Wednesday, November 17, 2010

shopping list

Proteins Carbohydrates


Chicken Breast Sweet Potato Broccoli
Turkey Breast Baked Potato Cauliflower
Lean Chicken Deli Meat Brown Rice Green Beans
Lean Turkey Deli Meat Wild Rice Green Beans
Lean Roast Beef Deli Meat Whole Wheat Pasta Green/Red Pepper
Lean Turkey/Chicken Hotdog Quaker Instant Oatmeal Mushrooms
Lean Ham Deli Meat Whole Wheat Bread Tomato
Salmon Whole Wheat Buns Carrots
Chicken Black Beans Celery
Tuna Red Beans Cabbage
Swordfish White Beans Zucchini
Halibut Refried Beans Cucumber
Crab Baked Beans Onion
Shrimp Corn Lettuce
Lobster Berries Asparagus
Venison Melon Collard Greens
Flank Steak Apple/Pear Mustard Greens
Ground Turkey Orange/Grapefruit Spinach
Top round Banana Artichoke
Eggs Peach/Plum Kidney Beans
Low-Fat Cottage Cheese Grapes Mixed Vegetables
Low-Fat Peanut Butter White/Brown Rice
Low-Fat Cheese Spaghetti (whole wheat) Snacks
Waffles (whole wheat) Pretzels
Condiments French Toast Baked Tortilla Chips
Fat-Free Mayonnaise English Muffins Baked Lays
Mustard Raisin Bran All Fruit
Ketchup Total/Wheaties Fat-Free Yogurt
Salsa Pancakes Low-Fat cottage Cheese
Fat-Free/Low-Fat Sour Cream Wheat Bread
Margarine Italian Bread Desserts
Butter Substitutes Jello
Molly McButter Drinks Angel Food Cake
Promise Ultra Light Water Oatmeal Raisin Cookie
Benacol Light 2%, Low-Fat, Skim Milk Chocolate Pudding
Take Control Crystal Light Sherbert
Orange Juice Frozen Yogurt
Diet Soda

There are six nutrients that are essential for the human body to function, I want you to name and define what they are. I also want you to explain how they are important to the body.

Monday, October 18, 2010

muscle fibers

please follow the direction present in fron you to excute this exercise, after going through this exercise please in a paragraph briefly describe why muscle fibers are important.

Every human body has an uncountable number of individual muscle fibers. A certain proportion of the fibers are fast twitch while the remaining fibers are slow twitch. The proportion is determined genetically before birth.
Fast twitch fibers predispose a person to quick, explosive movements such as those necessary to chase ball across a tennis court or to successfully cover a streaking wide receiver in football. Fast twitch fibers may be thought of as those fibers that characterize sprint type movements.
Slow twitch fibers, on the other hand, are best thought of as muscle fibers which allow for excellent performance in endurance type activities. The most obvious example are long distance runners, however, slow twitch fibers regulate many other non-explosive type of athletic movements.
A person with a high proportion of slow twitch fibers as compared to fast twitch fibers may have excellent hand eye coordination, tremendous muscle definition, among a full range of other important athletic characteristics; however, their chances of excelling at wide receiver on a football team would be seriously impaired.
Currently very few athletes in America have any idea as to their proportion of fast twitch to slow twitch fibers. Needless to say, children are totally clueless. Their adaptability to a certain sport or sport position is less scientific or reality based than say, astrology or palm reading. Contrast that to the old Iron Curtain nations where children's muscle fibers types were known well before their hair color would stabilize.
The most accurate way to assess muscle fiber type proportions is with a simple needle biopsy. Of course, this procedure must be carried out in your local sportsmedicine physician's office or at one of the large University based sportsmedicine research facilities. Fortunately, it is fairly painless and relatively inexpensive; once you find the appropriate professional with access to the appropriate laboratory to do the "typing."
As always, though, there are alternatives. Not as accurate as a sophisticated laboratory technique but practically speaking, for Sport Election, just as useful. And even better, one procedure can be done in 30 seconds using the side of a house.
The first couple of steps in any athletic movement are a direct function of the proportion of fast versus slow twitch fibers in the legs. The simplest test for this is the Vertical Jump.
Directions:
Find a high wall.
Have your child face the wall with the toes touching the wall and the heels firmly planted on the floor. 3. Have your child fully extend both arms overhead and have their fingers touching the highest point they can reach on the wall.
. Mark that spot.
Have your child move one foot back from the wall.
Have your child jump with legs together, without a running start and touch the wall at the highest point possible.
Mark the spot they reached. Let them take a couple of practice jumps and then let them jump for a score.
Measure the height between the first and the second mark. You can use a yardstick. (If they jumped beyond the yardstick, don't bother measuring. Just grab a couple of plane tickets and get here as quickly as possible. I'll want to act as agent/coach for all their future athletic endeavors.)
Use the table below to find the number that corresponds to their jump performance. Use the body weight column that is closest to them. TABLE 1
Having found the number on the table above, look at the scoring key below and translate the result into points. Place the point score in the appropriate Vertical Jump scoring box located on your child's overall scoring sheet.
TABLE 2

Monday, September 13, 2010

Discussion Blog

Briefly please tell me about yourself



Please share your past experiences with weight training with me and your classmate.




What are some of your goals for this class.


How Did you hear about this class.

Thursday, July 22, 2010

Assignment 2

How many it take for your muscle to completely grow?




what are muscle made out of?

Assignment 1

What is the most important aspect of training



WHen do you muscle grow after working out