Welcome to the 58th Annual North Carolina Alliance for Athletics, Health, Physical Education, Recreation, and Dance Convention
“Alive With Action in 2005” November 17-19, 2005 Sheraton Four Seasons
Joseph H. Koury Convention Center Greensboro, North Carolina
November 16, 2005
Dear Friends: Welcome to the 2005 North Carolina Alliance for Athletics, Health, Physical Education, Recreation and Dance Convention. I know this convention comes with much anticipation. Congratulations as you celebrate your annual event for athletics, health, physical education, recreation and dance professionals. I applaud your efforts to recognize the importance of these subjects to our children’s education. Mary joins me in welcoming you to this year’s convention. We wish you a successful and productive meeting. With kindest regards I remain
MFE/sg
Location: 116 West Jones Street ● Raleigh, NC ● Telephone: 919-733-5811
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WELCOME AND THANK YOU FOR ATTENDING OUR 58TH ANNUAL CONVENTION We are so pleased that you have made the commitment to take part in a terrific opportunity for professional growth, networking, and sharing time with colleagues. Here are some highlights that you will not want to miss. • • • • • • • • •
General Session and Business Meeting at 10:35 am on Thursday. Exhibitors with their latest products are open Thursday & Friday. The Dance Showcase on Thursday at 7:45 pm, followed by an All Convention Social with DJ Ronnie Akers. Celebrate continuing success at our Jump/Hoops Breakfast Friday at 7:30am. Over 150 sessions many with National and State Teachers of the Year. Participate in “ALIVE WITH ACTION IN 2005” Convention Walk, Friday at 9:00am. Celebrate the achievements of your colleagues at the Awards Luncheon, Friday at 11:45am. Tickets required. Enjoy the All Convention Dance with the Band “FLASHPOINT” on Friday night. Stay to participate in the very special programs and workshops on Saturday.
Special Thanks to: • Association Presidents Pete Shankle, Pam Edwards, Dennis Johnson, Russ McHenry, Michael Hemphill and Krystal Tyndall for their dedicated leadership these past two years. • President-elect Keith Cannon, and his terrific team of Richard Hatley, Kathy Crumpler, Russ McHenry, Travis Teague, Barnanne Creech, Danielle Humphreys, and Karen Lux for all their efforts to plan a most outstanding convention program. • Vice President Donna Woolard for a wonderful job with the Awards Luncheon. • Linda Harrill Rudisill and Linda McManama, Co-chairs of the efficient and friendly Registration Committee. • Cathy Roberts, David Black, Jennifer Aguilar, Micah Stevens, all from UNC Greensboro and Kenny Connor for handling all the AV needs. UNCG Dean David Perrin continues to support our conference with his staff as well as all AV equipment. • Fredia Gooch, our exceptional Exhibits Manager. • Ron Morrow and Greg Moore for their time, dedication, and teamwork that have made this convention a success! Enjoy all the opportunities offered at the 2005 Convention! Return to work with renewed enthusiasm, as you are “ALIVE WITH ACTION FOR A HEALTHY and ACTIVE NC!” Bonnie Ferneau NCAAHPERD President
Greetings from Southern District AAHPERD! As Past President, I would like to extend a personal invitation for you to join us in Virginia Beach, Virginia, March 1-6, 2006 for one of the most professionally enriching times of your life. The 2006 joint convention with Virginia AAHPERD, your neighbor, will be full of exciting and rewarding programs to enhance your professional experience and give you a great opportunity to network with colleagues from 12 other southern states. Fran Myer, current President of the district wants me to remind you to check out the district website for registration information, the tentative program, and hotel information. It is my pleasure to represent Southern District this year at the 58th Annual NCAAHPERD Convention. The program looks fantastic with plenty of time to socialize, network, and enjoy Greensboro. Please as you see me in the convention center, speak to me and allow me to personally invite you to Virginia Beach. VAHPERD promises to show you a good time! Leroy Fanning Southern District Past President
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Table of Contents NC Governor Michael Easley’s Message Welcome Letters from NCAAHPERD and SDAAHPERD Presidents Executive Board Past Presidents Friends of NCAAHPERD Exhibitors Day at a Glance Thank you to very special people Wednesday Program Thursday Program Friday Program Saturday Program Awards Information Convention Evaluation Form Past Award Recipients CEU Application Form 2006-2007 Jump Rope for Heart Grant Application Facilities Map and Room Locations 2006 Program Proposal Form Spring PELT (Physical Education Leadership Training) Registration Form Volunteer Form Future Dates
1 3 5 6 7 8 9 11 12 12 18 23 25 37 38 39 40 41 43 44 45 46
Mission Statement: To provide advocacy, professional development and unity for health, physical education, fitness, recreation, dance, and athletics professionals and students in order to enhance and promote the health of North Carolinians. Vision Statement: NCAAHPERD will be the leading organization promoting and supporting a healthier, more creative and active North Carolina. NCAAHPERD Office: NCAAHPERD’s Six Associations PO Box 27751 Dance Association for North Carolina Educators (DANCE) Raleigh, NC 27611-7751 North Carolina Association for Athletic Education (NCAAE) 1-888-840-6500 North Carolina Association for the Advancement of Health Education (NCAAHE) North Carolina Association of Intramurals and Recreation (NCAIR) 1-888-840-6fax (329) Physical Education Association (PEA) www.ncaahperd.org Student Majors Association (SMA) ncaahperd@ncaahperd.org
Renewal Credit Renewal credit forms may be picked up on Friday between 4:00pm and 5:00pm at the registration desk by completing and turning in the renewal credit form in your program, page 40. On Saturday, renewal credit forms may be picked up between 11:30-12:30pm. No forms can be mailed. Application for CHES Category I continuing education contact hours (CHECH) have been made and teachers who need this credit are to see Pam Edwards.
Extra Programs available for $5.00.
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2005 NCAAHPERD Executive Committee
Left to right: President-elect Keith Cannon, Vice President Donna Woolard, President Bonnie Ferneau, Executive Director Ron Morrow
NCAAHPERD Keith Cannon, NCAAHPERD President-elect Paula Collins, DPI Representative Barnanne Creech, PEA President-elect Kathy Crumpler, NCAAHE President-elect Pam Edwards, NCAAHE President Bonnie Ferneau, NCAAHPERD President Richard Hatley, NCAAE President-elect Michael Hemphill, SMA President Danielle Humphreys, SMA President-elect Dennis Johnson, PEA President Karen Lux, Joint Projects Coordinator Russ McHenry, NCAIR President Greg Moore, Staff Ron Morrow, Executive Director Winky Pasour, Journal Editor Virginia Polatano, Parliamentarian Pete Shanklin, NCAAE President Carol Smith, SMA Advisor Travis Teague, Sports Management Cathy Thomas, DHHS, PAN Krystal Tyndall, DANCE President Cary Weaver, DANCE President-elect Tonya Wicker, Secretary Donna Woolard, NCAAHPERD Vice President
President-elect Keith Cannon and AAHPERD President Jerry E. Landwer
Executive Board 2005
The NCAAHPERD Executive Board welcomes you to the 58th Annual Convention. Join us as we attend meetings, gain professional knowledge, renew friendships, and meet new colleagues.
“Alive With Action in 2005!” -5-
NCAAHPERD Past Presidents 1921-1922 Mary Channing Coleman 1922-1923 R.B. Lawson 1923-1924 Mary Channing Coleman 1924-1925 Lloyd Hathaway 1925-1927 Harold Meyer 1927-1930 Guy Philips 1930-1931 J.G. Miller 1931-1933 Lloyd Hathaway 1933-1935 Dorothy Hutchion 1935-1937 Elmer Burke 1937-1939 Christine White 1939-1940 Floyd Siewert 1940-1941 John Nettles 1941-1942 E.E. Garbee 1942-1943 Ralph Andrews 1943-1944 J.L. Pierce 1944-1946 Ruth Moore 1946-1947 Tom Hines 1947-1948 Alice Benton 1948-1949 Doris Hutchison 1949-1950 James Long 1950-1951 Doris Peterson 1951-1952 Walter Rabb 1952-1953 Margaret Greene 1953-1954 George Shepard 1954-1955 Nell Stallings
1955-1956 George Powell 1956-1957 June Dinkins 1957-1958 Harold Barrow and Ellen Griffin 1958-1959 Roger Thomas 1959-1960 Doris Harrinston 1960-1961 Richard Jamerson 1961-1962 Helen Hartshorn 1962-1963 Paul Derr 1963-1964 June Galloway 1964-1965 Marvin Allen 1965-1966 Elizabeth Bookout 1966-1967 Carroll King 1967-1968 Virginia Hart 1968-1969 Edgar Hooks 1969-1970 Jay Massey 1970-1971 Rufus Hackney 1971-1972 Margaret Duncan 1972-1973 Michael Pollack and Ronald Hyatt 1973-1974 Lavonia Allison 1974-1975 Tom Johnson 1975-1976 Robberta Mesenbrink 1976-1977 Kenneth Wheeler 1977-1978 Barbara Yarborough 1978-1979 Barbara Yarborough
1979-1980 Bill Russell 1980-1981 Phyllis Pharr 1981-1982 Robert Blackburn 1982-1983 Marian Solleder 1983-1984 Ronald Hyatt 1984-1985 Jane Jenkins 1985-1986 Rick Barnes 1986-1987 Beverly Sanford 1987-1988 Larry Bostian 1988-1989 Angela Lumpkin 1989-1990 David Gardner 1990-1991 Paula Hildebrand 1991-1992 David Gardner 1992-1993 Lynn Berle 1993-1994 Ron Champion 1994-1995 Cathy Thomas 1995-1996 John LeBar 1996-1997 Sherry Salyer 1997-1999 Ron Morrow 1999-2000 Patricia Pertalion 2000-2001 John Bennett 2001-2002 Judy Peel 2001-2002 David Claxton 2002-2003 Mary Lou Veal 2003-2004 Carey Hughley
Vote for Alliance Vice President Voting box and ballets are in the exhibit area Open - Thursday 9:00am – 4:00pm; Friday 9:00-11:00am
Artie Kamiya
March Krotee
Artie Kamiya
March Krotee
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FRIENDS OF NCAAHPERD The FRIENDS of NCAAHPERD was established in 1989 to raise funds for worthwhile projects of the NCAAHPERD membership. It was decided that FRIENDS of NCAAHPERD would have a total of over $10,000 before any monies would be given out. In 1994, the $10,000 minimum was met and surpassed. Therefore, the FRIENDS of NCAAHPERD committee is prepared to accept and review applications and proposals for grants, scholarships and projects. You may request a proposal form from NCAAHPERD at 1-888-840-6500. As of November 5, 2005, FRIENDS contributions for 2005 were $2,240.00, with a balance of $50,849.86. FRIENDS have awarded members $20, 954.00 to this date. Want to be a FRIEND of NCAAHPERD? Send your contributions to: FRIENDS, NCAAHPERD, and PO Box 27751, Raleigh, NC 27611. Levels of giving: Contributor: $25. Donor: $100. Sponsor: $250. Patron: $500. Benefactor: $1000.
2005-2006 FRIENDS of NCAAHPERD (as of 11/5/2005) $10.00-$25.00 Teresa Allen Martie Bell David Claxton Sherry Crowder Joel Dagenhardt Marie Flowe-Dawson Alec French Glen Gilbert Carmyn Glynn Richard Hatley Michael Hemphill Brenda Hicks Ellen Hinton Jennie Jones Deborah Lauria Mary Lida Alexander Vicki Marsh Neil Oakley Lillian McCaw Lisa Rotolo Donna Spinks Bonnie Wagner Chip Watts Anne Whitmire Casey Williams
$30.00-$50.00 Kymm Ballard Ellen Essick Vicki Gilbert Chip Gill Danielle Humphreys Sherry Salyer Kathy Stefanou Candy Thompson Tonya Wicker $60.00-$90.00 Keith Cannon Shirley Harper Anne Wiggin Sponsor ($250-499) Donna Woolard in memory of her mother
$100.00 –$200.00 Rick Barnes Betsy Beals Robert Blackburn Kacy Crabtree Barnanne Creech Kathy Crumpler Linda Harrill Rudisill Ernest Holcomb Paula Hudson Collins Carey Hughley Dennis Johnson John LeBar Ron Morrow Patricia Pertalion Phyllis Pharr Marian Solleder
Patron ($500-$1,000) Bonnie Ferneau* * Gift in the form of stock
Benefactor ($1,000+) In-Kind Contributions
Fackrell Print Shop, Charles Fackrell Greensboro UNCG School of Health and Human Performance, Dean David Perrin
Friends Committee: John LeBar, Chair; Linda Harrill Rudisill; Carey Hughley, Past President; Donna Woolard, Alliance Vice President; Ron Morrow, Executive Director, ex officio; Bonnie Ferneau, ex officio
Thank you to all our FRIENDS of NCAAHPERD! Come by the FRIENDS’ Reception on Thursday - 9:30-10:30am Location: Presidential Suite 593 -7-
Our Great Exhibitors (List as of November 1, 2005) Please take the opportunity to go by the Exhibits upstairs in the Prefunction Area and tell all of our vendors how much we appreciate their participation in our convention. They could have gone to many others, but choose ours and we need to support them. You will find their prices much better than catalog prices. American Heart Assoc., Donna Ashcraft 3131 RDU Center Drive (Suite 100), Morrisville, NC 27560 919-463-8331 donna.ashcraft@heart.org ACC Women's Tournament, Elizabeth Colamarino, PO Box 5447, Greensboro, NC 27435. 336.433.7261, elizabeth.colamarino@greensboro-nc.gov. Action Based Learning, Jean Blaydes Madigan, 232 Zachary Walk, Murphy, TX 75094. 972.424.2250, jean@actionbasedlearning.com. Arbonne International, Betsy Pullen, 311 Brookneil Dr., Winchester, VA 22602. 540-869-5462, abetsy@visuallink.com. BeActive NC, Laurie Bronson, PO Box 2291, Durham, NC 27702. 919-765-3107, leslie@beactivenc.org. Bill Fritz Sports Corp., Bill Fritz, 1072 Classic Rd., Apex, NC 27539. 800-234-1004, bfritz@billfritzsports.com. Bowlers Education/In-School Bowling, Bob Rea, 19230 3rd. Dr. SE, Bothell, WA 98012. 425-776-8819, bob@bpaa.com. Discovery Education, Terry Catullo, 1560 Sherman Ave. (Ste. 100), Evanston, IL 60201. 800.323.9084, terry_catullo@discovery.com. ECU - School of Health, Dr. Sharon Knight, Dept. HHP, Minges, Greenville, NC 27858. 252-328-0038, gilbert@mail.ecu.edu. ECU Teaching Fellows Program, Mary Beth Corbin, Speight 203/ ECU, Greenville, NC 27858. 252.328.4126, corbinm@mail.ecu.edu. Everlast Climbing Industries, Undria Clifton, 1335 Mendota Heights Rd., Mendota Heights, MN 55120. 651-665-9131, uclifton@traversewall.com. Geo Fitness Inc., Sara Gustavesen, 12565 Research Pkwy (Ste. 300), Orlando, FL 32826. 404.275.0510, geofitnessconf@yahoo.com. Gopher Sports, Michele Skala, 220 24th Avenue NW, PO Box 998, Owatonna, MN 55060. 800-533-0446 x533, micheles@gophersport.com. Great Activities Publishing Co., Artie Kamiya, PO Box 51158, Durham, NC 27717. 800-927-0682, kamiya@mindspring.com. Great Lakes Sports, Dennis Metzger, PO Box 447, Lambertville, MI 48144. 800.446.2114, help@greatlakesports.com. High Point University, Alberta Herron, 833 Montlieu Ave./ Grad School, High Point, NC 27262. 336-841-9198, aherron@highpoint.edu. Hunter Texbooks, Inc., Tonya Osborne, 701 Shallowford St., Winston-Salem, NC 27101. 336-725-0608, huntertext@bellsouth.net. Jodon II, JoAnn Claussen, 10935 Fathke Rd., Crown Point, IN 46307. 219.663.4556, sales@jodonii.com. Kikaflik Inc., David Blues, PO Box 386, Isle of Palms, SC 29451. 843.886.8712, david@kikaflik.com. Microfit, Beth Chan, 1077 B Independence Blvd., Mountain View, CA 94043. 610.969.7296, sales@microfit.com. Millis Regional Health Education Center, Dana Fitzgerald, 600 N. Elm Street, High Point, NC 27262. 336-878-6713, dfitzgerald@hprhs.com. NASPE, John Farrell, 1900 Association Dr., Reston, VA 20191. 703.476.3483, jfarrell@aahperd.org. NC Action for Healthy Kids/ Southeast Dairy Organization, Laura Simpson, 1577 D New Garden Rd. (#297), Greensboro, NC 27410. 336.540.1628, lsimpson@sudiaine.com. NCAE, Norma Reaves-Carree, PO Box 27347, Raleigh, NC 27611. 919-832-3000, norma.smith@ncae.org. NCAAHE, Kathy Crumpler, Cell Phone: 910-520-4201, ncaahe-president-elect@ncaahperd.org PEA, Dennis Johnson, Box 5005, Wingate, NC 28174. 704.233.8182, djohnson@wingate.edu. Personal Summits, Mike Fischesser, PO Box 69, Jonas Ridge, NC 28641. 828-733-4184, taasc@bellsouth.net. Playworld Systems, Tina Kuhns, 1000 Buffalo Rd, Lewisburg, PA 17837. 570.522.5310, tinak@playworldsystems.com. Polar Electro, Suzanne Gregor, 1111 Marcus Ave. (Suite M 15), Lake Success, NY 11042. 506.364.0400 x 3060, eileen.mcglone@polar.fi. Professional Educators of North Carolina, Kathryn Allen, 309 W. Millbrook Rd. (Ste 111), Raleigh, NC 27609. 919-788-9299, kathryn@pencweb.org. Socci Sport LLC, Grant Scheffer, 1011 Royalist Rd, Mt. Pleasant, SC 29464, 843-388-2812, grant@socci.net Sportime International, Karen Ware, 3155 Northwoods Pkwy, Norcross, GA 30071. 800.444.5700, kware@sportime.com. Sportwall International, Inc., Rachael Morgan, 5045 Sixth St., Carpinteria, CA 93013. 805.745.5559 x 104, rachaelm@sportwall.com. Tchoukball Promotion, LLC, Pierre-Alain Girardin, PO Box 6176, Silver Spring, MD 20916. 301-962-5076, info@tchoukballpromo.com. Toledo Physical Education Supply, Dennis Metzger, PO Box 5618, Toledo, OH 43613. 419-726-8122, dmetzger@tpesonline.com. UCS, Inc., Jason Schwartz, 511 Hoffman Rd., Lincolnton, NC 28092. 704.732.9922, jasonschwartz@ucsspirit.com. Ultimate Players Association, Kyle Weisbrod, 741 Pearl St. (Side Suite), Boulder, CO 80302. 303.447.3472, kyle.weisbrod@upa.org. UNC Greensboro-Health & Human Performance, Mary Ann Sensebaugh, 401 HHP Bldg./Dean's Office/UNCG, Greensboro, NC 27402. 336.334.5744, maryanns@uncg.edu. United States Tennis Assoc./North Carolina, Amy Thomas, 2709 Henry St., Greensboro, NC 27405. 336-852-8577, amyt@nctennis.com. Wingate University, Tom Appenzeller, PO Box 3012, Wingate, NC 28174. 704-233-8176, appenzel@wingate.edu.
