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‘We’re not just show and tell’: how yoga keeps anatomy students’ attention during lectures at university in Hong Kong
- Dr Christopher See, of Chinese University of Hong Kong, uses a novel approach to highlight the workings of the human body in anatomy lectures: a live yoga model
- Junior research assistant Charlotte Lin holds yoga poses to illustrate See’s lessons, and both say their method helps keep students engaged
Reading Time:3 minutes
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![Dr Christopher See (left), a Hong Kong lecturer on anatomy, uses yoga to keep his students engaged and retain knowledge. Research assistant Charlotte Lin (right) strikes yoga poses to illustrate See’s lessons. Photo: Edmond So](https://cdn.i-scmp.com/sites/default/files/styles/1020x680/public/d8/images/canvas/2023/08/09/935f58f7-a488-4332-85b7-9bb0bb9ee465_d5b0c71f.jpg?itok=jI4cxuwE&v=1691563760)
Dr Christopher See Yew-hong stands at the front of a lecture hall in the Chinese University of Hong Kong’s CM Li Building for Basic Medical Science.
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On stage with him, junior research assistant Charlotte Lin Tien-lan holds a back-bending wheel pose – also known as upward facing bow – on a yoga mat, as 170 students look on.
See asks the class a question: which spinal curvature undergoes the most change from normal in the wheel pose, cervical, thoracic or lumbar?
After some discussion, most students raise a card to indicate the thoracic. They are correct.
![Lin holds a back-bending wheel pose while See presents an anatomy lesson. Photo: Chinese University of Hong Kong Lin holds a back-bending wheel pose while See presents an anatomy lesson. Photo: Chinese University of Hong Kong](https://img.i-scmp.com/cdn-cgi/image/fit=contain,width=1024,format=auto/sites/default/files/d8/images/canvas/2023/08/09/747fa9e5-54fe-4867-a68b-67f5c1710f20_7ee38878.jpg)
See has always loved puzzles, from board games to video games.
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