Anatomy of the Foot & Ankle

$175.00

Be the yoga anatomy expert. This Buy-A-Lesson curriculum provides you with everything you need to teach yoga anatomy with confidence. Your students will gain a deep understanding of the boney and muscular structure of the foot and apply this understanding to teaching yoga asana safely.

Estimated teaching time: 2.5 hours

What’s Included

  • Google Slides | PowerPoint for in class presentation (1.5 hours)
  • Review & Application: help students apply anatomical concepts to yoga teaching and practice (1 hour)
  • Student handouts in Google Docs (downloadable as PDF or Word)
  • Trainer notes to guide you every step of the way
  • Curriculum specially designed to make anatomy relevant for yogis
  • Fun and interactive discussions and activities to drive learning home

Be the yoga anatomy expert. This Buy-A-Lesson curriculum provides you with everything you need to teach yoga anatomy with confidence. See all available lessons here.

Estimated teaching time: 2.5 hours

What’s Included

  • Google Slides | PowerPoint for in class presentation (1.5 hours)
  • Review & Application: help students apply anatomical concepts to yoga teaching and practice (1 hour)
  • Student handouts in Google Docs (downloadable as PDF or Word)
  • Trainer notes to guide you every step of the way
  • Curriculum specially designed to make anatomy relevant for yogis
  • Fun and interactive discussions and activities to drive learning home

What You Need

  • Computer
  • Projector
  • Internet connection (if you’re using Google Slides)

Learning Objectives

By the end of this lesson, your students will be able to:

  • Describe the general anatomy of the foot and ankle, including bones, joints, and major muscles
  • Identify the muscles and actions that support the three primary arches of the feet 
  • Demonstrate and name the movements at the ankle joints, tarsals, metatarsals, and toes
  • Cue mountain pose (tadasana) with proper foot alignment and arch engagement
  • Describe how the spiral of bones and human variation may impact the functionality of “parallel” feet in tadasana (and all poses)
  • Assess your own tadasana and the impact of human variation
  • Confidently cue students in practice who may be dealing with an ankle sprain