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Wednesday, November 16, 2005 (At-A-Glance) 11:30 - 1:00 1:00 - 4:00
PETE Reform Luncheon 1 Location: Stingers Restaurant
NCAAHPERD Executive Board Luncheon 2 Location: Stingers Restaurant
PETE Reform Meeting 4
6:00 - 8:00
Location: Tanglewood
NCAAHPERD Board Meeting 5 Location: Edinburgh
PEA Board Meeting 6 Location: Edinburgh
Early Arrivers Social 7 Location: Presidential Suite
18:00 - ??
Healthful Living Coordinators 3 Location: Maple 10:00 A. M. -4:00 P. M.
Early Registration 8 7:00PM - 8:30PM Registration Area
WD 40 Dance - Guilford G - Rick Barns and Robert Blackburn 9
Thursday, November 17, 2005(At-A-Glance) 8:00 - 9:00 7:15-8:45 Joint Proj Task Force Breakfast
Guilford E
Guilford F
Guilford G
Guilford D
Arrowhead
PEA 11 Adapted PE is Good Teaching
PEA 12 Hot Stuff: News You Can Use About Warm-ups
PEA 13 Tennis Everywhere, Anywhere, Anyone
DANCE 14 Interdisciplinary Lesson Plans
PEA 137 Authentic Assessment Polar Teacher Of Year
9:00-9:30
Tidewater
Sandpiper
Tanglewood
Pebble Beach
Colony BC
Colony A
NCAIR/ NCAA 15 The NCATA: the Past, Present, & our Future
AAHE 16 Achieving Health Balance for Women
AAHE 17 Coaches Perception of Eating Disorders
PEA 18 The Be Active Approach to School Wellness
NCAAE 19 Strategies for Teaching the Tennis Serve
BREAKFAST ALL MEMBERS - Exhibits OPEN
9:30-10:30
PEA SPARK 22
PEA 23 Juggling Activities for Elem. School PE
PEA 24 Making Fitness Fun
10:35-11:50
12:!5-1:30 12:15-1:30
DANCE 25 Dance History Comes To Life
Research Posters in Exhibit Area 21
NCAAHPERD 26 Show me the Money
NCAAHPERD Past Presidents’ Luncheon 34 Heritage A
AAHE 29 Hitting the Highlights of High School Health Teacher Of Year
Ethnic Minority Luncheon 35 Heritage B
PEA 38 Awaken Your Brain Teacher Of Year
PEA 39 Hopsports: Tivo, Entertainers and Athletes… The Future is Here!
AAHE 40 Learning Styles & Retention: Making It Stick
PEA 41 Building Better Brains Through Physical Education
AAHE 30 Adolescent Depression
PEA 31 Practical Pedagogy: Linking Healthy Eating & Phys Act.
NCAAE 32 High School, College Coaches Looking out for No.1
PEA48 The Station Master 48
PEA 49 Tchoukball
PEA 50 Calisthenics for the 21st century
DANCE 51 African Dance
SMA 52 Energizers: Promoting PA in Schools
3:15- 4:15
PEA 59 SAFE (successful activities for everyone)
PEA 60 Cup Crazy
PEA 61 Activities for Severe/ Profound Disabilities
DANCE 62 Bust A Move
DANCE 63 Arts Management
4:30- 5:30
PEA 70 The Sport for the Rest of Us
PEA 71 Ultimate Frisbee
PEA 72 Tennis 101 Safe, Easy, Fun
DANCE 73 Folk dances from Hawaii, Germany and Romania UNCG Social Augusta
College & University Socials 81
DANCE Business Meeting Lunch 36 Meadowbrook
SMA 42 NASPE Internship Experience
NCAAHPERD 43 NC WISE NCDPI
AAHE 44 High School Health Electives Panel
AAHE/ NCAIR 45 Fitness for a Lifetime: NC Senior Games
NCAAHPERD Curr Dev in Elem. PE: Does the Present 53 AAHPERD President AAHE 64 Wellness at Work Panel
NCAIR How to Hire a Certified Athletic Trainer in NC 54 NCAIR 65 Photographic Journey Eastern Australia
AAHE Keeping Health Education Alive in 2005 55
AAHE Gangs in NC 56
AAHE 66 The Data’s Right
AAHE 67 Bullying & Violence Prevention
AAHE 74 Schools Eating Smart and Moving More
AAHE 75 Sound Mind & Body: Enhancing the Health of Teachers
Joint Projects 76 How to run an event
AAHE 77 How Well are your Students?
Jean Blayes Madigan
1:45- 3:00 PEA 124.5 Water Aerobics Pool
8:30-11:30
PEA/NCAIR 28 Move More Standards for Physical Activity
General Session & Business Meeting for all Members Guilford B 33 PEA 37 How to develop upper body strength in children
7:45-8:45
NCAAHPERD 27 Friends Social Presidential Suite 593
SMA Social 83 Presidential Suite
84AAHE Social -Turnberry
DANCE Performance Showcase GUILFORD B 86 All Convention Dance Social DJ - Ronnie Ackers 87
*Dressing Rooms for Dance Showcase *Colony A Classroom Set for NCAAE
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PEA 46 Required HPE Making the Connection for Students Teacher Of Year PEA 57 Ouch! Effective Strategies to Prevent Injuries PEA 68 Thinking about National Board Certification?
NCAAE 47 Selecting your coaching style
NCAAE 58 Trials and Tribulations: PE & Sports Court Cases NCAAE 69 Should Coaches Sue Parents
PEA 80 Online tools for teaching G.Y.M. (Great Young Minds!) Dance Showcase Rehearsal -Guilford B 85 SMA 78 Are You Prepared For Success
FRIDAY NOVEMBER 18, 2005 (AT-A-GLANCE) 7:30 -8:30am 8:30-9:00 9:00 -9:30 9:30 -10:15
NCAAHPERD Joint Projects Breakfast Awards Ceremony 88 NCAAHPERD ALIVE WITH ACTION IN 2005 ALL CONVENTION WALK- Walk and Talk, Students and Professionals - Meet at Lobby Entrance 89 Exhibits Open Guilford E
Guilford F
Guilford G
Guilford D
Augusta
Tidewater
Sandpiper
Tanglewood
Pebble Beach
Colony BC
Colony A
PEA 90 SPARK with a Nutrition Twist
PEA 91 9:00 - Business Meeting
Joint 93 Projects A rockin' session with long ropes!
DANCE 94 Modern Dance Technique
AAHE 95 Elementary Health Education: An Integrated Approach
AAHE 96 Graduate Internships
Sports Mgt. 97 9:00 Opening Keynote Sports Mang. Chase for the Cash
Sports Mgt. 98 Risk Management of Historically Black Colleges
AAHE 99 Asthma
PEA 100 PDA’s for Dummies
NCAAE 101 The Middle School Coach and Athletic Director - You are Different
Joint Projects 104 The Awesome Demo Teams
DANCE 105 Integrating student choreography into the P.E. curriculum
AAHE 106 Methamphetamine Labs in NC
Research 107 Presentations
Sports Mgt. 108 Internships & Networking-Strategies for success
Sports Mgt. 109 Measuring the psychic income of sports teams
AAHE 110 Educating Healthy Student Bodies
PEA 111 Balance the 6th component of Health Related Fitness
NCAAE 112 Changes in the middle/jr. high school athletics manual
PEA 92 Skill Theme Approach Elem PE AAHPERD President
10:30-11:30
PEA 102 It's Their World: PE for the Munchkins!
DANCE 103 Creative Choreography
Teacher Of Year
11:45-1:00
AWARDS LUNCHEON Honoring All NCAAHPERD and Association Awardees (tickets required) 113
1:15 -2:15
PEA 114 Fitness Games for Everyone
2:30 -3:45
PEA 125 Wakcky Warmups & Get your Circuits Crossed
NCAAHPERD 117 Ronnie Ackers Dance for all ages & occasions DANCE 128 Combos to Go
Teacher Of Year
Joint Projects 116 Short Rope Activities PEA 127 Want to Know How to Line Dance?
PEA 136A Bowling + Fitness= FUN
PEA 138 Weight Training 109
PEA/Joint 139 Projects Jump Rope Skills for Elem & Middle School
PEA 115 Get over the fitness hurdle with the TURTL PEA 126 Let Them BE Little
Teacher Of Year
4:00 -5:00
PEA 136 Fine Motor Tuning
5:15 -6:30
AAHE 118 BUSINESS MEETING
SMA 119 STRATEGIES FOR MANAGEMENT IN
Sports Mgt. 120 Sport Management: Classroom to Practice
Sports Mgt. 121 Sport Participants as Consumers:
DANCE 122 Take Action with Leadership
THE CLASSROOM
AAHE 129 Answering Student Questions About Sex Teacher Of Year
SMA 130 ESPN Play your way....
Sports Mgt. 131 Sport Management Forum
NCAAHPERD 132 Speaker Service
AAHE 133 Linking Activated Health Ed. Model & DINE Healthy 5
AAHE 140 Recognizing Eating Disorders in Adolescents
DANCE 141 Lesson Plans at Your Fingertips
Sports Mgt. 142 Crowd Management Issues in Sport
PEA 143 Wet Sweat - POOL
AAHE 144 Stress Reduction for Teachers
143.5 AFHK’s Legislative Update
PEA 123 Moodle Technology in Health & PE PEA 134 Professional Development & Scholarship
NCAAE 124 Principles the Games Approach Way Pt 1 NCAAE 135 Principles the Games Approach Way Pt 2
PEA 145 Setting the PASE: Undergraduate Field Experience
NCAAE 146 Business Meeting
NCAAHPERD Installation of all newly elected officers – Arrowhead 147
6:30 - 8:15
PEA Social 148 PEA Suite
8:30 - 12:00
NCAIR / Sports Mgt. / DANCE Social 149 Suite
ALL CONVENTION DANCE - Live Band -“ Flashpoint” Guilford D 150
Saturday, November 19, 2005 (At-A-Glance) - Special One Day Registration - $25.00 Guilford C 8:00 - 9:00
9:05 -10:05
10:15 - 11:15
PEA 151 Gymnastics Mania! Teacher Of Year DANCE 157 (9am - 12) Even Exchange Dance Theater: Education Through Embodiment
Guilford E
Guilford D
Colony B
Colony C
Colony A
PEA 152 1/2 Day Sessions (8am -2pm) Jean Blaydes Madigan,
PEA 153 Staying alive with where the wild things are then black dots and wacky weather
PEA 154 AED Training
155 Praxis PE Exam 1/2 Day Workshop (8am - 12)
AAHE 156 Yoga
Building Better Brains through Movement
$10.00 per person PEA 158 But I Don’t Know How to Dance
AAHE 159 Discovery Health Connection
PEA 160 PE Catch of the day Teacher Of Year
AAHE 161 When Smoke Ran Like Water: Native American Environmental Health
11:15– 12:15 12:15 – 1:15 1:15 – 2:00
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Thank You to Very Special People REGISTRATION MANAGER
EXHIBITS MANAGER
LINDA HARRILL RUDISILL
FREDIA GOOCH
We all can’t thank Linda enough for the twenty years of tireless service to NCAAHPERD in so many ways, but especially as our Registration Manager. She has been the recipient of many professional awards including: NCAAHPERD Honor Award, NC Health Educator of the Year, SDAAHPERD Health Educator of the Year, and the AAHE Presidential citation. The North Carolina Association for the Advancement of Health Education established the Linda Harrill Rudisill Lifetime Achievement Award at the 2004 NCAAHPERD Convention. This award was developed in honor of Linda, who was the first recipient, and who has contributed over forty-one years of service and dedication to health education. Her enthusiasm, expertise, and firm belief that health education improves lives are evident in all her actions.
This will be Fredia’s sixth year as our exhibits manager. She works hard throughout the year contacting vendors, setting up contracts, verifying space and preparing our exhibitors for our annual convention. At the convention you will see her tirelessly running back and forth seeking to make everyone’s experience a great one! This years Exhibit space is completely sold out! Go by and congratulate Fredia on her most successful event!
Convention Manager Cathy Roberts, UNC Greensboro Cathy is in her thirteenth year as our Convention Manager. It is her job to secure all AV equipment needed free of charge, deliver it to the hotel, seek volunteers from her own staff to run the equipment from room to room, non-stop for three days. And she is a volunteer! If we had to rent this equipment it would cost in the 10’s of thousands of dollars. We can’t thank her and Dean David Perrin enough for the great job they do. Her staff this year includes David Black, Jennifer Aguilar, Micah Stevens, all from UNC Greensboro and Kenny Connor will be assisting. Please thank them as they fly by on their way to the next room.
For those who have not met her, make it a point to go see her and thank her for taking care of registration!
Assistant to the Executive Director Greg Moore Greg is in his second year serving as staff for NCAAHPERD. Greg energetically pursues chances to enhance the quality of life for all citizens in his native North Carolina. He enjoys serving the membership. Make sure you see Greg!
100% Online Masters Degrees in Health Education Department of Health Education and Promotion East Carolina University MA in Health Education The Master of Arts Degree in Health Education provides advanced academic training for individuals employed or planning to seek employment as health educators in academic, clinical, community, and corporate settings.
MAEd in Health Education The Master of Arts in Education in Health Education is designed for licensed teachers, seeking advanced certification in classroom teaching and is the only program leading to “M” licensure in Health Education in North Carolina.
All courses are taught online allowing you to eliminate time and location barriers. The Department of Health Education and Promotion provides timesaving services without sacrificing high academic standards. Online courses are treated the same as on-campus courses, with the exception that lecture material, study guides, discussions, and assignments are online. For more information about the online Master’s Programs please contact: Ms. Jamie Tier, Distance Education Program Coordinator at dehlth@mail.ecu.edu or 252-328-1153. Visit the Department Website to learn more at www.ecu.edu/hlth
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Wednesday, November 15 6:00pm - 8:00pm Location: Edinburgh
Number: 6 -PEA Board Meeting Presider: Dennis Johnson, Barnanne Creech 6:00pm - 8:00pm Location: Presidential Suite 593
Number: 7 -Early Arrivers' Social Presider: Bonnie Ferneau 7:00pm - 8:30pm
Registration Area
Number: 8 -Early Registration Linda Harrill Rudisill, Linda McManama 8:00pm until Location: Guilford G Number: 9 -WD 40 Dance Presenters: Robert Blackburn, Rick Barnes
Thursday, November 17 7:15 - 8:45 am Location: Presidential Suite 593
Number: 10 -JRFH/HFH Task Force Breakfast Meeting Members of the Joint Projects Task Force. Presider: Karen Lux 8:00 - 9:00 am Location: Guilford E Number: 11 -Teaching Adapted Physical Education is Just Good Teaching
Including students with disabilities in a regular physical education class is really a matter of using sound teaching techniques. Participate in several activities that will demonstrate methods for including students with varying disabilities into activities along with the “regular” students. Presenter: Bob Beaudet, WCU Presider: Tara Jenkins 8:00 - 9:00 am Location: Guilford F Number: 12 -Hot Stuff: News You Can Use About Warm-ups Learn new evidence released by the American College of Sports Medicine that answers the question: “To stretch or not to stretch before activity?” Topics include: making the warm-up specific to the activity, ideas for the general warm-up to increase heart rate, static versus dynamic stretching, and a review of high-risk exercises. Presenters: Donna Scales, ECU Rhonda Kenny Presider: Amanda Gorduch
As we try to be good stewards of our natural resources, we will be sending more electronic mail than paper. We encourage your use of e-mail and will promise not to spam you!
