğrenimi
English
Advanced Swimming Skills
Course Code
BEB 102
Credit
Lecture
(hour/week)
Recitation
(hour/week)
Laboratory
(hour/week)
Semester
-
-
-
2
-
Course Language
Turkish
Course Coordinator
Kadir Can Çakıcı
Course Objectives
Developing students, physically, mentally and socially with swimming as a tool, and developing their competitiveness and team spirit through swimming. Seeing sports as a science and realizing that mostly studies in the fields like engineering and architecture are contributing to sports sciences.
Course Description
BEB102 is designed for students who can swim by themselves, without any assistance, more then 50m. At the end of the class, it is aimed that the student can understand the biomechanical basis of, and execute freestyle (crawl), backstroke and breaststroke techniques; able to plan and perform a 60min training program by him/herself.
Course Outcomes
Upon successful completion of the course, the students should be able to
- demonstrate the basic freestyle (crawl), backstroke, breawststroke, floating and diving techniques in water by themselves,
- analyze the biomechanics of a swimmer,
- realize the contribution of the other science branches to sports sciences,
- criticize the need of learning swimming.
Pre-requisite(s)
BEB102 class has no pre-requisites but the class is designed for students who you can swim 50m or more without assistance. Non-swimmers and students who has fear of water should select BEB101.
Required Facilities
While attending the class, bring your own
- SWIMSUIT (You are NOT allowed to wear shorts or bikini during the class)
- Swim cap
- Towel
- Slippers
- Swimming goggles (It is not allowed to wear swimming goggles for the first few weeks of the classes. Students wearing contact lenses should come with their eye glasses to the pool deck)
Other
At least 80% class attendance is compulsory. At the first week, necessary information about the course is given and the rules during the course is explained. At the second week, theoretical background of the practical classes during the semester is taught. Attendance to these classes is required. The last week of the semester is the final evaluation. Attendance to this class is mendatory. Student who doesn't attend 4 classes during the semester gets VF in the system.
Textbook
• MAGLISCHO, EW (2003) Swimming Fastest, Human Kinetics [GV 838.67 T73 M34]
• COUNSILMAN, JE (1994) The New Science of Swimming, Prentice Hall [GV 837 C68]
• WHITTEN, P (1994) Complete Book of Swimming. Random House [GV 837.W55 1994]
• YMCA (1999) Teaching Swimming Fundamentals, Human Kinetics Publishers Inc. [GV 836.35 T43]
• THOMAS, D (2005) Swimming: Steps to Success. Human Kinetics Publishers Inc. [GV 837.T46 2005]
• LAUGHLIN, T (2001) Swimming Made Easy: The total immersion way for any swimmer to achieve fluency, ease, and speed in any stroke. Swimware Inc. [GV 837.7.L38 2001]
Other References
https://www.iat.uni-leipzig.de/datenbanken/iks/bms/
Other books and international science journals about
Sports Biomechanics
Sports Architecture
Sports Equipments
Fluid Mechanics
Example:
Proceedings of the Institution of Mechanical Engineers, Part P: Journal of Sports Engineering and Technology (http://pip.sagepub.com/content/by/year)
Sports Engineering (http://www.springer.com/engineering/mechanics/journal/12283)
Sports Engineering (http://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/journal/10.1111/(ISSN)1460-2687/issues)
International Journal of Sports Science and Engineering (http://www.worldacademicunion.com/journal/SSCI/online.htm)
Courses
.
Help
.
About
Ninova is an ITU Office of Information Technologies Product. © 2024