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COOKEVILLE, Tenn. (Oct. 12, 2006) — Tennessee Tech University’s
former health and physical education department this semester has a new
name, four more academic concentrations — and more than double the
number of new students it had last year.
Seventy-five students this year are enrolled in two different sections
of the exercise science, physical education and wellness department’s
introductory course, compared with 26 students enrolled in the equivalent
course for last year’s fall semester.
“That means we have 75 students this semester who are completely
new to our department,” said Pat Jordan, chairperson. “That’s
nearly triple the number of introductory students we had at this time
last year, so that tells me we’re seeing a significant growth in
our department since we’ve made these changes.”
In addition to the licensure concentration already in place for training
health and P.E. teachers, the newly reorganized department now also offers
concentrations in coaching, fitness and wellness, pre-occupational therapy
and pre-physical therapy.
“These are concentrations for which we recognized a significant
need, and they’re obviously being well received,” Jordan said.
Of the department’s new concentrations, the one in coaching will
prepare students for careers in coaching at the community college, junior
college or college level, as well as allowing students the opportunity
to work with recreational sports leagues.
Employment options for students in the coaching concentration might also
include non-teaching positions at the high school, junior high or middle
school levels.
The fitness and wellness degree track enables students to study, measure
and evaluate physiological changes that occur with regular training and
physical activity. Graduates of the program will be prepared to assess
health-related and performance-related physical fitness and create exercise
programs and prescriptions to enhance health and sport outcomes.
Possible occupations for students in the fitness and wellness track include
youth sports programmers, strength and conditioning coaches, personal
trainers, cardiac and pulmonary rehabilitation specialists and more.
The university already offers concentrations in pre-occupational therapy
and pre-physical therapy through its pre-professional program in the College
of Arts and Sciences, but offering them also through Jordan’s department
will provide students with a greater number of academic options, she said.
“The expanded program offerings increase recruiting potential for
the department, and provide an opportunity for us to continue offering
even more cutting edge programs,’ she said.
The pre-occupational therapy track provides students with the basic education
they will need to help people who have permanent mental, physical, developmental
or emotional disabilities achieve and maintain daily living skills.
The pre-physical therapy track teaches students the skills they will
need to plan, organize and administer individualized treatments based
on each patient’s condition in order to restore functional mobility,
relieve pain and prevent or limit permanent disability.
Other program possibilities being considered include sports administration,
golf instruction and golf course management and sports broadcasting.
Another successful program in the newly reorganized department offers
students an opportunity to study online to earn a master’s degree
in physical education.
“The online master’s program began in the fall of 2003, and
we started out with eight students,” Jordan said. “We’ve
nearly doubled our number every semester and currently have 57 students
enrolled in the online master’s program.”
When it began, it was one of the first such fully accredited programs
in the country, but many other institutions have since followed suit in
developing similar programs, Jordan said.
“Our greatest strength is the students who are enrolled,”
she said. “They’re well qualified, motivated, hard-working
and enthusiastic about their profession.”
Most of the program’s students fall into one of two categories:
teachers who are already working in the field at either the high school,
middle school or elementary level and who want to earn a master’s
degree, or teachers in another major teaching field who want to become
certified to teach physical education.
Because of out-of-state tuition fees, the program’s primary service
area is within the state of Tennessee, but approximately 20 percent of
the students are from out of state.
It can sustain a total of approximately 75 students based on the teaching
faculty and resources it now has, Jordan said.
--Tracey LeFevre
This information posted 24 October 2006
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