8:00 -9:00 am Location: Guilford G Number: 13 -Tennis: Everywhere, Anywhere, Anyone Learn a non-technical, fun games approach to tennis that teachers can use with large classes. These games are great for all ages! It is a very active program and the teachers participate in all of the games and drills, and will have the chance to win prizes as well! Presenters: Amy Thomas, USTA/NC, Amy Franklin, Harriett Enzor Presider: Ashley Simmons 8:00 - 9:00am Location: Guilford D Number: 14 -Interdisciplinary Lesson Plans
Learn how to incorporate all subject areas with dance. Some lessons are able to be taught in the primary teachers’ classroom as well as a dance studio. Presenter: Anna Millings, WCary Middle Presider: Cary Weaver 8:00 - 9:00 am Location: Sandpiper Number: 15 -The NCATA: The Past, The Present, and Our Future NCATA’s, formed in 1974, past and present history and mission are examined. Short and long range goals will be explored along with collaborations existing and future. Presenter: Jim Bazluki, Cary High Presider: Danielle Humphreys 8:00 - 9:00am Location: Tanglewood
Number: 16 -Achieving Health Balance for Women Learn the effects of environment, diet, prescription drugs, and stress on hormones and how natural alternatives are as an option for individuals with these imbalances. Presenter: Betsy Pullen Presider: Cathy Stone 8:00 - 9:00am Location: Arrowhead
Number: 137 -Authentic Assessment in Physical Education Learn the benefits of using technology, such as heart rate monitors, fitness assessment systems and hand-held computers in physical education and discover how to objectively assess student and class fitness levels. Presenters: Kem Dudney, Middle School Physical Education Teacher of the Year, John Saville, Polar Presider: Carolyn Flory
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8:00 - 9:00am Location: Pebble Beach
Number: 17 –Coaches’ Perceptions of Eating Disorders and Supplement Usage Amongst Female Athletes Findings indicated that certain sports were more likely to have females who were at risk for eating disorders as defined by the American Dietetic Association. Presenter: Phoebe Butler Ajibade, NCAT U
Presider: Angelique Seifert
W E D N E S D A Y
8:00 - 9:00 am Location: Colony BC Number: 18 -The "Be Active" Approach to School Wellness Ready to light the spark that's going to spread wellness like wildfire throughout your school T and community? The Be Active H Approach to School Wellness will highlight the benefits of a school U wellness program, provide ideas R for fundraising, share ways to S involve your community partners D and will help you advocate for A change using the media. Presenters: Laurie Bronson, Be Y Active NC, Shellie Pfohl Presider: Michael Hemphill 8:00 - 9:00 am Location: Colony A Number: 19 -Strategies for Teaching the Tennis Serve A specific method for teaching the tennis serve will be covered in detail. It is primarily aimed at coaches, but secondary teachers should also find useful information for the physical education setting. Presenter: Dan McLaughlin, Idlewild Elementary Presider: Casey Williams
EXHIBITS OPEN 9:00 - 9:30am Location: Exhibit Area
Coninental Breakfast All Members Presider: Fredia Gooch, Exhibits Manager
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9:00 - 9:30am Location: Exhibit Area
Number: 21 -Research Posters Presiders: Justin Menickelli, WCU, Lauren Merkle, Wingate University A Self-Management Intervention to Promote Health Behaviors. Craig M. Becker, East Carolina University A Comparison of Two Warm-ups on Joint Range of Motion. Barry Beedle & Christie Mann, Elon University Under-Prediction of RPE During Vo2max Testing in Trained Runners. Sara Dupree & Maridy Troy, Western Carolina University North Carolina Standards-Based Elementary Physical Education Lesson Plans. Dennis A. Johnson & Laurel Shirey, Wingate University Applications of the PRECEDE Model to the Evaluation of Cervical Cancer Screening Behavior Among College Women, Terri Mitchell, East Carolina University An Investigation of the Health and Physical Activity Status of Home-Schooled Families in the Triad Area of North Carolina. Tammy Schilling, Sarah Harris, & Amanda Chapman, UNC Greensboro An Investigation of the Effects of a Preschool Physical Activity Program on Preschoolers’ Physical Activity Rates and Development. Tammy Schilling & Kelly McOmber, UNC Greensboro A Study of Elementary Instructors’ Teaching in Physical Education. Tsui-Feng Tiffany Yeh, University of Northern Iowa
9:30 - 10:30am Location: Guilford E Number: 22 - A Taste of SPARK The SPARK (Sports, Play and Active Recreation for Kids) Programs began studying elementary physical education in 1989, and today, the name SPARK represents a collection of exemplary, research-based physical activity/nutrition programs. This SPARK session will be FUN, “hands-on”, and designed to share concepts and methodology that will focus on the development of healthy lifestyles, motor skills, movement knowledge, and social and personal skills. Presenter: Courtney Sjoerdsma, The SPARK Programs Presider: Bradley Barbee
9:30 - 10:30am Location: Guilford F Number: 23 -Juggling Activities for Elementary School PE A variety of different juggling activities will be presented for use in an elementary school physical education setting. Specific teaching, management, and design strategies will also be shared. Presenter: Dan McLaughlin, Idlewild Elementary Presider: Taryn Shaw 9:30 - 10:30am Location: Guilford G
Number: 24 -Making Fitness Fun! Learn ways to improve fitness scores by using fun fitness activities. We will include games and challenges that we use in elementary and middle school. Presenters: Henry Castelvecchi, Crestwood Elementary, Deanna Castelvecchi Presider: Jeff Nerret 9:30 - 10:30am Location: Guilford D
Number: 25 -Dance History Comes to Life: Safeguarding Our Intangible Cultural Heritage! Come, learn more about your southern cultural heritage through a lively "trip" through the early years up to the 1900's. We will dance the early country dances and move all the way up to shag. An interdisciplinary "tie in" to our historical/cultural roots through dance. Presenters: John Bennett, UNCW, Zachariah Bennett, UNCW Students Presider: June Cheatham 9:30 - 10:30am Location: Arrowhead
Number: 26 -Show Me the PE Money The Challenge is to SHOW every professional the PE Money. Funding from foundations, professional organizations and government will be reviewed and will help participants find the necessary funding sources to make physical activity happen. Come join the grant funding team and make physical activity happen. Presenter: Betsy Beals, Elementary & Southern District Physical Education Teacher of the Year, Northwoods Elementary School Presider: Barnanne Creech
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9:30 - 10:30am Presidential Suite 593 Number: 27 -Friends Social Presider: John LeBar, Bonnie Ferneau 10:35 - 11:50am Location: Guilford B
Number: 33 -General Session &
Business Meeting All Memebers Presider: Bonnie Ferneau "Students in Action" - Students from Kiser Middle School with Physical Education Teacher, Russ McHenry will welcome you to this session with Physical Education Activities. Welcome and introduction NCAAHPERD Board and Past Presidents - Bonnie Ferneau
Welcome from Southern District - Past President, Leroy Fanning and Shirley Holt-Hale, AAHPERD - Past President Yearly Update - Committee Reports Constitutional Changes- Judy Peel, Chair Necrology Report - Betsy Beals, Chair Financial Report - Ron Morrow, Executive Director
Presentation of Candidates for Vice President - Carey Hughley, Past President Artie Kamiya, March Krotee
Activity Break
Keynote Speaker: Madison Newberry “Parent and Child Partnership for a Healthy Lifestyle"
Advocacy Today Announcements Special Presentation: "Message to Legislators-A Rhapsody of Issues for Orchestral Change"- Conductor, Connie Johnson, 2004 Elementary Physical Education Teacher of the Year
9:30 - 10:30am Location: Sandpiper Number: 28 -Move More Standards for Physical Activity in Schools Voices from all over North Carolina came together this year to set out North Carolinas first set of standards for physical activity in schools. Presenters: Kymm Ballard, NCDPI, Lori Schneider Presider: Cathy Thomas
T H U R S D A Y
9:30 - 10:30am Location: Tanglewood
Number: 29 -Hitting the Highlights of High School Health Explore exciting lessons that engage all students and promote behaviors for a lifelong healthy lifestyle. Topics such as nutrition, abstinence, substance abuse and stress are highlighted along with concepts of physical fitness that allow students to understand the physiological benefits of physical activity. Presenter: Misty Bruner, High School Health Educator of the Year, East Surry Presider: Pam Edwards 9:30 - 10:30am Location: Pebble Beach
Number: 30 -Adolescent Depression-Current Trends and Treatment Adolescent depression is a concern for parents, teachers, and medical professionals. This session will focus on the identification and assessment of adolescent depression and current treatment modalities. Presenter: Michael Hayes, Pathways Counseling & Development Presider: Kathie Garbe 9:30 - 10:30am Location: Colony BC
Number: 31 -Practical Pedagogy: Linking Healthy Eating and Physical Activity in a Middle School Physical Education Curriculum Share practical pedagogical strategies as to how healthy eating and physical activity can be linked within a middle school physical education curriculum to helps students develop a practical understanding as to the importance of daily physical activity. Presenters: Daniel Webb, NCAT University, Derrick Minor Presider: Deborah Callaway 9:30 - 10:30am Location: Colony A Number: 32 -High School & College Coaches Simply Looking Out for No. 1 Learn ways to solve problems with coaches not keeping their promises other than firing them. Presenter: Dennis Felder, WSSU Presider: Stenson Conley 12:15 - 1:30pm Location: Heritage A
Number: 34 -Past Presidents' Lunch Presider: Carey Hughley
12:15 - 1:30pm Location: Meadowbrook Number: 36 -Business Meeting and Dance Membership Lunch (Tickets required for lunch)
Presiders: Krystal Tyndall, Cary Weaver 12:15-1:30 pm Location: Guilford E Number: 37 -How to Develop Upper Body Strength in Children
Learn why pushups are not the way to gain upper body strength for children, and take back activities that will make building upper body strength fun! Presenter: Garrett Tandy, UNCW Presider: John Bennett 12:15-1:30 pm Location: Guilford F Number: 38 -Awaken Your Brain Learn how to wake up your brain as well as your students' brains. These exercises will help regular and special needs students. The three dimensions of learning will bring physical education skills "alive." Presenter: Connie Johnson, Elementary Physical Education Teacher of the Year Presider: Ren Simmons 12:15 - 1:30pm Location: Guilford G
Number: 39 –Hopsports: Tivo, Entertainers and Athletes… The Future is Here! Presenter: Tom Root, Kirk Agler, Hopsports Presider: Jeff Hinson 12:15 - 1:30pm Location: Guilford D
Number: 40 -Learning Styles and Retention: Making it Stick Reflect on different learning styles. while sharing experiences and building on each others understanding of how learning styles enhance classroom activities. Presenter: Kevin Young, Poe Health Ctr Presider: Michele Wallen 12:15 - 1:30pm Location: Arrowhead
Number: 41 – Building Better Brains Through Physical Education
Learn the true benefits to the brain of physical activity during the school day. Presenter: Jean Blaydes Madigan, Action Based Learning Presider: Ben Fleming
12:15 - 1:30pm Location: Heritage B
Number: 35 -Ethnic Minority Lunch Presider: Cynthia Williams
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12:15 - 1:30pm Location: Tidewater
Number: 42 -NASPE Internship Experience NASPE offers a year round, paid internship program for physical education and sport majors. This past summer, two NC students served as NASPE interns. This is a must see for any student considering an internship. Presenters: Michael Hemphill, Wingate University, Leigh Leonard Presider: Sarah Godec 12:15 pm - 1:30pm Location: Sandpiper
Number: 43 -NC WISE--Athletic Module T A new Athletic Eligibility Module H based on the NC High School athletic U Association (NCHSAA) requiremnts R is now part of the NC WISE solution. The Athletic Eligibility Module S works hand-in-hand with the eSIS D general module to assist school A athletic directors in determining Y student eligibility and produces reports that can be turned in directly to the NCHSAA. Presenter: Elaine Darby, NC WISE Presider: Linda Hinkle 12:15 - 1:30pm Location: Tanglewood
Number: 44 -New High School Healthful Living Electives Health risk behavior does not end in the 9th grade and neither should healthful living instruction. CharlotteMecklenburg, Wake, and Forsyth Counties will share their experience and/or plans to implement prevention education electives for the upper high school years. Presenters: Angelique Seifert, Eleanor Bailey 12:15 - 1:30pm Location: Pebble Beach
Number: 45 -Fitness for a Lifetime: NC Senior Games This workshop will focus upon health and wellness in older adults, particularly among the participants in North Carolina Senior Games, both at the Local Games level and at State Finals. Presenters: Brad Allen, NC Senior Games, Alice Keene Presider: Kathy Crumpler
12:15 - 1:30pm Location: Colony BC
Number: 46 - Required HPE - Making the Connection for Students Methods developed over a 32 year career in HPE, 15 middle grades and 17 high school level, have allowed the creation and development of lots of grassroots ideas that integrate the two courses as one. Meeting today's standards, daily planning, creating syllabi, writing across the curriculum, fitness components, and a simple but effective grading system. Presenter: Ernest Holcomb, High School Physical Education Teacher of the Year, Reidsville High School Presider: Dan Sherrill 12:15 - 1:30pm Location: Colony A Number: 47 -Selecting Your Coaching Style Middle School Coaches and Athletic Directors experience a multitude of "problems" while performing their job; this session will present several ways to avoid or solve those "problems". Presenter: Chip Gill Presider: Richard Hatley 1:45 - 3:00pm Location: Pool Number: 124.5 -Water Aerobics Learn to develop a safe, effective, and enjoyable aquatic experience for all age levels and ability levels through movement variations, sequencing, and transitions. Recommend you bring water bottle, bathing suit, and water shoes. Presenters: Donna Michaux, Southpoint Elementary, Wendy Jones 1:45 - 3:00pm Location: Guilford E Number: 48 -The Station Master (Rated "SSF" for Super-Sized Fun!!! Do you have “super-sized” classes, basic P.E. equipment, and a desire to keep kids active while learning new skills? Experience ways to keep these large classes moving in an organized, structured, and creative environment! Presenters: Gary Martin, Rankin Elementary, Amanda Shoe, Carmyn Glynn Presider: Matt Hamilton
1:45 - 3:00 pm Location: Guilford F Number: 49 -Tchoukball: New, Exciting, Vigorous and Fun Tchoukball is the answer! It is a vigorous game that helps students become better team players and more considerate of classmates. The game has a lot of elements that could be used to address academic standards. Get into the action! Presenter: Shari Franck, US Tchoukball Association Presider: Jeff Hinson 1:45 - 3:00 pm Location: Guilford G Number: 50 -Calisthenics for the 21st Century Sport calisthenics combines techniques from wrestling, dance, martial arts, and gymnastics and is a new tool in the battle against America’s soon to be number one killer, obesity. Presenter: Tony Kemerly, High Point U Presider: Zach Ritter 1:45 - 3:00 pm Location: Guilford D Number: 51 -African Dance Learn from a well known African dancer and choreographer about some African dance history and some beginning/ intermediate choreography. Come and break it down with us! Presenter: LD Burris Presider: Marsha Lester 1:45-3:00 pm Location: Arrowhead Number: 52 -Energizers: Promoting Physical Activity in Schools The SBE mandated that all schools K-8 shall provide 30 minutes of physical activity during the school day. Additionally, recess and other physical activity cannot be taken away as punishment. Tools to lead in this initiative. Presenter: Kymm Ballard, NCDPI Presider: David Aiello
Spring Physical Education Leadership Training April 27-29, 2006 Look for a registration form page 45. Don’t miss out. Held at the beautiful YMCA Blue Ridge Assembly in Black Mountain.
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1:45 - 3:00 pm Location: Tidewater Number: 53 -Curriculum Development in Elementary Physical Education: Does the Present Determine Our Future? Does "busy, happy and good" versus the teaching of skills make a difference for our future as well as those of the children we teach? The answer is yes! Presenter: Shirley Ann Holt/Hale, Past President AAHPERD, Linden Elementary School Presider: Bonnie Ferneau 1:45 - 3:00pm Location: Sandpiper Number: 54 -How to Hire a Certified Athletic Trainer in North Carolina With a little flexibility and creativity all schools in NC can hire a certified athletic trainer. Learn alternative ways to attract and find qualified applicants. Presenter: Jim Bazluki, Cary High Presider: Ryan Defaber 1:45 - 3:00pm Location: Tanglewood
Number: 55 -Keeping Health Education Alive in 2005! Student majors from Appalachian State University and East Carolina University programs will present engaging activities to liven up health education in the classroom. Presenters: Hunter Rice, Jessica Cowart, Ashley Cave, and Jillian Potts, ASU & ECU Students Presider: Donna Breitenstein, Rick Barnes 1:45 - 3:00pm Location: Pebble Beach
Number: 56 -Gangs in North Carolina Gang violence is on the rise nationwide. North Carolina schools are seeing an increase in gang related activity. Learn what a gang is and how to identify gangs and gang related activity and positive strategies that can be taken to address gang activity in schools. Presenter: Don Shaver, Senior Analyst Organized Crime & Violence Unit National Drug Intelligence Center Presider: Michele Wallen
T H U R S D A Y
1:45 - 3:00 pm Location: Colony BC Number: 57 -Ouch! 7 Effective Strategies to Prevent Unintentional Injuries in Physical Activity Classes Injuries are the number one cause of death for people under the age of 40. Many of the injuries that young people under the age of 21 experience occur during physical activity. This session will examine recommended strategies for reducing the incidence of injuries in the classrooms and on the playing fields. Presenter: Phoebe Butler Ajibade, NCAT University Presider: Travis Myernick 1:45 - 3:00 pm Location: Colony A Number: 58 -Trials and Tribulations: An Analysis of Physical Activity and Sportrelated Court Cases Examine several “hot” court cases that have had a significant impact on our profession. Emphasis will be on HPERD professionals' obligation to maintain a workplace environment that is safe and conducive for all participants involved. Presenter: BerNadette Lawson Williams, NCCU School of Law 3:15 - 4:15pm Location: Guilford E Number: 59 -SAFE--Successful Activities for Everyone Learn a variety of skill, fitness, rhythm and dance activities that help to enhance total participation and daily success for each student. Presenter: Don Puckett Presider: Jon Cook 3:15-4:15pm Location: Guildford F Number: 60 -Cup Crazy!! Kids go nuts for yogurt cups! It’s not cup-stacking, but it is cup crazy! Come and learn how to use yogurt cups as currency to get kids excited about fitness via games like Tummy Tuffy and Double Track Cup Attack. Presenters: Kim Berg, Alamance Elementary, Karen Lux Presider: Jamison Ollis
3:15 - 4:15 pm Location: Guilford G Number: 61 -Activities for Individuals with Severe/Profound Disabilities Activities to use with students with severe/profound disabilities. The activities will cover a variety of areas such as coordination skills, striking skills, as well as fundamental motor skills. Presenter: Ginny Politano, NCCU Presider: Matt John 3:15 - 4:15 pm Location: Guilford D Number: 62 -Bust a Move! This convention "HIT!" from last year is a favorite for the dancer that likes a challenging, fast-paced class! Students will be challenged to pick up choreography in this fast paced "New York Style" class! Presenter: Freddie Lee Heath, Ligon GT Magnet Middle Presider: Cindy Hoban 3:15 - 4:15pm Location: Arrowhead Number: 63 -Arts Management Learn how to integrate and support artist in residencies within the public school. Find out what necessary steps you will need to successfully bring artists into any environment. Presenter: Brianne Barrow Presider: Krystal Tyndall 3:15 - 4:15 pm Location: Tidewater Number: 64 -Wellness at Work Staff wellness programs can have a profound impact on the health of school faculty and staff. Employees receive physical, mental, and emotional benefits. Students, families, and communities benefit from the program because faculty and staff serve as positive role models and are more energetic, absent less, and the school climate is enhanced. Presenters: Ann Hulslander, Alice Ragan, Ernie Holcomb, Beth Swanger Presider: Michelle Wallen 3:15 - 4:15pm Location: Sandpiper Number: 65 -A Photographic Journey Through Eastern Australia Come and join us on a tour of Eastern Australia. Learn and see sights and history of cities such as Sydney and Melbourne; and in Lamington and Daintree National Parks along the Great Ocean Road, and the Great Barrier Reef. Presenters: Carol Smith, Elon University, John Pasquariello Presider: Jermy Helms
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3:15 - 4:15pm Location: Tanglewood
Number: 66 -The Data's Right: Reality Check-Adolescent Risk Behaviors Learn current data on adolescent risk taking behaviors from the YRBS in the format of the fun and energetic game, "The Data’s Right" (to the theme of the Price is Right game show). Presenter: Sherry Lehman, Sarah Langer, DPI Presider: Terri Mitchell 3:15 - 4:15pm Location: Pebble Beach
Number: 67 -Bullying & Violence Prevention Focus will be on prevalence and harm of school bullying and violence and what schools can do including: policies, instruction and changes in school climate. Learn how to identify early warning signs of violence and the role teachers play in reducing bullying behavior. Presenters: Kathleen Webster, Kwain Bryant Presider: Sarah Sears 3:15 - 4:15 pm Location: Colony BC Number: 68 -So You're Thinking about National Board Certification What is National Board Certification? How can National Board Certification help you become a better educator, mentor, and teacher leader? Presenter: Betsy Beals, Elementary & Southern District AAHPERD Physical Education Teacher of the Year Presider: Bobby Needham 3:15 - 4:15 pm Location: Colony A Number: 69 -Should Coaches Sue Parents? Coaches are being sued today in the United States for coaching and a few coaches have returned the favor by suing parents or boosters. Is there a better way to resolve conflict between coaches and parents of the echo boomers? Presenter: Tom Appenzeller Presider: Travis Teague
T H U R S D A Y
4:30 - 5:30 pm Location: Guilford E Number: 70 - Sport for the Rest of Us! Want to compete with basketball in your program? When given the choice of basketball or badminton, frequently more students choose badminton. It is a lifetime sport in which all students can be challenged and find success. Presenters: Lisa J. Ward, Hawfields Middle, Matthew Haley, Paul Knechtel Presider: Judi Hux 4:30 - 5:30 pm Location: Guilford F Number: 71 -Ultimate Frisbee Ultimate frisbee is a game that combines teamwork, agility, and cardiovascular exercise. Ultimate stresses sportsmanship and fair play. It allows K-12 students to self-officiate their games and learn the benefits of respect for their peers. Presenter: Mark Strasser, Carolina Day Presider: Laurel Shirey 4:30 - 5:30 pm Location: Guilford G Number: 72 -Teaching Tennis 101: It's Safe, Easy and Lots of FUN! Learn to teach a non-technical, fun games approach to tennis that teachers can use with large classes. Teachers that participate in the entire program will receive free equipment. Presenters: Amy Thomas, USTA/NC, Amy Franklin, Harriett Enzor Presider: Cynthia Terrell 4:30 - 5:30pm Location: Guilford D Number: 73 -Multicultural Dance Explosion Come out and participate in this fun, active, upbeat multicultural dance session and learn various folk dances like Hukilau from Hawaii, the d’hammerschmiedsgselln from Germany, and the Alunulul from Romania. Presenter: Tiffany Fuller, NCAT U Presider: Deborah Callaway 4:30 - 5:30 pm Location: Tidewater Number: 74 -Schools Eating Smart and Moving More: Local School Wellness Policy
To combat the rising tide of overweight in children and youth, Congress passed a law in 2004 requiring all school districts to develop a wellness policy beginning 2006-07. Come view highlights of the law, roles health and physical education professionals can and should play, and resources available for policy implementation. Presenter: Sheree Thaxton Vodicka, DHHS
Presider: Dave Gardner
4:30 - 5:30 pm Location: Sandpiper Number: 75 -A Sound Mind and Sound Body--Enhancing the Health of Teachers Health risks and behaviors will be assessed and positive health strategies with special attention paid to the interaction of health behaviors on mental performance, stress, emotional well-being and ultimately, teaching performance. Presenter: Kathie Garbe, University of North Carolina Presider: Pam Edwards 4:30 - 5:30pm Location: Tanglewood Number: 76 -Your Best JRFH/HFH Event Ever! How to Run an Event Learn from top coordinators and AHA youth market directors about how to have your most successful JRFH or HFH event. Talk to the best about how to do everything from coordinate your first event, or bring new excitement to your already successful JRFH/HFH program. Presenters: Karen Lux, Jesse Wharton Elementary School, JRFH/HFH Coordinators of the Year and AHA Youth Market Directors Presider: Charlie Vernon 4:30 - 5:30 pm Location: Pebble Beach
Number: 77 -How "Well" Are Your Students? Would you like to know what objectives most students fully understand? What ones many just don’t get? Come view student data (50,000), the trends, our curriculum strengths and our plans to tackle areas of improvement countywide. Presenter: Ann Hulslander, Wake County Public Schools Presider: Artie Kamiya
Save with Multi-year Memberships
4:30 - 5:30 pm Location: Colony BC Number: 78 -Are You Prepared for Success For student majors, learn about challenges you will soon face as you enter the job market. Important for students who seek growth and success in fields of sport and physical education. Presenter: Dennis Felder Presider: Amanda Gorsuch 4:30 - 5:30 pm Location: Colony A Number: 80 –Online Tools for Teaching G.Y.M. (Great Young Minds!) Use MyStationPE.com is a tool for physical educators, classroom T teachers and activity leaders who H want to improve the quality of their U movement programming while R integrating standards-based academic S content. Participants will receive access to MyStationPE.com. D Presenter: Aaron Hart, Station PE A 5:30 - 6:00 pm Location: Colony BC Number: 79 -SMA Business Meeting Presider: Michael Hemphill, Danielle Humphreys 5:30 - 7:30 pm Location: Guilford B Dance Performance Rehersal Presider: Krystal Tyndall, Cary Weaver 5:30 - 7:00pm Location: Various (check message board in registration area) Number: 81 –University-College Socials 5:30 - 7:00pm Location: Augusta Number: 81 –UNC
Greensboro Social Host: Dean David Perrin
Professional Membership 1yr - $30 2yrs - $55 3yrs - $80 (Limited Membership assistance available)
Student Majors Who Graduate in ‘05 Any senior student major who is a member of NCAAHPERD their senior year can renew their first year professional membership for the student rate of $10.00. Save $20!
