To apply anatomy to a human body, you must first know what to look for and how to describe it. So I imagine they'll be spending some time on getting the Latin terms down, which help reduce the ambiguity.
Example: how do you describe the direction your thumb is pointing in? In anatomy they base it on the bones in your forearm, rather than saying 'outwards', because if you rotate your hand its no longer valid.
As for the testing: there are so many bones, muscles, nerves and organs in the body that it will take more than 10 weeks to cover them all in detail. Besides, knowing the name is one thing, knowing the function another.
A sample question I got in college: What are the effects of a unilateral paralysis of the femoral nerve? Ten points of karma if you get it right.
I think you can do fine without dissections. I don't think very many intro to anatomy classes are going to involve everyone getting a human hand to play with.
This is still a very interesting idea/class and I hope it succeeds 100%.