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Physiology
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Physiology is the branch of biology concerned with how living organisms and their component parts function. It sits at the core of life science education and appears across courses in biology, medicine, nursing, kinesiology, and health sciences. What makes it academically compelling is the way it bridges structure and process — understanding not just what the body is made of, but how its cells, tissues, and systems carry out essential operations. Topics like blood circulation, metabolic response, respiratory mechanics including Boyle's, Dalton's, and Henry's laws, and conditions such as Spina Bifida illustrate how form and function are inseparable at every scale of biological organization.

Student papers on this topic take several distinct approaches. Some focus on anatomical and functional description, examining specific structures like the thyroid gland in terms of both form and physiological role. Others adopt a case-based or applied angle, exploring how exercise triggers metabolic responses or how physical conditions affect the body's regulatory systems. Analytical papers engage with broader theories, such as arguments around warm-blooded dinosaurs, applying physiological reasoning to evaluate evidence. This range reflects how physiology connects foundational science to real-world health and disease contexts.

A strong physiology essay starts with a clearly bounded thesis — choosing one system, process, or condition rather than attempting to survey the entire field. Evidence drawn from established biological mechanisms, such as how cells release hormones or how blood responds to physical stress, tends to carry the most weight. The common pitfall to avoid is substituting general descriptive statements for functional explanation; always connect what a structure is to what it actively does and why that matters.

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Essay Undergraduate
Biotechnology the Origins of Biotechnology for Centuries,
For centuries, humans have been selectively breeding different plants and animals in an attempt to create a species more useful to human endeavors. This alteration of the fundamental basis of a species, although…
Paper Doctorate
Truth About Girls and Boys:
¶ … Truth about Girls and Boys: Challenging Toxic Stereotypes about Our
Paper Doctorate
Dental Assistance (Dental Surgery) I Started Out
I started out as a dental assistant at 19, then became an instructor, and was promoted to a program director before opening my own teaching program in 2000. I work part time at a community college and teach my dental auxiliary courses on the weekends. In that way, I have an extensive background of practice, reflection, observation, and application that is connected to my job. Since I really have two jobs – dentistry and teaching – and the essay wishes me to employ just one, I will focus on the overarching one: dentistry. Note that these four terms - practice, reflection, observation, and application - represent those used by David Kolb's experiential learning theory and indeed my essay format will be designed according to Kolb's theory so as to best illustrate the contributions of experience to my dentistry background. Kolb considers experience a source of learning and cites four elements that contribute to experiential learning. These are: Concrete experience (doing); Reflective observation (observing); Abstract conceptualization (thinking, generalization); and Active experimentation (planning, testing and application). The essay will connect my experience to each of these four phases in turn.
Essay Doctorate
Elephantiasis the Disease Commonly Known as \"Elephantitis\"
This paper examines Elephantiasis and looks at the background of the disease as well as popular treatments that are being used in regions where the disease is most prevalent. It concludes by clarifying certain misunderstandings about the disease--specifically, the one in which people think it produces a deformity like that which appeared in the so-called "Elephant Man."
Thesis Doctorate
Comparison of the Respiratory System of Fishes and Frogs
The evolution of the vertebrate respiratory system is of considerable interest among evolutionary biologists because it represents a crucial adaptive process that allowed aquatic organisms to inhabit terrestrial niches. While fish primarily depend on gills and cutaneous respiration for gas exchange, frogs at different developmental stages employ gills, cutaneous respiration, and lungs to avoid hypoxia. This essay examines the anatomic and functional differences between fish and frogs to gain a better understanding of this evolutionary process.
Research Paper Doctorate
Left Hand of Darkness Ursula
Ursula LeGuin's the Left Hand of Darkness critiques commonly-held stereotypes and assumptions related to human gender. Based on the field notes by the Ekumenical investigator in Chapter Seven, gendered humans almost…
Paper Undergraduate
Gastrointestinal Tract: Disorders of Motility
This paper discusses three related conditions, GERD, PUD, and gastritis. All three medical conditions are caused by acid in the stomach and gastrointestinal tract and how a dysfunctional body reacts to the increase in acid. If the acid is too abundant or if it reaches part of the body where it was not intended, it can make the person very sick.
Research Paper Doctorate
From Latvian Nurse to Massage Therapist: A Personal Statement
My first, formative experiences in the field of health care began in different country, my home nation of Latvia. There, as a nurse, treating the sick was my primary role. In Riga, I worked at cancer clinic, and then on…
Research Paper Doctorate
Cushing\'s Disease Anatomy and Physiology
Cushing's disease, as well as Cushing's syndrome, is caused by the overproduction of something called cortisol. Cortisol is "a normal hormone produced in the outer portion, or cortex, of the adrenal glands" (Margulies).
Paper Doctorate
Animals Conscious? Evaluating Animal Consciousness
There has been a longstanding controversy over whether or not animals do indeed possess a consciousness. The multitude of definitions throughout the years has shifted from a polarized, static definition to a contemporary one that emphasizes the dynamic nature of consciousness. An examination of these facts demonstrates that animals do indeed possess consciousness.