www.ncaahperd.org Have you logged into the members only section of our website? Log in and update your profile so you get your
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5:30 - 7:00pm Location: Turnberry Number: 84 -NCAAHE Social Take a trip down memory lane to the Health Education Leadership Conferences of the past!
Presiders: Pam Edwards, Kathy Crumpler, Michelle Wallen 6:00 - 7:30 pm Location: Presidential Suite 593
SMA Social Hosts: Bonnie Ferneau, Michael Hemphill, Danielle Humpreys
Y
7:45 - 8:45 pm Location: Guilford B
Dance Performance Showcase All Members Presiders: Krystal Tyndall, Cary Weaver
Top 10 NC JRFH #1 Huntersville Elementary, Holly Porter #2 Jefferson Elementary, Janet Beavers #3 Alamance Elementary, Kim Berg #4 Lake Norman Elem., Pamela Elliott #5 Cape Fear Academy, Jim Hall #6 Green Elementary, Heather Moore #7 Jesse Wharton Elementary, Karen Lux #8 Oak Grove Elementary, GiGi Sammons #9 Willis Hare Elementary, Gwen Walton #10 Myers Park Traditional, Kristin Horner
Top 10 Mid-Atlantic JRFH 9:00 - midnight Location: Guilford B
All Convention Dance Social DJ: Ronnie Ackers
#3 Huntersville Elementary, Holly Porter #8 Jefferson Elementary, Janet Beavers #10 Alamance Elementary, Kim Berg
Top New School JRFH -Green Elem.
Highest Student Average JRFH East Clayton Elementary
Highest Percentage Increase JRFH -Hunter Elementary Top 10 Mid-Atlantic Hoops for Heart #2 South Charlotte Middle, Patrick Dean #3 Jay M. Robinson Middle, Judy DeWalt #10 C. Campbell Elem., Cheryl Markland
Top 10 NC HOOPS
FRIDAY, November 18 7:30 – 8:30am Location: Guilford B
NCAAHPERD's Joint Projects Awards Breakfast Come Join Us! Grant Presentation ($200 each) (2005 Grant Application is in the back of this program)
Anne Whitmire, Clear Creek Elementary Brenda Williams, Julian Gibson Elementary Judy Mullin, Carolina Forest Elementary Bob Eliasson, Oxford Elementary “Winky” Pasour, Lenoir Rhyne College Bill Miller, Taylorsville Elementary Gabe Ervin, Startown Elementary David Cardoza/Brenda Herman, Middle Fork Robert Marchinko, Morgan Elementary Heather Pope, Contentnea Elementary Abby Knox, Old Richmond Elementary Sara Phillips, Corriher-Lipe Middle Donna Michaux/Wendy Jones, Southport Randy Bernhardt/Misty Ward, Balls Creek Kenny Connor, Roger Bell Elementary Linda Hinkle, Shadybrook Elementary Susan Dillingham, Kernersville Elementary Fonda Rosenbaum, Rural Hall Elementary Ginger Wakefield, Webb Murray Elementary Karen Gray, Mt. Vernon Ruth Elementary
#1 South Charlotte Middle, Patrick Dean #2 Jay M. Robinson Middle, Judy DeWalt, Tess Palmer #3 C. Campbell Elem., Cheryl Markland #4 Lufkin Road Middle, Marti Capaforte #5 Kernersville Middle, Craig Thompson #6 Centennial Middle, April Parrish #7 West Rowan Middle, Teresa Pless #8 Crest Mid. School of Tech., Tracy Beaver #9 Fallston Elementary, Lisa Wilson #10 Apex Middle, Mike Steele Highest Student Average Hoops-West Rowan Middle Highest Percentage Increase Hoops Kerwin Baptist Christian
8:30 - 9:00am Meet near registration area
Alive With Action All Convention Walk Walk and receive your special gift! Students walk with a professional &network Presider: Russ McHenry & Student Majors Association
Thank you for your support!
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9:30 - 10:15am Location: Guilford E Number: 90 -SPARK with a Nutrition Twist Selected activities from the SPARK Curriculum integrating nutrition concepts and methods will be reviewed. Creative teaching styles with an emphasis on nutrition will be proven F to be fun, easy-to-teach, and readyR to-use friendly! Presenters: Courtney Sjoerdsma, I The SPARK Programs, Jim Deline D Presider: David Aiello 9:00am - 9:30am Location: Guilford F
Number: 91 - PEA Business Meeting Presider: Dennis Johnson, President Carol & Little Memorial Convention Scholarship - Gary Martin University Physical Education Teacher of the Year – Dan Grube Distinguished Principals – Tammie Sligh, Blue Creek Elementary; Pat Williams, W. J. Gurganus Elem.; John Joyner, Lucama Elem.; Lori Howard, Clyde Irwin Elem.; Tom Hemmings, J. Sam Gentry Middle.
9:30-10:15am Location: Guilford F Number: 92 -The Skill Theme Approach to Elementary Physical Education Teaching by skill themes provides Rigor & Relevance to an elementary physical education program. Receive in depth experience in the teaching of skills as curriculum content and teaching by skill themes as the method for doing so. Presenter: Shirley Ann Holt/Hale, Past President AAHPERD, Linden Elem. Presider: Bonnie Ferneau 9:30 - 10:15am Location: Guilford G
Number: 93 –Rockin’ with Long Ropes A rockin' session with long ropes! JRFH Demo Teams will teach participants a variety of long rope and double dutch skills. Demonstration Team coaches will demonstrate best teaching practices so you can take it back to your students with success! Presenters: Kim Berg, Kenny Connors, Susan Cruickshanks, Karen Lux Presider: Karen Lux
A Y
9:30-10:15am Location: Guilford D Number: 94 -Modern Dance Technique Learn the Horton technique in a warm-up, an across-the-floor series, and a short choreographic center combination that allows for participant creativity and inclass performance. Presenter: Laura Earnhardt, East Millbrook Middle School Presider: Krystal Tyndall 9:30 - 10:15 am Location: Augusta Number: 95 -Elementary Health Education: An Integrated Approach Come actively engage in utilizing creative lesson ideas that integrate health education with multiple content areas. Presenter: Ellen Essick, UNCG, Michele Wallen 9:30 - 10:15 am Location: Tidewater Number: 96 -Graduate Internship Presentations The Online MAEd Masters in Health Education Degree is a 36 hour course requirement with 6 hours of internship in health education setting. Students are required to apply health education concepts and to evaluate the project. Presenter: Victor Aeby, ECU 9:00 - 10:15am Location: Sandpiper Number: 97 -Chase for the Cash: The Closing of Speedways and the Longterm Effects of NASCAR'S Drive for Expansion The financial and moral implications of NASCAR’s expansion and abandonment of traditions and the features that fueled its popularity, are analized and learn suggestions of potential repercussions that could negatively impact the sport. Presenter: Michael Edwards, ECU Presider: Becky Kochany
9:30 - 10:15am Location: Tanglewood
10:30 - 11:30am Location: Guilford F
Number: 98 -A Study Concerning the Risk Management Practices of Historically Black College Results will be shared of research on the risk management practices of HBCU athletic directors. Presenter: Calvin Hunter, Catawba College Presider: Bill Russell
Number: 102 -Creative Choreography Explore choreography using improvisation, gesture manipulation, theme and development, and spatial exploration. Geared to assist all teachers, public, private, or higher education. Presenters: Heidi Godfrey, Salem College, Shawn Bowman-Hicks Presider: Noel Reiss
9:30 - 10:15 am Location: Pebble Beach
Number: 99 -Asthma: Who's in Control A review of asthma triggers, early and late warning signs, explanation of medications used to treat and control asthma and the devices that are so important to helping deliver the medications. Exercise induced asthma will be discussed. Presenters: Lisa Pickett, Duplin General, Betty Rose
Presider: Pam Edwards 9:30 - 10:15am Location: Colony BC
Number: 100 -PDA's for Dummies Part one examines equipment that is available and current software. Part two will be hands-on time. Free CD's will be provided with physical education information. A PDA will be awarded, winner must be present to win. Presenter: Gloria Elliott, FSU Presider: Maurice Clampitt 9:30 - 10:30am Location: Colony A Number: 101 -Middle School Athletic Director: You Are Different As a Middle School A.D. or Coach you are faced with different types of issues and problems. Learn a different perspective in "how to" deal with the Middle School Athletic and Athletics. Presenter: Richard Hatley Presider: Chip Gill 10:30 - 11:30am Location: Guilford E
Number: 102 -It's Their World--We're All Just Living in it: PE for the Munchkins! It’s clear that just “baby-ing” down traditional activities doesn’t work. Get activities, strategies, and organizational tips for working with the little ones and helping classroom teachers integrate physical education in their classrooms. Presenters: Tammy Schilling, University Physical Education Teacher of the Year, UNCG, Kelly McOmber, Sarah Harris Presider: Katie Williams
Past NCAAHPERD Presidents
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10:30 - 11:30am Location: Guilford G
Number: 104 -The Awesome AHA Demo Teams These kids rock!! Come check out the awesome Jump Rope for Heart demonstration teams. You are sure to be impressed as the teams "knock your socks off" with a variety of individual short rope skills and routines, partner and group tricks, long rope and double dutch stunts. Presenters: Demo Team Coaches, Kim Berg, Kenny Connors, Susan Cruickshanks, Karen Lux Presider: Karen Lux 10:30 - 11:30am Location: Guilford D
Number: 105 -Integrating Student Choreography into the PE Curriculum Learn the basic steps of some of the line dances common to today's youth, evaluating similarities and creative differences of well-known line dances, and then challenging participants to work in small groups to create their own line dance. Presenter: Laura Earnhardt, East Millbrook Middle School Presider: Stephanie White 10:30 - 11:30am Location: Augusta Number: 106 -Methamphetamine Labs in North Carolina Examine the problem that North Carolina is facing related to the illegal manufacturing of Methamphetamine in home drug laboratories including the dangers associated with the manufacturing process, the behavior of those individuals utilizing the drug, and the potential effects on children that reside in the homes where the drug is being manufactured. Presenter: Van Shaw, NC SBI Presider: Terri Mitchell
F R I D A Y
10:30 - 11:30am Location: Tidewater
Number: 107 -Research Presentations Resting Energy Expenditure in Young Males and Females Presenter: Alan Beck & Maridy Troy, Western Carolina University Presider: Justin Menickelli 10:30 - 11:30am Location: Sandpiper
Number: 108 -Internships & Networking: Strategies for Success Effective networking leads to jobs and career advancement opportunities – even in highly competitive markets. Learn the development of an individualized networking plan. Presenter: Hal Walker Presider: Amanda Gorsuch 10:30 - 11:30am Location: Tanglewood
Number: 109 -Measuring the Psychic Income of Sports Teams Psychic income, that good feeling from living in a Major League city, has often been used to justify governmental spending on professional sports teams’ facilities. Contingent valuation as a method to measure psychic income is explained. Presenter: Clay Harshaw, Guilford Presider: Josie Vegter 10:30 - 11:30am Location: Pebble Beach
Number: 110 -Educating Healthy Student Bodies For growing children and adolescents, proper nutrition and exercise can affect both mental and physical performance in school. Child Nutrition Programs across NC provide nutritionally sound meals through breakfast, lunch and after school snack programs. Focus is on nutrition and the influence it has on cognitive learning. Presenter: Janice Ezzell, NCDPI Child Nutrition Services Presider: Michele Wallen 10:30 - 11:30am Location: Colony BC
Number: 111 -Balance--The Sixth Component of Health-Related Fitness Balance is the component of physical fitness usually considered to be skillrelated. Understand the contribution of balance to long-term health and examples of exercises that can help maintain and improve balance. Presenters: David Claxton, WCU Maridy Troy, Justin Menickelli Presider: Walt Plemmons
10:30 - 11:30am Location: Colony A Number: 112 -Changes in the Middle/Jr. High School Athletics Manual Highlighted changes made by the SBE in June of 2005, including: the addition of a semester rule, allowing a scrimmage, changes to the dates available to play fall sports and in particular football, the number of innings that MS pitchers should pitch in baseball, and adding a weight classification of 215 lbs for wrestling will be discussed. Presenter: Kymm Ballard, NCDPI Presider: Chip Gill, Richard Hatley 11:45 - 1:00pm Location: Guilford B
Number: 113 - NCAAHPERD
Annual Awards Luncheon Tickets required* *Purchase tickets when you register. There will be a small number available at the registration desk for purchase until 11:00am Thursday.
11:45am Doors open 11:50am Welcome, President Ferneau Invocation Past President Hughley, 12:15pm Paula Hudson Collins, MC Bonnie Ferneau, Presider North Carolina Association for Athletic Education – Presented by Pete Shanklin & Richard Hatley Middle School Coach of the Year (Male) – Paul Menegay High School Coach of the Year (Female) – Pam Adams High School Coach of the Year (Male) – Danny Anderson Athletic Director of the Year – Vickie Hamilton, Charlotte-Mecklenburg North Carolina Association for the Advancement of Health Education – Presented by Pam Edwards & Kathy Crumpler Middle School Health Educator of the Year – Debbie Hunter High School Health Educator of the Year – Ernest Holcomb University Health Educator of the Year Ellen Essick Distinguished Friend of Health Education – Kathleen McCann Webster Physical Education Association – Presented by Dennis Johnson & Barnanne Creech Outstanding Elementary Physical Education Program – Shady Grove Elementary Outstanding Middle School Physical Education Program – Wakefield Middle University Physical Education Teacher of the Year – Dan Grube Lifetime Service Award – Tim Elrod
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North Carolina Association for Intramurals and Recreation – Presented by Russ McHenry Intramural Program of the Year – Colfax Elementary, Judy Fowler Dance Association of North Carolina Educators – Presented by Krystal Tyndall & Cary Weaver High School Dance Educator of the Year Baily Rich K-12 & Middle School Dance Educator of the Year – Freddie-Lee Heath College and University Dance Educator of the Year – Carol Kyles Finley Community Dance Educator of the Year – Charles “Chuck”Davis Dance Student Major of the Year – Mary Anne Millender Student Majors Association – Presented by Michael Hemphill & Danielle Humpreys Student of the Year – Elizabeth Voetsch Joint Projects Awards - Presented by Karen Lux & Bob Blackburn Robert E. Blackburn Outstanding Jump Rope for Heart Coordinator of the Year – Kim Berg Outstanding Hoops for Heart Coordinator – Molly Dibble North Carolina Association of Intercollegiate Athletics for Women Scholarship – Katy Beth Tran, UNC - Presented by Phyllis Pharr NC Healthy Schools Superintendent of the Year - Julia Mobley, Pamlico County – Presented by Paula Hudson Collins NCAAHPERD Awards - Presented by Bonnie Ferneau & Keith Cannon Advocacy Award – Kymm Ballard Legislator of the Year – Lt. Governor Beverly Purdue June P. Galloway Scholarship – Tara Jenkins Nathan Taylor Dodson Scholarship – Diana Collier Service Awards – Bill Fritz Sports, Billy Gober, Sportime, LLC. Edgar W. Hooks Jr. Young Professional Award Ann Hulslander Honor Award – Betsy Beals; Fredia Gooch; Patricia Pertalion; Anne Whitmire Distinguished Friend of NCAAHPERD – Ronald Hyatt NCAAHPERD President’s Citations – VAHPERD; NCAAHPERD Outgoing Presidents: Michael Hemphill, SMA; Pete Shankle, NCAAE; Pam Edwards, NCAAHE; Dennis Johnson, PEA; Russ McHenry, NCAIR; Krystal Tyndall, DANCE; Bonnie Ferneau, NCAAHPERD 1:00 pm Closing Announcements - Bonnie Ferneau & Keith Cannon
For additional information on our award recipients, please see page 25.
F R I D A Y
1:15 - 2:15 pm Location: Guilford E
1:30 - 2:15pm Location: Augusta
Number: 114 -Fitness Games for Everyone
Number: 118 -NCAAHE Business Meeting All 1st and 2nd choice members are encouraged to attend.
Do you want to make fitness fun? Our fitness games combine running, jumping, shooting, passing, chasing and fleeing combined with concepts in basketball, paint ball, and many other exciting games. Games are designed for all levels of skill to participate and enjoy. Presenters: Matthew Haley, Hawfields Middle School, Lisa Ward Presider: Alec French 1:15 - 2:15pm Location: Guilford F Number: 115 -Get Over the Fitness Hurdle with the TURTL Ever use a TURTL to overcome a hurdle? Here's your chance to achieve the ultimate, functional training to develop balance, coordination, core stability, total body awareness, proprioception, muscular strength and endurance, and flexibility. Great for neuromuscular development and sensory integration. Challenge dynamic balance to develop total musculature. Presenter: Cindy Gober Presider: Billy Gober 1:15 - 2:15 pm Location: Guilford G Number: 116 -Short Rope Activities Demo Coaches Short rope skills that will knock your socks off!! Learn from the JRFH Demonstration teams how to perform and teach short rope skills. Individual, partner, group, and Chinese wheel tricks: get them all and be able to take them back to your students for success! Presenters: Karen Lux, Jesse Wharton Elementary School, JRFH Demonstration Team Coaches Presider: Karen Lux 1:15 - 2:15 pm Location: Guilford D Number: 117 -Dance for All Ages and Occasions Physical educators often need rhythmical activities that can be taught with little equipment and little preparation for rainy days and other special occasions. Learn dances that can be used by students of all ages for these situations. Presenter: Ronnie Akers, Reinhardt College Presider: Keith Cannon
Presiders: Pam Edwards, Kathy Crumpler, Michele Wallen 1:15 - 2:15 pm Location: Tidewater Number: 119 -Strategies for Management in the Dance Classroom New and future teachers receive a toolkit of strategies for management specialized for the dance classroom. Behavior guidelines will be established so that all students can share in a safe and joyful dance experience. Presenter: Cindy Hoban, Moore Square Museum Magnet Middle Presider: Krystal Tyndall 1:15 - 2:15 pm Location: Sandpiper Number: 120 -Sport Management: Classroom to Practice Overview the experiential education experiences of the Sport Management students at Wingate University. Chronicle how classroom experiential education experiences have impacted their ability to transfer theory to practice; specifically organizing and promoting a triathlon. Presenters: Dennis Johnson, Wingate University, Mike Hemphill, Tara Jenkins, Lindsay Boldt, Beth Voetsch Presider: Josie Vegter 1:15 - 2:15pm Location: Tanglewood Number: 121 -Sport Participants as Consumers: Why the Corporate World Should Love the Sport of Triathlon
Examine the market profile of triathletes and their buying habits relative to products outside of their sport, including the marketing focus of corporations and their perception of the sport of triathlon. Presenter: James Zarick, High Point U Presider: Jake Lawrence 1:15 - 2:15pm Location: Pebble Beach
Number: 122 -Take Action with Leadership Examine the philosophies and principles of Stephen Covey's model "Principle-Centered Leadership" with consideration given to implementing these principles into dance leadership work. Presenter: Kacy Crabtree, College Dance Educator of the Year, Lees-McRae Presider: Cary Weaver
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1:15 - 2:15 pm Location: Colony BC Number: 123 -Moodle Technology Use in Health and Physical Education The Moodle Technology for Health and Physical Education is currently being used at the laptop initiative campus of Johnson C. Smith University in Charlotte, North Carolina. This technology has allowed the professor to bring his courses to the students. Presenter: Henry White, J.C. Smith Presider: Shelly Gresham 1:15 - 2:15 pm Location: Colony A Number: 124 -Principles of Teaching the Games Approach Way Part 1 Part I deals with what technical and tactical skills are and how most coaches use the traditional approach in coaching these skills. It then introduces the Game approach way of coaching and explains how to teach this method. Presenter: Chip Gill Presider: Richard Hatley 2:30-3:45pm Location: Guilford E Number: 125 -Wacky Warm-ups & Challenge Circuits Body weight exercises, garage sale items and cutting edge individual fitness equipment will all be utilized to present a variety of circuit training options for your students. Presenter: Mike Tenoschok, NASPE Middle School Teacher of the Year Presider: Casey Williams 2:30 - 3:45pm Location: Guilford F Number: 126 -Let Them Be Little Developmentally children are competent, have cognitive understanding, are physically active to be fit, and have responsible behavior. Learn appropriate activities designed for Pre-K, kindergarten, and first grade. Colors, sequencing, and attention to symbols can teach young children and students with special needs. Presenter: Betsy Beals, Elementary & Southern District Physical Education Teacher of the Year, Northwoods Elementary School Presider: Stacy Swenson
F R I D A Y
2:30 - 3:45 pm Location: Guilford G Number: 127 -Do You Want to Know How to Line Dance--Yes or No? If you attended my session and for whatever reasons, you feel that you have not accomplished your goals in my session, I will come to your high school and do a free line dancing session for your class, free of charge. Presenter: Dennis Felder, WSSU Presider: Stenson Conley 2:30 - 3:45 pm Location: Guilford D Number: 128 -Combos to Go! A must for teachers that LOVE TO DANCE!! A movement class for teachers to spark technique & choreography! Strong ties to National Standards and National Board Certification. Presenter: Freddie Lee Heath, Ligon GT Magnet Middle Presider: Cindy Hoban 2:30 - 3:45 pm Location: Augusta Number: 129 Answering Student Questions About Sex Using actual student questions, we will present information about creating a safe environment for questions, teacher options in answering questions, local and state requirements, parent notification, dealing with “taboo” topics, and school resources. Presenters: Amy Stringer, Middle School Health Teacher of the Year, Cathy Hailey, Kisha Davis Presider: Sarah Sears 2:30 - 3:45 pm Location: Tidewater Number: 130 -ESPN Play Your Way Student majors have the opportunity to work with ESPN and NASPE to implement ESPN's Play Your Way program! Five student majors clubs will be awarded $1,000 for exceptional implementation of the program, a readymade community outreach project that empowers kids to use their imaginations to create physically active games using traditional and non-traditional games. Presenter: Michael Hemphill, Wingate University Presider: Danielle Humpreys
2:30 - 5:00 pm Location: Sandpiper Number: 131 -Sports Management Forum A forum to discuss current issues related to sport management within NCAAHPERD. Professionals and students are encouraged to attend. Presenter: Travis Teague 2:30 - 3:45pm Location: Tanglewood
4:00 - 5:00 pm Location: Guilford E Number: 136 -Fine Motor Tuning Learn a variety of fine motor, aerobic, and problem solving activites that can be used for all grade levels and take part in individual, dual, small and large group settings. Presenter: Don Puckett Presider: Steven McClamrock
Number: 132 -Sign Up for the NCAAHPERD Speakers Service Come kick off the new NCAAHPERD “Speaker Service,” designed to advance the Alliance's visibility and provide members and communities with a useful resource. This service will offer members an opportunity to advocate for active, healthy, creative, and active lifestyles to a wide variety of groups. Presenter: Donna Woolard, Campbell U Presider: Anne Wiggin
4:00 - 5:00 pm Location: Guilford F Number: 136A – Bowling + Fitness = FUN In-school bowling – Learn a simple method of teaching bowling and ways to modify the teaching for a varied ages and abilities. Free CD of the In-School Bowling Teacher’s Manual and Curriculum. Presenter: Bob Rea
2:30 - 3:45pm Location: Pebble Beach
4:00 - 5:00 pm Location: Guilford G Number: 138 -Weight Training 109-Infusing Free Weight, Body Bars, Exercise Bars, Taebo, Workout F Sheets, & R Anatomy I Students enrolled in Weight Training at D NC A&T State A University will showcase the many Y different exercises learned and demonstrate various ways to use free weights, body bars, exercise balls, Taebo, workout sheets, and anatomy in a weight-training course. Presenter: Tiffany Fuller, NCAT University Presider: Deborah Callaway
Number: 133 -Linking Activated Health Education Model with DINE Healthy 5 Dine Healthy 5 is a nutrition/physical activity software program for secondary and college level students. Learn how to integrate AHE (Activated Health Education) model with DINE and how students accept responsibility for managing their health through realistic goal setting and tracking progress. Presenters: Darwin Dennison, John Bennett, Royce Noble, UNC Wilmington Presider: Kathy Crumpler 2:30 - 3:45pm Location: Colony BC Number: 134 -Professional Development & Scholarship-What do we have to offer and how do we find the time? Come discuss the need for continued professional development and learn strategies to help strengthen existing professional development plans or in the development of new plans. Presenter: Richard Rairigh, Meredith 2:30 - 3:45 pm Location: Colony A Number: 135 -Principles of Teaching the Games Approach Way Part 2 Part II, is a work session where coaches list the advantages and disadvantages of teaching the traditional approach way to the games approach way of teaching. Presenter: Chip Gill Presider: Richard Hatley
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4:00 - 5:00 pm Location: Guilford D Number: 139 -Jump Rope Program-Team Skills for Elementary and Middle Schools Learn basic to advanced jump rope skills in single rope, partner jumping, long rope and Double Dutch. Presenters: Tommy Hager, Cary Family YMCA Super Skippers Presider: Cameron Wright
4:00 - 5:00 pm Location: Augusta Number: 140 Recognizing Eating Disorders in Adolescents Learn practical information for recognizing students with eating disorders. Personal experiences from individuals effected by eating disorders will also be included. Presenter: Ellen Essick, UNCG 4:00-5:00 pm Location: Tidewater Number: 141 -Lesson Plans at Your Fingertips
These activities range from writing to movement and some of both. Handouts of lessons will be made available for participants to utilize in your classroom. Presenters: Cary Weaver, Wake County, Krystal Tyndall, Baily Rich Presider: Cindy Hobin 4:00 - 5:00pm Location: Sandpiper Number: 142 -Crowd Management Focus on issues related to crowd management strategies for today’s sport management professional including issues of crowd dynamics, causes of crowd violence, and strategies for managing and controlling crowds. Presenter: Travis Teague Presider: Crystal Scott 4:00 - 5:00pm Location: Pool Number: 143 -WET SWEAT Come experience WET SWEAT--using the perfect medium of water to illustrate the benefits of balanced muscle development without the stress and strain on the joints. “Churn" to fitness, relax, and enjoy. Presenter: Cindy Gober Presider: Billy Gober 4:00 - 5:00pm Location: Tanglewood
Number: 143.5 –NC Legislative Update NC Action for Healthy Kids will review progress NC has made in physical activity and nutrition policies in schools. Come learn about NC Action for Healthy Kids, resources and get a State Board of Education Update. Presenters: Dave Gardner, Wake Med, Laura Simpson
4:00 - 5:00pm Location: Pebble Beach
Number: 144 -Stress Reduction for Teachers More is being asked of today's teachers than ever before. The cumulative effects of stress can be seen in all aspects of one's life. Come enjoy a humorous and practical session on how to cope with and reduce the stress in your life. Presenters: Brittany Edwards, Physical Therapist, Paula Hudson Collins, NC Healthy Schools Presider: Pam Edwards 4:00 - 5:00 pm Location: Colony BC Number: 145 -Setting the PASE: Undergraduate Majors' Perspective of Field Experiences Examine an overview of the Pedagogical Approach to Sport Education (PASE) and an in-depth discussion centering on several pre-service teachers’ experience using the PASE curricular and instructional model during a practicum teaching experience. Presenters: Derek Mohr, ASU Scott Townsend, PETE students Presider: Rich Rairigh 4:00 - 5:00 pm Location: Colony A Number: 146 -NCAAE Business Meeting Presiders: Pete Shankle, Richard Hatley 5:15- 6:30 pm Location: Arrowhead
8:30 - midnight Location: Guilford D
All Convention Dance Social w/Flashpoint F R I D A Y
SATURDAY, Nov 19 8:00-9:00 am Location: Guilford C Number: 151 -Gymnastics Mania! Put gymnastics back in your gym! The skills learned in gymnastics (balancing, traveling/jumping, rolling) are some of the most important lead-up skills for all activities including sports, dance, and martial arts. Learn how to teach these skills in a safe and fun environment. Presenters: Tammy Schilling, University Physical Education Teacher of the Year, UNCG, Kim Berg, Amanda Shoe, Jonathan Dent Presider: Kirby Simmons
Number: 147 –Installation and
reception for new NCAAHPERD Board Officiers Presider: President Keith Cannon 6:30 - 8:15 pm PEA Suite 1268
Number: 148 -PEA Social Presiders: Dennis Johnson, Barnanne Creech 6:30 - 8:15pm Location: Suite 1172
Number: 149 DANCE/NCAIR/ Sports Management Social
Presiders: Krystal Tyndall, Russ McHenry, Travis Teague
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8:00 - 2:00 pm Location: Guilford E Number: 152 -Building
Better Brains through Movement Brain research suggests that what makes us move is also what makes us think. Physical activity builds the framework for cognition and proper brain development. This interactive, energetic presentation provides a checklist of activities that will give the teacher insight that will help students work at peak performance for learning. It will also demonstrate how proper early brain development is linked to early motor development and how practice of motor movement enhances student performance. Presenter: Jean Blaydes Madigan, Action Based Learning Presider: Keith Cannon
S A T U R D A Y
8:00 - 9:00 am Location: Guilford D Number: 153 -"Staying Alive" with "Where the Wild Things Are," "Ten Black Dots," and "Wacky Weather" Literature based games can center around one action or a story, the characters, or the cognitive concepts found in a book. Reading left to right, using poetry, creating actions to support eye-tracking skills can enhance our programs. This presentation provides ways, ideas, and activities to incorporate literature and reading into our short time with the children each week. Many activites can be quick reinforcements or entire lessons. Come "Boogie on Down" with our literature based games! Presenter: Kim Hamilton, Wake County Public Schools Presider: Christine Blair 8:00 - 10:00am Location: Colony B Number: 154 -Automated External Defibrillator (AED) Essentials Training $10.00 This is a twohour training course for participants wishing to become certified by the American Red Cross in the use of an automated external defibrillator (AED). According to the American Red Cross, every minute that defibrillation is delayed there is a 10% reduction in survival rate. You never know when you may be in a position to assist in saving a life. Cost: $10. Mark registration form. Presenter: Craig Eilbacher, Guilford College 8:00 - 10:00 am Location: Colony C Number: 155 -Strategies for Passing the Praxis Physical Education Exams Physical education majors learn secrets to pass the Praxis Physical Education Exams. Test preparation and test taking strategies aimed at improving scores will be shared. The web master of www.pepraxis.com will present tips on what to study, how to study, and where to get study materials. Example test questions will also be reviewed and discussed. Presenter: Donna Woolard, Campbell University
8:00 - 9:00 am Location: Colony A Number: 156 –Basic YOGA Fundamentals Experience first hand the many benefits of yoga including flexibility, strength, and balance. Includes postures, alignment principals, breathing, and relaxation. Presenter: Laura Mrosla Presider: Kathy Crumpler 9:00 am - 12:15pm Location: Guilford C Number: 157 -Even Exchange Dance Theater: Education Through Embodiment
Responding to questions, facts, and concepts through movement, dance educators can engage and support the kinesthetic learner while teaching them the concepts of abstract artmaking. In this workshop, teachers will explore the many ways to connect dance and movement with curriculum. Use expository text as well as creative writing to inspire the creation of unique dance phrases. Presenters: Even Exchange Dance Theater, Glenda Mackie, Kathryn Auman, Jennifer Huggins Presider: Krystal Tyndall 9:05 - 10:05am Location: Guilford D
Number: 158 -But I Don't Know How to Dance How often have you heard "I don't know how to dance?" This highly interactive session will help you learn how to move those 2 "left feet." Various types of dances (cotton eye Joe/Schottische; simple square, circle & line) dances will be presented, complete with ways to teach the steps successfully. Presenters: Carol Smith, Elon University, Amanda Biuso, Lindsey Schopfel, Hanna Stagg, Jeff Allen and Charlie Porterfield Presider: Carol Smith 9:05 - 10:05 am Location: Colony A Number: 159 -Discovery Health Connection Learn to teach the Millennium generation of Internet Children healthy values and initiatives with lessons and videos for 30 minutes of exercise initiatives. Topics include: bullying, tobacco, drug, and alcohol prevention, nutrition, etc. surrounding the 8 components of Coordinated School Health. Presenter: Simi Ranajee, Discovery Health Presider: Kathy Crumpler
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10:15-12:15pm Location: Guilford D
Number: 160 – PE..The Catch of the Day No water, No problem! Learn how to teach fishing to your students in the gym and on the field and get them hooked on a lifetime activity. This program will show you how to teach fishing with minimal resources. Presenter: Mike Tenoschok, National Middle School Teacher of the Year Presider: Barnanne Creech 10:15 - 11:15am Location: Colony A Number: 161 -When Smoke Ran Like Water: Native American Environmentalism Professionals can better understand their roles with regard to environmental education. Participate in a traditional Native American approach to effecctively teaching environmental education through high-level cognitive and affective learning in addition to the use of contemporary music. Presenters: John Janowiak, ASU, Carlos Two Bears Ashe Presider: Katherine "Winky" Pasour
Help the NCAAHPERD Office • Be consistent with the name you use – Bill, William, Billy – pick one and stay with it. • Don’t staple forms or checks. • Leave your area code when you leave us a message. • Write a newsletter article about your school, a favorite student, a memorable teacher, and outstanding program. We can always use it. • Share a lesson plan that you have found effective for your students. • Give us suggestion on how we can make your membership more valuable to you.
S A T U R D A Y
2005 Alliance and Association Awards times, and Regional Champion in 2005. She has compiled an overall record while at Northern High School of 190 wins and 53 losses. The accomplishment that Coach Adams is most proud of during her tenure as head coach at Northern is that every athlete who has played at the varsity level has graduated and gone to college.
Paul Menegay Middle School Coach of the Year Coach Paul Menegay graduated in 1944 from Louisville High School in Ohio. The New York Giants drafted him after high school. While at camp, he was recruited for the Army to serve in World War II. Upon returning home from World War II, Coach Menegay was signed to a class A team in the Northeast Ohio League. In 24 years as a volunteer coach, he amassed 441 wins.
The North Carolina Association for Athletic Education is proud to name Pam Adams Female High School Coach of the Year because of her successes on the court, in the classroom, and in the lives of her players.
Danny Anderson Male High School Coach of the Year Danny Anderson’s 23 years as a head basketball coach has been a career with literally too many accomplishments to list. Danny has combined his drive to compete and be the best with his passion to influence and change young lives for the better.
After moving to North Carolina with Timken, Paul finished working his thirty years. After his retirement, Paul graduated from Belmont Abby College with a B.A. in teaching. His first teaching and coaching position was at Granite Falls Middle School in 1983. He coached at Granite Falls Middle School for eight years and had five championship teams in baseball and basketball.
During Danny’s 23 years as a head coach, he has received 17 Coach of the Year Awards and won over 450 games. Sixteen of his teams have been ranked in the state’s top 10 poll, two teams have been state runner-ups. Coach Anderson has won 14 conference championships, 12 conference tournament championships, 9 sectional championships, and 2 regional championships in 9 appearances. He has coached in the EastWest and the North-South All-Star games.
Coach Menegay was hired to teach and coach at Collettsville School where he coached one year of softball and the team won the conference championship. Coach Menegay moved on to Hudson Middle School where he coached baseball, basketball, and softball. In six years, Coach Menegay has fielded four championship teams. Coach Menegay has tallied over 750 middle school wins. The North Carolina Association for Athletic Education is honored to present Coach Paul Menegay with the Middle School Coach of the Year for his devotion to the quality athletic experiences for middle school students.
While many basketball programs’ schedules consist of individual workouts, weight room sessions, and team practices, few programs have a schedule as unique as the Warriors do. Danny Anderson’s basketball program is filled with scheduled hiking trips, family fish fries, team barbeques and individual “life and future” counseling. Typically, Warrior assistant coaches are assigned a few players who they take out to eat weekly to discuss how they are doing and to be a positive influence in their life. Coach Anderson’s “complete person” philosophy combined with the West Caldwell’s intense player development program is the reason that the North Carolina Association for Athletic Education selected him as the 2005 Male High School Coach of the Year.
Pam Adams Female High School Coach of the Year Pam Adams was born in Batavia, New York. She grew up in Ohio. She graduated from Lakota High School in 1978, where she was MVP of the girls’ basketball team. She accepted a basketball scholarship to Union College in Kentucky. Two years later, she transferred to Georgian Court College in New Jersey to receive a teaching certificate and her degree in Mathematics. She played both basketball and softball while at Georgian Court.
Vicki Hamilton Athletic Director of the Year Vicki Hamilton has divided her career between education and athletics. The former coach and principal has pulled both passions together in her role as Director of Athletics for CharlotteMecklenburg Schools.
In 1986, she was the subject of an NBC National News Documentary, by Tom Brokaw, entitled “White Paper Special: To Be a Teacher.” Because of this program, Pam was offered a job at Northern Durham High School. She coached basketball and softball at Northern Durham becoming the head basketball coach in 1996. In the nine years she has teamed with Cecilia Payne, Northern Durham has been the Conference Champion seven times, Sectional Champion five
The first female athletic director of a public school system in North Carolina, Vicki began her career as a junior high school coach in Salisbury, North Carolina. She has also coached
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women’s volleyball and softball at the University of South Carolina and at the high school level in Charleston, SC.
It is an honor to have teachers like Debbie working in North Carolina Public Schools and NCAAHE appreciates her dedication and extra work to enhance the health of young people, which is why the North Carolina Association for the Advancement of Health Education proudly recognizes Debbie Hunter as the 2005 North Carolina Middle School Health Educator of the Year.
Vicki joined the Charlotte-Mecklenburg Schools System in 1977 and began an illustrious career as a principal, serving in that capacity in three elementary schools and one junior high school. In 1988, she was named the Wachovia Principal of the Year for Charlotte-Mecklenburg Schools and for Region 6, and was a finalist for the State Principal of the Year Award. As a principal of Davidson Elementary, Hamilton was recognized as one of 80 educators nationwide who developed effective approaches to teaching at the K-12 level. In 1994, Hamilton was appointed Director of Athletics for the Charlotte-Mecklenburg Schools.
Ernest Holcomb High School Health Educator of the Year Ernie Holcomb has been teaching health and physical education in North Carolina public schools for over 32 years. He received his BS in health and physical education from the University of North Carolina at Wilmington and later received an M.Ed. from the University of North Carolina at Greensboro. Ernie earned National Board Certification in physical education in 2002 proving that even after 30 years in education there is room for challenge and growth. Ernie’s beliefs in active learning and learning by doing are evident in his health classroom and the school.
In demand across the state and nation as a guest speaker, Hamilton was named a “Distinguished Woman in North Carolina” by the North Carolina Council for Women. In 1996, she received the North Carolina Girl’s & Women’s Sports Award, and in 1998 she was the recipient of the Carolinas Athlete of the Year Humanitarian Award. Hamilton has served as a guest lecturer at Queens University and Winthrop University, as well as a presenter at local, state, and national conferences. Vicki Hamilton currently serves on community and professional boards, including the Charlotte Regional Sports Commission, the Charlotte Touchdown Club, the First Tee of Charlotte, the North Carolina High School Athletic Association, and the Police Athletic League. Because of her many accomplishments and the trails that she has blazed, the North Carolina Association for Athletic Education is proud to name Vicki Hamilton as the Athletic Director of the Year.
His health classroom is filled with opportunities for investigation, personalization, and skill building. He is known for creative health lessons and allowing his students to practice and build healthy skills. It is his hope and belief that these skills will be used to develop healthy lifelong behaviors. He is a firm believer in establishing healthy behaviors that will affect future decisions. As an advocate for healthy lifestyles for students and for teachers, Ernie organized and developed a staff wellness program for the faculty and staff at Reidsville High School.
Debbie Hunter Middle School Health Educator of the Year
Ernie offers his experience, support, and expertise to school, district, state committees, and collaborative projects. He is respected in the classroom, on the athletic fields, in the community, and throughout the state as a teacher, coach, mentor, and role model. His dedication and continuous efforts to improve health education and the health and well-being of students is why he is so deserving of the 2005 North Carolina Association for the Advancement of Health Education High School Health Educator of the Year Award.
Debbie Hunter is a teacher, a leader, an advocate, and a role model in the field of healthful living. She has led Surry County Schools in promoting programs to ensure that students are healthy active children. Debbie was instrumental in developing a health and wellness room at Gentry Middle School that contains computers and exercise equipment for small group or individual self-directed learning and personal health assessment.
$13,000.00+
She is well known for her efforts in the health classroom to motivate and encourage students to develop lifelong healthy attitudes, beliefs, and behaviors; however, she is also known for her efforts to conceptualize and organize the countywide program, Walk/Run for Your Life. The primary purpose of this health initiative was to reinforce healthy choices, which involve all aspects of students’ lives. One letter of support summarizes her efforts best, “Ms. Hunter receives no extra pay for her unbelievable dedication and her extra work. She rallies the troops over and over to make sure that all of us remember that healthy children should be at the very core of our work in public schools.”
This is the amount of money that NCAAHPERD tries to give away each year: $4,000 in student (graduate and undergraduate) scholarships; $4,000 Jump Rope for Heart Grants; $1,500-$2,000 FRIENDS grants; $1,000 – $1,500 PEA grants and scholarships; Intramural/Recreation Program of the Year $200-$500, NCAAHE mini-grants. Some of these funds go unused for lack of applications. Apply for a grant or scholarship!
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Kathleen currently works with the NC Comprehensive School Health Training Center and the NC Department of Public Instruction to provide professional development for teachers and school staff in the areas of tobacco prevention, family life, HIV/AIDS education, nutrition education, and violence prevention. Recently Kathleen served as the lead writer on the NC Department of Public Instruction manual, Effective School Health Advisory Councils, which is nationally recognized as a model for establishing school health advisory councils to coordinate school health programs. Kathleen is a passionate and knowledgeable advocate for health education both in public schools but also in public health. Kathleen is an active member of NCAAHE and served as President of the Association from 1997-1999. She was a writer and reviewer for the first editions of Successfully Teaching Middle and High School Health Education Manuals.
Ellen Essick, Ph.D. College/University Health Educator of the Year Dr. Essick has dedicated the last 18 years to work in the field of health education. She is currently focusing on the professional preparation of elementary school teachers in the area of health education. Dr. Essick received her undergraduate, Masters Degree, and Ph.D. from the University of North Carolina at Greensboro where she is currently teaching. She has also taught at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill and Greensboro College. Dr. Essick is well known for her work in the prevention, intervention, and treatment of eating disorders. Her dedication in the field of health education spans far beyond the university students she works with on a daily basis. Dr. Essick has served as a Guilford County School Health Advisory Council member, president (2004) and board member (2000-present) of the North Carolina Association for the Advancement of Health Education, and as president (2000-2003) and board member (1999-present) of the Eastern Triad HIV Consortium. Her efforts are far reaching in the schools as a teacher of teachers and as a professional development trainer. She is equally as active in the community, supporting health education initiatives and programs. Dr. Essick served as a writer for the Successfully Teaching Middle School Health II Manual and was instrumental in the creation and development of an elementary education resource for teachers, Elementary Health Education: An Integrated Approach.
It is because of these many accomplishments and the countless hours that Kathleen has devoted to the advancement of health education, that NCAAHE is pleased to present the 2005 Distinguished Friend of Health Education Award to Kathleen McCann Webster.
Shady Grove Elementary School Outstanding Elementary Physical Education Program Shady Grove Elementary School has been a Physical Education Demonstration School for 12 years, from 1993 to 2005. The school twice has been awarded a Governor’s Council Award on Physical Fitness and Health – Top 10 Fit School, once in the 1996-1997 academic year and once in the 1999-2000 school year.
NCAAHE is honored to present Dr. Ellen Essick with the University Health Educator of the Year Award for her devotion to the enhancement of health education at the university level, in the public schools, and in the community.
The fitness goals at Shady Grove are to instill in the student the importance of being healthy, in both mind and body. Karen Umberger, the physical education teacher, and Sandra Smith, the physical education teacher assistant, help students acquire knowledge of how their bodies work and an understanding of how being active will help improve lives. At Shady Grove, the physical education staff expose students to a variety of activities and give them choices so that they can be successful participating in activities they can enjoy throughout their adulthood. Shady Grove teachers integrate the physical education program and academic classroom to help children learn and understand the importance of good nutrition and the harm done by tobacco, drugs, and alcohol. The students at Shady Grove receive physical education on a daily basis, even with a population base of 637 students.
Kathleen McCann Webster, M.Ed. Distinguished Friend of Health Education Students, public health officials, teachers, administrators, and numerous others have benefited from the work that Kathleen Webster has conducted in the field of health education for over 27 years. After receiving her undergraduate and graduate degrees in Public Health from the University of North Carolina at Greensboro, Kathleen began working in public schools as a nutrition educator. Kathleen has since served as a health education coordinator, public health program director, School Health Training Center project coordinator, director of education at Wesley Long Hospital, and currently as a private health promotion consultant and trainer. Curriculum writer, nationally certified trainer, and consultant are just a few of the titles that she carries with her in the multiple roles she fills across the state.
It is an honor to have schools like Shady Grove Elementary in North Carolina. The Physical Education Association appreciates the dedication and extra work of the faculty and staff to enhance the health and fitness of young people and is proud to name Shady Grove Elementary as the Outstanding Elementary Physical Education Program.
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Danny Grube as the ultimate professional. His Dean makes the statement, “In short, they don’t come any better than Dan Grube.” That is also why the Physical Education Association is proud to name Dr. Dan Grube as the 2005 University Teacher of the Year.
Wakefield Middle School Outstanding Middle School Physical Education Program Wakefield Middle School focuses on developing the student’s life skills in order to make pro-active decisions and choices that will lead to healthful and successful lives. A major focus is to empower the students to avoid behavior with long-term and short-term consequences. Combining a healthful diet, avoidance of risky substance abuse and sexual activity, and learning to live in a safe and healthy manner to avoid accidents or personal harm are just three of Wakefield Middle School’s targeted behaviors.
Tim Elrod PEA Lifetime Service Award Tim Elrod graduated from Appalachian State University with a B.S. in Health and Physical Education. He has completed 25 year of teaching at Shuford Elementary School in Conover, North Carolina. In 1982, he was recognized as Newton Conover City Schools Teacher of the Year. NCAAHPERD recognized Tim Elrod as 1998 North Carolina Elementary Physical Education Teacher of the Year. In 20012002, he was in the first group of Nationally Board Certified Physical Education Teachers.
The Wakefield Middle School physical education faculty works in conjunction with classroom teachers to integrate curriculum. In geography, the students do a “Walk Across America” activity; in Math, the students learn about target heart rate calculations and how to analyze nutritional information gathered through the Cybershop Nutrition program. The Physical Education Association appreciates the dedication and work of the teachers of Wakefield Middle School to enhance the health and fitness of young people and is proud to name Wakefield Middle School as the Outstanding Middle School Physical Education Program.
Giving back to the profession has been a hallmark of Tim Elrod’s career. He has served as Chairman of the NC Leadership Training and two terms as the Northwest Regional Representative on the PEA Board, organizing successful regional workshops, and contributing many ideas for the visibility of the PEA in NC. His original ideas and activities have been published in Great Activities Newsletter and online at P.E. Central.
Dan Grube, Ph.D. Western Carolina University PEA College/University Teacher of the Year
Tim Elrod has directed Shuford’s Physical Education Club for 16 years. He has served as the director of the Men’s and Women’s Track Program at Newtown-Conover High School and won seven Conference Championships. He was named as the Southern District Track Coach of the Year four times. In 2000, Tim was named North Carolina’s 2A Coach of the Year.
Dr. Danny Grube is an Associate Professor and Physical Education Program Director at Western Carolina University in Cullowhee. He received his Bachelor of Science from Lyndon State College in Vermont with a major in Physical Education Teacher Certification. He earned his Master of Science in Education from Troy State University in Alabama, again with a major in Physical Education Teacher Education. Dan’s Doctor of Philosophy was earned at Florida State University, with an emphasis in Physical Education Pedagogy.
Tim is a caring, compassionate individual who strongly believes in the importance of physical education for “his” students. It is because of his many accomplishments and his continuous efforts to improve the quality of physical education in North Carolina that the Physical Education Association is pleased to present the PEA Lifetime Service Award to Tim Elrod.
Through his leadership at Western Carolina, the program has “grown in both size and quality” according to the Department Head of Health and Human Performance. His teaching evaluations are excellent and consistently among the very highest scores that are recorded for Health and Human Performance faculty. Twice, the department put forth his name for the Taft Botner Teaching Award.
Please complete the Convention Evaluation Form on page 38. It will help us improve your experience in 2006. Thank you.
His research topics include teacher education pedagogy, sport education philosophy, outdoor education principles, and decision making of leaders. He is the inaugural sponsor of NC TIP (North Carolina Teacher Incentive Program) for out of state students who receive in state tuition rates and agree to teach in North Carolina one year for each year they receive the scholarship. Many of his recommendation letters describe Dr.
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Teacher in Dance. She was the winner of the Dance Theater Dedication Award for two consecutive years.
Judy Fowler Colfax Elementary School Outstanding Public School Intramural Program
Since graduating, Baily helped produce three dance concerts a year and danced with local companies. At Broughton High School, she not only choreographs two annual concerts, but also serves as the Stage Manager. She has performed numerous times with local dance companies including Five Chick Posse, ChoreoCollective, and The Postcard Project. For the past two years, Baily has served on the DANCE board as the High School and College Coordinator.
Judy Fowler has taught at Colfax Elementary School in Guilford County for seven years. She earned her Bachelor of Science and Master of Science degrees in Health and Physical Education from Virginia Polytechnic Institute and State University. Judy is also a National Board Certified Teacher. During 2003-2004, she was the staff-nominated teacher of the year and was one of the 16 finalists for the Guilford County Teacher of the Year Award. Judy was one of five Guilford County Schools elementary teachers chosen to receive the county’s Silas Abraham Peeler Outstanding Elementary Educator Award by the Guilford County Council of PTAs.
Baily has a passion for bringing her love of dance to her students. It is for this passion that the Dance Association for North Carolina Educators is proud to name Baily G. Rich as the High School Dance Educator of the Year.
Freddie-Lee Heath Middle School and K-12 Dance Educator of the Year
Judy has initiated a wide variety of activities to aid her students in developing active lifestyles, most recently, the GO FAR (Go Out For A Run) Running Club. GO FAR is a 10week program that allows children to train and prepare for a 5K run, which is the culminating event. Each training session allows children to run for a set time at their own pace. Lessons involve nutrition, character education, and physical training principles.
“Open the window any way you can." These words of advice have served as the motto upon which Freddie-Lee Heath has built his teaching career. A veteran dance educator of 23 years, Freddie-Lee is a graduate of East Carolina University and a National Board Candidate in Physical Education. He teaches at Ligon GT Magnet Middle School where in addition to teaching leveled classes in tap and jazz, he has developed new curriculum for Wake County Public Schools including Swing Dance, Video Dance, Dance in the Media, and Twist and Tone. His school tap company, Tapestry, has performed at the Magnet Schools of America Conference, the No Child Left Behind Conference, the North Carolina Education Ball, the DANCE Showcase, and at Pieces of Gold. Freddie-Lee has taken Tapestry to New York City many times and has developed a partnership with the Radio City Rockettes to conduct yearly workshops for his students. Freddie-Lee is also an instructor at the North Carolina Dance Institute. He has two dance troupes, Star Strutters and Sassy Classics, made up of ladies over the age of 55. These groups confirm his belief that you must never stop learning and dance has the power to affect positive change.
Judy also organizes field days in the spring. She collaborates with her PTA Field Day committee to provide refreshments and organize the parent volunteers. The PTA is very active and support activities that allow the children of Colfax Elementary to be physically active. NCAIR appreciates the dedication and extra work of Judy Fowler and the Colfax Elementary School PTA in providing intramural and recreational opportunities to young people, which is why the North Carolina Association of Intramurals and Recreation proudly recognizes Colfax Elementary and Judy Fowler for the Outstanding Public School Intramural Program of 2005.
Baily G. Rich High School Dance Educator of the Year
For his dedication to dance and his dance students, the Dance Association for North Carolina Educators is proud to name Freddie-Lee Heath as the Middle School and K-12 Dance Educator of the Year.
Baily Rich graduated from Meredith College Magna Cum Laude with a B.A. in Dance Education in 2003. She is currently a Dance Educator at Broughton IB High School of Raleigh and DanceArt, Incorporated of Clayton. Baily teaches students ages 3-18 in a variety of dance styles including Modern, Jazz, Hip Hop, Dance Composition, and Creative Movement.
Carol Kyles Finley College Dance Educator of the Year Carol Kyles Finley, a Wilkesboro native, holds a Bachelor’s degree from North Carolina State University and a Masters of Fine Arts in Dance, Choreography from The Ohio State University. Carol is an Assistant Professor of Dance at Meredith College in Raleigh where she serves as Director of Dance. She also
She annually attended the American College Dance Festival and had the opportunity to not only dance but to have her work adjudicated at the 2003 festival. Baily was the recipient of the Dance Academic Excellence Award, the “You Make a Difference” Award and named the Outstanding Student
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advises the Meredith Dance Theatre Company. Carol has taught master classes and presented workshops for NC State’s Center Stage, the American College Dance Festival, the Governor’s School, the DELT conference, and numerous schools and studios across North Carolina.
Mary Anne Millender Dance Student of the Year Mary Anne Millender, from Perry, GA, is a senior at Lees-McRae College. After graduation as a Performing Arts Studies major, Mary Anne plans to pursue performing, teaching and choreography with professional dance companies, private dance studios, cruise lines, and professional athletic teams.
Carol’s choreography has been performed at NC State, the American Dance Festival’s Acts to Follow, The Ohio State University, the North Carolina Dance Festival Tour, the Third Avenue Performance Space in Columbus, the Mid-Atlantic Regional Dance Festival, the Southeast Regional Festival, and the National Festival in Washington, DC. She has performed compositional improvisation at Wellness Partners in the Arts in Durham, the Improvised and Otherwise Festival in Brooklyn, NY, and at The Ohio State University. Her video dance works have been screened at Toronto's Moving Pictures Festival of Dance on Film, the New York Dance Films Association Festival and Tour, the Festival Riccione in Italy, the Wexner Center for the Arts, and the ODC Theatre in San Francisco. Carol creates staged work and video dances with Bill Brown and Julee Snyder for their company, the Postcards Project Dance Company. In April 2005, she received a Harry and Marion Eberly Faculty Development Award at Meredith College.
On campus, Mary Anne is a Student Ambassador, a Peer Advisor, a member of Order of the Tower – a Presidential club, and a member of Alpha Psi Omega – a theatre honor society. She is also president of Nu Delta Alpha – a dance honor society. Mary Anne is also a featured dancer with the college show choir, the Highlanders. Mary Anne has served as an intern with the Isadora Duncan Foundation, the National Dance Association, and the Horn in the West in Boone and has performed in and choreographed for many concerts and shows at Lees-McRae College, including Pillow and Kaleidoscope dance concerts, annual Christmas concert, “Fiddler on the Roof,” and more and has stage managed for “Lend Me a Tenor.”
The Dance Association for North Carolina Educators is proud to name Carol Kyles Finley as the College Dance Educator of the Year.
The Dance Association for North Carolina Educators is proud to name Mary Anne Millender as the Dance Student of the Year.
Charles "Chuck" Davis
Elizabeth Voetsch
Community Dance Educator of the Year
Student Major of the Year
Dr. Charles “Chuck” Davis is the founder and Artistic Director of the African American Dance Ensemble of Durham. Majoring in Theater/Dance at Howard University, he continued his study of African dance after graduation. In 1998, he received an honorary Doctorate of Fine Arts from Medgar Evers College of New York. He also is the founder and facilitator of the Cultural Arts Safari, which makes an annual pilgrimage to the continent of Africa.
Elizabeth Voetsch is a senior sports management major at Wingate University. Beth is an honor student holding a 3.8 GPA in her major and an Academic All-American in Swimming. Her campus activities include being the captain of the women’s swimming team and its representative on the Student Athletic Committee. Beth is a member of the Student Government Association, a representative on the women’s housing committee, and an officer of the Sport Sciences Student Major Club. As a Leadership Fellow, she met with Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice at Rice’s fall 2004 visit to Wingate.
Dr. Davis is the recipient of innumerable state awards and special recognitions. Among them are the North Carolina Dance Alliance Award, North Carolina Artist Award, the North Carolina Order of the Long Leaf Pine, and the North Carolina Award in Fine Arts, the highest honor the state can bestow in the Arts. Nationally, he has been the recipient of the Bessie Award, the very prestigious Brooklyn Academy of Music Award, and in 2000, Dr. Davis was listed as one of the first 100 Irreplaceable Dance Treasures in the United States by the Dance Heritage Coalition. Earlier this year, Dr. Davis was recognized by the Kennedy Center as a Master and Caretaker of African American Choreography.
In the summer of 2004, Beth petitioned for a Wingate University Chapter of Phi Epsilon Kappa and recruited an initial class of 24. Additionally, as co-president and treasurer of the organization, she headed a group of PEK members in organizing Wingate University’s first-ever triathlon. It was a successful event involving over 60 participants. Proceeds from the event helped to send 12 Wingate University students to the national AAHPERD convention in Chicago.
For his many accomplishments as a community dance educator, the Dance Association for North Carolina Educators is proud to name Dr. Charles Davis as its Community Dance Educator of the Year.
For her academic achievement, professionalism and leadership, the Student Majors Association is proud to name Elizabeth Voetsch as the Student Major of the Year.
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Field Hockey Team. In 2004, she was named the AllConference Goalkeeper and selected for the All-Tournament Team. Additionally, in 2003 she was a second Team South Region All-American. Katy has been selected for three US Teams, is a 3-Time NCAA Academic All-American, has made the Dean’s List four times, and has been on the ACC Honor Roll each of her four years at Chapel Hill. The National Field Hockey Coaches Association selected her for the National Academic Squad for four years. In 2003-2004 and again in 2004-2005, Katy was given the ACC Top Six for Service Award, which recognizes her as one of the six student-athletes at UNC for outstanding community service. In 2004-2005, she was the Arthur Ashe, Jr. Sports Scholar Award recipient.
Kim Berg Robert Blackburn Jump Rope for Heart Coordinator of the Year When Jump Rope for Heart was first available in Guilford County nine years ago, Kim Berg was one of the first to jump on board. Each year since then, Alamance Elementary School has raised enough money to be in the top 10 for the Mid-Atlantic Affiliate of JRFH. In 1999, they placed first in both North Carolina and the Mid-Atlantic. Kim’s events are highly successful due to the innovative and holistic ways in which JRFH is done at Alamance Elementary.
Katy’s campus leadership activities include participating in the Carolina Leadership Academy, the APPLE Leadership Conference, the Student Athlete Recognition Program, Executive Officer of the Carolina CREED Mentoring Program, the Team Representative to the UNC StudentAthlete Advisory Council and the Carolina Outreach Team Representative. She finds time to volunteer for Habitat for Humanity, Adopt a Highway, Ronald McDonald House, Adopt a Classroom, Gatorade’s Get Kids in Action Program, and is a team coordinator for Share Your Holiday.
Kim has not only influenced JRFH at her school, but her influence can be seen all over North Carolina. Over the course of her 17 years of experience, she has had numerous jump rope teams and has been instrumental in helping 15 other specialists develop their own teams. The past 6 years, The Jazzy Jumpers have been a NC state demonstration team and have traveled to promote JRFH. Kim is dedicated to JRFH and works passionately to instill the importance of heart healthy lifestyles in all people in North Carolina.
For her athletic accomplishments, academic excellence, and community service, the NCAIAW is pleased to award the 2005 Scholarship to Katy Beth Tran.
Molly Dibble
Dr. Julia R. Mobley
Hoops for Heart Coordinator of the Year
NC Healthy Schools Superintendent of the Year
Molly Dibble teaches at FuquayVarina Middle School and is in her eighth year of teaching physical education. In that time, Molly has coordinated two Jump Rope for Heart events and five Hoops for Heart events. She was selected as Wake County’s Middle School Physical Education Teacher of the Year for the 2004-2005 school year.
Dr. Julia Mobley, formerly the Pamlico County Superintendent of Schools, has long been dedicated to healthy students and healthier schools. This was evidenced by her being the only School Superintendent to chair the Local Education Agency's School Health Advisory Council. Dr. Mobley retired January 1, 2005, but continued to serve as Interim Superintendent until June 30.
Molly’s enthusiasm for physical education is not only evident in her involvement and support for Joint Projects events, but in her teaching. She thoroughly enjoys teaching children to live healthy, happy lives. It is for her enthusiasm and continuing support of Joint Projects that makes the Alliance proud to recognize Molly Dibble as the Hoops for Heart Coordinator of the Year.
Under Dr. Mobley’s leadership, Pamlico County Schools implemented programs in all eight components of healthy active schools. In the summer of 2004, a Smoke Free Campuses Policy was implemented. Staff members who were smokers were encouraged to get “Quit Smoking” assistance from the Pamlico County Health Department and free nicotine patches were distributed for those who requested them.
Katy Beth Tran North Carolina Association of Intercollegiate Athletics for Women Scholarship
Dr. Mobley worked closely with Pamlico County’s only pediatrician to bring the Take 10! program into the primary and elementary schools. When staff members returned to work in July of 2004, they were given a pedometer as a “Back-toSchool” gift and were issued the challenge of “Walking to Hawaii.” The staff responded to the challenge and logged enough miles to go around the world several times. Dr. Mobley was also instrumental in collaborating with NC State University’s Cooperative Extension program to acquire Expanded Foods and Nutrition Education Program for students.
The eighteenth winner of the North Carolina Association of Intercollegiate Athletics for Women Scholarship is Katy Beth Tran, a senior double major in Biology and Exercise Science with a 3.482 GPA at The University of North Carolina. A native of Harrisburg, PA, Katy is a member of the 2004 ACC Championship Tar Heel
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Instruction did not isolate her from schools or from children. On the contrary, Kymm understands the needs of today's children and she understands the imperatives of the educational system. This has made her an extremely effective advocate for physical education and healthy active children. The North Carolina Alliance is proud to present Kymm Ballard with the NCAAHPERD Advocacy Award.
Under Dr. Mobley’s direction, the school nurse and the Asthma Coalition jointly provided workshops for parents of children with asthma as well as for others in the community suffering from the condition. Educational programs were provided for other issues, including brain injury awareness. At Pamlico County School’s first annual National Family Day celebration, bicycle helmets were given to children and adults.
Lt. Governor Beverly Perdue
Dr. Mobley truly was a superintendent actively involved in efforts to improve the health of students, teachers, and the larger community. For her leadership and work on behalf of healthy students and healthier schools, NCAAHPERD is proud to name Dr. Julia Mobley the NC Healthy Schools Superintendent of the Year.
Legislator of the Year Helping to lead North Carolina with innovative ideas and practical results has been the hallmark of Lieutenant Governor Beverly Eaves Perdue’s first term in office. North Carolina’s second-highest elected official has an impressive record of achievement as a tireless advocate for public schools, programs to help our youth quit smoking, and healthy lifestyle choices.
Kymm Ballard Advocacy Award Kymm Ballard is the Physical Education, Athletics and Sports Medicine Consultant with the North Carolina Department of Public Instruction. A 1985 graduate of Appalachian State University in Physical Education with a concentration in Health Education, Kymm also holds a Master's degree in Physical Education from Appalachian. She currently is pursuing a doctorate in Education through the University of North Carolina at Greensboro. From 1985-1996, Kymm was a health and physical education teacher and a coach. During that time, she served several years as a co-athletic director, was as an assistant principal for several months, and was the codeveloper of North Carolina's first high school demonstration school.
A former public school teacher, former director of geriatrics at a community hospital, a devoted wife and the proud mother of two sons, Beverly Perdue was elected North Carolina’s Lieutenant Governor in 2000. Prior to her election as Lieutenant Governor, Perdue served in the North Carolina House of Representatives for two terms and the North Carolina Senate for five terms. She was consistently ranked as one of the most effective members of the General Assembly. A major priority for Lieutenant Governor Beverly Perdue is ensuring quality public education across North Carolina so that every child regardless of where they live receives a firstclass education. A former public school teacher, she knows first-hand that the most important job in the world is teaching our kids, and Beverly Perdue is committed to do whatever it takes to attract and retain great teachers in North Carolina.
Kymm was awarded the National 2002 P. E. 4 Life Advocate of the Year award for her work both in North Carolina and in Washington, DC. She is also the state’s first and only teacher to receive both the Physical Education and Health Education Teacher of the Year Awards in the same year. In addition to being a Past President of the Society of State Directors for Health, Physical Education and Recreation, she also serves as part of the North Carolina infrastructure Team to Promote Coordinated School Health and on numerous committees representing physical educators through updates, meetings, and workshops. Currently, Kymm serves the National Association for Physical Education and Sport as the Public Relations Coordinator and sits on the NASPE Board of Directors.
As Chair of the State’s Health and Wellness Trust Fund Commission, Lieutenant Governor Perdue is targeting a portion of the state’s tobacco settlement funds to combat two critical health issues for North Carolinians: teen smoking and obesity. The Commission has recently partnered with Blue Cross Blue Shield North Carolina to launch Fit Together NC, a comprehensive fitness and wellness program providing healthier lifestyle choices for our citizens and communities. For her efforts in fighting teen smoking and obesity, and for her support for healthy active children, NCAAHPERD is proud to name Lieutenant Governor Beverly Eaves Perdue as Legislator of the Year.
Kymm's leadership in getting the Healthy Active Children Policy written, supported, and passed is widely known by NCAAHPERD members. Under that policy, recess and physical activity must be provided in NC schools and cannot be taken away for punishment. This year, Kymm was instrumental in getting the State Board of Education to specify a minimum of 30 minutes of daily physical activity for all K-8 students.
$50,000.00 The amount we spend on average for our annual convention.
Throughout her career, Kymm has shown extraordinary devotion and commitment to quality, daily physical education for all children. Her move to the Department of Public
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sports, Bill worked as a sales representative for AMF Voit. It was while selling that company's broad range of sporting equipment that Bill first became interested in starting his own firm. That was twenty years ago and now Bill's company, the "Bill Fritz Sports Corporation" is a nationwide supplier of athletic, physical education, health, fitness, and recreational equipment that calls Apex, North Carolina home.
Tara Jenkins June P. Galloway Undergraduate Scholarship Tara Jenkins is a senior Physical Education major at Wingate University. Her academic work at Wingate has earned her a spot on the Dean’s List for several semesters. Tara has been very active in the leadership roles both on and off campus. At Wingate, she serves the University as a Presidential Ambassador. She is active in the University’s Sport Sciences Majors Club and in Phi Epsilon Kappa. Off campus, Tara has been a member of the NCAAHPERD Executive Board and served as the Student Majors Association President in 2004. She attended the 2004 Southern District AAHPERD Student Leadership Conference in Alabama and presented at the national AAHPERD Convention in New Orleans.
The company and Bill Fritz have long been supporters of the Alliance and exhibitors at the annual Convention. It is hard to envision a convention without a Bill Fritz Sports exhibit. For at least twenty years, Bill has been an ally of NCAAHPERD and an exhibitor at the annual conventions. The Alliance is proud to present Bill Fritz and Bill Fritz Sports with the NCAAHPERD Service Award.
For her academic accomplishments, leadership, and professional involvement, NCAAHPERD is proud to award Tara Jenkins with the June P. Galloway Undergraduate Scholarship.
Sportime, Peter Savitz & Billy Gober NCAAHPERD Service Award
Diana Collier
Sportime LLC is the nation's most recognized and respected brand for quality physical education equipment, resources, and teacher training. Since 1966, Sportime has been serving the needs of physical education, recreation, and special needs professionals in our nation's public and private schools, community recreation programs and hospitals.
Nathan Taylor Dodson Undergraduate Scholarship Diana Collier is a junior at Appalachian State University, majoring in Physical Education with a Health Education minor. She is described as a hard worker who is determined to excel in the academic field, and is a dedicated member of the Physical Education Student Association and of NCAAHPERD. She is active in the field as a volunteer in professional and university organizations related to Health and Physical Education. An Appalachian State University faculty member states that he is highly impressed with Diana’s scholarship, leadership, and professional contributions. She is task focused, goal oriented and strives to master challenges placed in front of her. She is enthusiastic, outgoing, sincere, and very reflective. Another faculty member states that she anticipates Diana will make positive contributions in the lives of the young people she will teach. She works with Watauga County PEAKS to encourage youth to be physically active and involved in positive activities outside of school.
Sportime has been the exclusive sponsor of the National Association for Sport and Physical Education Teacher of the Year Program since 1989. Through its Teacher of the Year sponsorship, Sportime supports many workshops and convention presentations where the presenters are current and past national Physical Education or Dance Teachers of the Year. In addition to its convention exhibitions and presentations, Sportime has supported numerous Teachers of the Year as presenters for the Fall and Spring Physical Education Leadership Conferences. Dr. Billy Gober, Director of Education Services at Sportime LLC, has been instrumental in recognizing these outstanding physical education and dance teachers and in bringing them to North Carolina to share new and innovative teaching methods.
For her academic accomplishments, leadership, and professional involvement, NCAAHPERD is proud to award Diana Collier with the Nathan Taylor Dodson Undergraduate Scholarship.
The North Carolina Alliance acknowledges Sportime and Dr. Gober for having added to the professional development of North Carolina Alliance members and for ultimately positively affecting the instruction of quality physical education and dance for students across the state. The Alliance is pleased to present the 2005 Service Award to the Sportime Company, Mr. Peter Savitz, President, and Dr. Billy Gober, Director of Educational Services.
NCAAHPERD Service Award Bill Fritz grew up in Schenectady, New York but came south to go to school at Memphis University where he earned his Bachelor's degree in journalism. Always interested in
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Ann Hulslander
Betsy Beals
Edgar W. Hooks Jr. Young
Honor Award
Professional Award Betsy Beals has been described "as one of the most compassionate people you'll ever find.” A physical education specialist for over 35 years, Betsy began her undergraduate studies at Elon University then transferred to the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill where she finished her Bachelor’s degree. For the last 25 years, Betsy has been teaching physical education at Northwoods Elementary School in the Wake County Public School System.
As the Edgar W. Hooks Young Professional Award implies, Ann Hulslander has been described "as a rising star" by her NCAAHPERD colleagues. Ann attended Slippery Rock University and graduated with a Bachelor of Science degree in Health and Physical Education in 1998. After graduation, she was hired by Franklin County Schools as a health and physical education teacher at Cedar Creek Middle School. Later she was hired to teach at Wakefield Middle School in the Wake County Public School System. There she served as the Department Chair. In 2002, she was named the county’s Coordinating Teacher for K-12 Healthful Living.
A member of NCAAHPERD since college, Betsy held her first Alliance volunteer position as the Physical Education Association (PEA) Secretary. She has served NCAAHPERD as a PEA regional representative, delegate to the national Representative assembly, Physical Education Public Information (PEPI) Coordinator, Alliance Convention Exhibits Manager, and as the Jump Rope for Heart/Hoops for Heart Joint Projects Coordinator.
Ann has been instrumental in developing a system-wide health education testing program for grades 6-9. The Health Education Assessment Tracking System (HEATS) provides valuable data for determining yearly progress for middle school and high school health education. HEATS has led to a greater focus on the need to implement quality health education programs in Wake County's public schools.
When National Board Certification became a reality for physical education in 2001, Betsy was a pioneer for this new program. She is well known across the state and nation for her expertise in this area and she has helped countless professionals to become more familiar with the craft of teaching for student learning.
Ann has served on the Department of Public Instruction's Standard Course of Study Revision Committee, the Wake County School Health Advisory Council, and the Planning Committee for the Spring Physical Education Leadership Training. She also served as an educational advisor for the WRAL television special, Kelly's Story. The program highlighted the need for families and communities to address North Carolina's childhood obesity epidemic. In addition, Ann has been instrumental in coordinating many aspects of Wake County Public Schools' $1.3 million Carol M. White PEP Grant.
As the North Carolina Jump Rope and Hoops for Heart Joint Projects Coordinator, she reactivated the Task Force. She also established free NCAAHPERD memberships for local coordinators who raised $1,500 or more. Betsy was instrumental in starting the Jump Rope and Hoops for Heart recognition awards. Currently, Betsy is the national Joint Projects Chairperson for the American Heart Association and the American Alliance for Health, Physical Education, Recreation and Dance.
In 2004, Ann completed a Master's in Health Education from East Carolina University. She is currently the Internship Coordinator for a cadre of Wake County teachers pursuing a graduate degree in health education from East Carolina University. She has also presented at a variety of professional conferences, including the NCAAHPERD State Convention, Spring PELT, and the National AAHPERD Convention.
Betsy has received several teachers of the year awards, including recognition by her peers as Northwoods Elementary and Lincoln Heights Elementary Teacher of the Year, the North Carolina Elementary Physical Education Teacher of the Year, and the NASPE Southern District Elementary Teacher of the Year.
NCAAHPERD is proud to award this rising star the Edgar W. Hooks Young Professional Award.
For her meritorious contributions to NCAAHPERD, the Alliance is proud to present the Honor Award to one of our most beloved members, Betsy Beals.
Reach out to your classroom colleagues who will begin monitoring daily physical activity in NC schools. Share ideas and suggestions they can use inside and outside. Your overall program will be enhanced.
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Fredia Gooch
Patricia Pertalion
Honor Award
Honor Award
Fredia Gooch has been described "as one of the friendliest people working behind the scenes for NCAAHPERD.” Fredia received her undergraduate degree from Appalachian State University and her graduate degree in Health Education from the University of North Carolina at Greensboro. After graduation from Appalachian, she was hired by High Point City Schools as a physical education teacher and later as the Coordinator for Elementary Physical Education. Subsequently, Fredia served as the Health Education Family Life Resource Teacher for High Point City/Guilford County School Systems until her retirement in 2001.
Patricia "Pat" Pertalion has been described "as a human dance dynamo" by her colleagues. Pat graduated from Southeastern Louisiana University with a Bachelor of Arts degree in Speech Education. Later, she earned a Masters of Fine Arts in Dance from Florida State University. She joined the faculty of East Carolina University (ECU) in 1973. Previously she operated a private dance studio, performed with the East Carolina Summer Theatre, and hosted a daily television show. She is currently enjoying emeritus status at ECU, giving guest lectures in Dance History, and performing with the Craven Historical Dancers.
A long-time member of NCAAHPERD, Fredia has been the Chair of the North Carolina Health Education Leadership Conference, the President of the Physical Education Association, and Secretary of the NCAAHPERD Board. Currently she serves as the NCAAHPERD Convention Exhibits Manager, a position she has held since 1997.
Pat has held a variety of NCAAHPERD offices, including Alliance President, Dance Association for North Carolina Educators (DANCE) President, and Secretary for the Alliance Executive Board. On the regional level, Pat has been Southern District AAHPERD Dance Division Board member. Nationally, she has served on the AAHPERD Nominating and Recognition Awards Committee, served on the Dance Position Papers Committee, and recently completed three years on the National Dance Association Board.
Continuing with her "behind the scenes" theme, Fredia has served as an American Cancer Society volunteer, a ParentTeacher-Student Association President, a member of the Muscular Dystrophy Association, and as a member of the Archdale Parks and Recreation Advisory Board. Additionally, Fredia was instrumental in establishing an Employee Wellness Program for the High Point City Schools.
Pat is well known as a teacher and for her work as a choreographer and consultant on a variety of dance documentaries. In 1994, Pat was selected as the North Carolina and Southern District AAHPERD College/University Outstanding Dance Educator and was given the DANCE President’s Award in 1995 and 1996. In 1984, Pat collaborated with kinetic sculptor, Tom Grubb on Dimensions of Time and Space, a documentary aired on UNC-TV. In 1990 and 1991, she received national recognition from AAHPERD’s Institute of Creative Research for dance videos of her concert works done for the East Carolina Dance Theatre. She has choreographed numerous concert works, musicals, and pageants, staged plays, and shared her interest in the dances of Isadora Duncan and her dance travels in Africa and Asia via the presentation of numerous programs. For fun, Pat goes dancing!
When the Department of Public Instruction first implemented regional physical education workshops, Fredia was one of the first teachers to be involved. Fredia has also promoted quality healthful living education through presentations at the state and regional level. When the High Point City School System first started the Mentor Teacher process, Fredia was one of the first teachers selected for this cadre of master teachers. Constantly recognized by her students and peers as an outstanding teacher, she was selected as the 1989 North Carolina Health Education Teacher of the Year. For her meritorious contributions to NCAAHPERD and promotion of healthful living education, the Alliance is proud to present the Honor Award to Fredia Gooch.
For her meritorious contributions to NCAAHPERD and promotion of dance education, the Alliance is proud to present the Honor Award to Pat Pertalion.
Nominations for Awards Honor one of your colleagues and recommend them for an Association Award or an Alliance Award. Forms and information are available on our associations’ website. Have a question? Contact a member of the board. They work for you.
Want to be on the board? Volunteer your leadership skills. Complete and turn in page 41 to the registration desk. -35-
Ronald W. Hyatt
Anne Whitmire
Distinguished Friend of NCAAHPERD
Honor Award Anne Whitmire has been described "as one of the most creative and energetic physical education teachers you'll ever find.” She is a graduate of Coker College in South Carolina. After graduation, she taught health and physical education at Gordon H. Garrett High School in North Charleston, South Carolina. Anne was awarded a Masters Degree in Recreation and Parks Administration from Clemson University in 1973. In 1979, she completed her coursework from Western Carolina University for her G certification. She has been a teacher with the Henderson County Public School System for the past 28 years and is currently teaching at Clear Creek Elementary School.
Dr. Ronald W. Hyatt is a full professor in the Department of Exercise and Sport Science and Director of The Program for Public Policy in Sport. A native of Latta, S. C., Dr. Hyatt graduated from Furman University in Greenville, S. C. He coached football, basketball, baseball, and track in S. C. high schools before attending UNC-CH to earn his master’s degree in 1958. From 1958-1960, Doc Hyatt coached, taught and ran the intramural program at Lee-Edwards High School in Asheville, N. C. before moving to Barton College in Wilson, N. C. for one year. At Barton, he taught professional preparation courses, coached tennis, and ran the intramural program. From 1962-64, he taught at Campbell University, directed the intramural program, and supervised practice teachers.
Anne has served as the Physical Education Association (PEA) President, chair of the Spring Physical Education Leadership Training, PEA Western Region Representative, and a member of the NCAAHPERD Board from 1994-1996. She has also been instrumental in providing physical education workshops and teacher in-service trainings across the state including the Department of Public Instruction’s regional workshops.
Dr. Hyatt moved to the North Carolina Advancement School, a school for underachieving students started by Governor Sanford, and stayed there until 1966 when he returned to UNC-CH as intramural sports director and assistant professor of physical education. He earned his doctorate in 1970 in physical education, recreation, higher education, and administration.
Within her school and community, Anne has served on the Hendersonville YMCA Board, Hendersonville City and County Recreation Board, developed a Sink or Swim Program for six graders, coordinated Jump Rope for Heart events for ten years, and sponsored her school's One Wheel Bears Unicycle Team and Physical Education Club Demonstration Teams. She has written and received a variety of grants that have helped her school to implement one of the best elementary physical education programs in the state. In 2001, she received grants from the Partnership for Health and a Creative Teacher Grant to strengthen her school's physical education program.
A member of NCAAHPERD for over 40 years, Dr. Hyatt has served as president of NCAAHPERD twice, president of SDAAHPERD, and received honorary awards by 9 different organizations. Among them, both the state and national AHPERD Honor Awards, the highest our state and national organizations can bestow. The North Carolina High School Association named Dr. Hyatt as one of the citizens that had contributed the most to high school athletics over the past 50 years. Ron has served as the Chair of Governor’s Council on Physical Fitness and Health, Co-chair of the NC Governor’s Council Older Adult Committee, NC Heart Disease and Stroke Prevention Task Force, and as Past Chair of the NC Parks and Recreation Legislative Committee.
In 1985, Anne was selected to be the North Carolina Elementary Physical Education Teacher of the Year. Additionally, she received the Lifetime Achievement Award from the NCAAHPERD Physical Education Association in 2004.
Dr. Hyatt has served as a deacon, a Sunday school teacher, a PTA President, a Cub Scout leader and also managed to spend 41 years in the NC National Guard before retiring as a colonel. During those 41 years, Dr. Hyatt spent part of his time as commandant of the NC Military Academy, which trains and commissions officers for the National Guard. As best stated in the University Gazette (UNC-Chapel Hill) newspaper, there is “no list [that] could be written nor any award crafted to capture the full sweep of his contributions.”
For her meritorious contributions to NCAAHPERD and promotion of physical education, the Alliance is proud to present the Honor Award to Anne Whitmire.
In 2004, Dr. Hyatt received the state’s highest award for his leadership, scholarship and service to advance public fitness programs in North Carolina. The Order of the Long-Leaf Pine is presented to individuals who have a proven record of leadership and service to the state of North Carolina. Dr. Hyatt’s record of service is a product of his “can-do-and-gladto-do-it” willingness to take on whatever task was asked of him. For his many years of leadership, dedication, service, and friendship, the Alliance is proud to name Dr. Ronald Hyatt a Distinguished Friend of NCAAHPERD.
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North Carolina Alliance for Athletics, Health, Physical Education, Recreation and Dance
Virginia Association of Health, Physical Education, Recreation and Dance
Presidential Citation
Presidential Citation
As a young teacher in Fairfax County Virginia, I heard Virginia AHPERD President JC Range challenge young professionals to join and be involved in leadership roles in their state association. Because of his challenge, I was given many opportunities for professional development, including being elected to the Elementary Council. As an early childhood specialist, I was honored to work with physical education pioneers Dr. Caroline Sinclair and Dr. Eleanor Bobbit. Experiences like these helped me to develop a quality physical education program for my students, and Graham Road Elementary served as one of the first Virginia Physical Education Demonstration Schools. Years later, my involvement with VAHPERD brought another school, White Oak Elementary School, recognition as a Physical Education Demonstration School.
Within a month of arriving in North Carolina, I was asked to serve as State Coordinator for Jump Rope for Heart. Since that wonderful welcome by the NCAAHPERD Board eighteen years ago, I have had many other opportunities to be involved with the North Carolina Alliance and its partner, the American Heart Association. As an elementary physical education teacher in Carteret County, I was involved with the first Fall Physical Education Leadership Training organized by Jerry Price and Billy Graham. This led to involvement in the Physical Education Association as secretary, president-elect and president, and the opportunity to serve on the NCAAHPERD Executive Board. In 2003, I was elected NCAAHPERD Vice President. These three years have been exciting and challenging with the passage of the Healthy Active Children’s Policy and the opportunity to be involved with many partners in working for healthy and active children. The Alliance Boards for the past three years have produced some of the most exciting leaders in the fields of athletics, health, physical education, recreation and dance all working together to meet our mission. I especially want to cite our student leaders who have been outstanding and will present a strong future for the Alliance. It has been my honor to represent the Alliance at Southern District AAHPERD and AAHPERD.
A perfect leadership opportunity was presented to me when I was selected to serve as the first Jump Rope for Heart State Coordinator and to organize the first JRFH Demonstration Team, “The Jumping Eagles,” culminating in conducting workshops in Australia. My heartfelt thanks go to Virginia AHPERD Executive Directors, Past Presidents, board members, and fellow members, who had faith in me, and provided so many opportunities for professional development and leadership.
My heartfelt thanks go to the Executive Directors, Assistant Executive Directors, Past Presidents, Executive Board Members, and all members of NCAAHPERD for their continued support of my professional and leadership development.
Did you know that as of November 1, 2005 NCAAHPERD had over 2,052 paid members? With a large membership, we are taken more seriously when we represent you at the General Assembly in Raleigh and in Washington. We represent you. Thank you for keeping your membership current.
Not getting your monthly newsletter, email updates, or bi-annual North Carolina Journal? Have you moved? Did you change your email address? Did you have a name change? Are you getting more than one copy of the newsletter or journal? Call or email the office and let us know. You can now update your own contact information on our website with your personal username and password. Did you not know you had one or did you just forget? Go to the website and the system will automatically email you both your username and password. Try it!
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NCAAHPERD Convention Evaluation Form Instructions: Please take the time to reflect on your impressions, appreciations, and satisfactions with the areas of the convention listed below. All comments and suggestions are valuable to the next year Convention Planning Committee in delivering a quality convention for you. Please be specific in you comments. Thank you! You may place completed evaluations in the box provided at the registration desk as you leave or you may mail it to: Convention Evaluation Committee, NCAAHPERD, PO Box 27751, Raleigh, NC 27611-7751
Dates Attended: Wednesday
Thursday
Friday
Saturday
Email if you would like a copy of the results: _________________________________________ 5=Excellent 1=Poor 1. Overall Convention 1 2 3 4 5 Comments: __________________________________________________________________________________________________ ____________________________________________________________________________________________________________ 2. Diversity of Topics 1 2 3 4 5 Comments: __________________________________________________________________________________________________ ____________________________________________________________________________________________________________ 3. Quality of Speakers 1 2 3 4 5 Comments: __________________________________________________________________________________________________ ____________________________________________________________________________________________________________ 4. Convention Schedule 1 2 3 4 5 Comments: __________________________________________________________________________________________________ ____________________________________________________________________________________________________________ 5. Exhibits 1 2 3 4 5 Comments: __________________________________________________________________________________________________ ____________________________________________________________________________________________________________ 6. Meeting Rooms/Facilities 1 2 3 4 5 Comments: __________________________________________________________________________________________________ ____________________________________________________________________________________________________________ 7. Convention Meals 1 2 3 4 5 Comments: __________________________________________________________________________________________________ ____________________________________________________________________________________________________________ 8. Registration Procedures 1 2 3 4 5 Comments: __________________________________________________________________________________________________ ____________________________________________________________________________________________________________ 9. If exhibits were open Wednesday evening (2006), would you attend? Yes No Comments: __________________________________________________________________________________________________ ____________________________________________________________________________________________________________ 10. Program Book/Format 1 2 3 4 5 Comments: __________________________________________________________________________________________________ ____________________________________________________________________________________________________________ 11. Are you staying for Saturday? Yes No Why/why not? _______________________________________________________________________________________________ ___________________________________________________________________________________________________________ 12. If you do not stay for Saturday sessions, what program attractions would motivate you to stay? ___________________________________________________________________________________________________________ ___________________________________________________________________________________________________________ 13. Suggested Future Speakers - please include name, address and topic Comments: __________________________________________________________________________________________________ ____________________________________________________________________________________________________________ 14. Suggested topics for NCAAHPERD-sponsored Workshops/Institutes throughout the year: Comments: __________________________________________________________________________________________________ ____________________________________________________________________________________________________________ Please feel free to use additional paper to provide comments.
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Past NCAAHPERD Award Recipients 1977 1978
Edgar J. Hooks, Jr. Young Professional Award 1986 1987 1988 1989 1990 1991 1992 1993 1994 1995 1996 1997 1998 1999 2000 2001 2002 2003 2004 2005
David Moore, Moore County Public Schools Robert Johnson, Appalachian State University No Award Given Charles Hardy, UNC-Chapel Hill Jackie Current, NCDPI No Award Given No Award Given Anne Sheehan, S. Eastern Middle School Donna Spinks, Guilford County Schools Susan Jackson, WakeMed Melanie Champion, Brunswick County Schools Kymm Ballard, NCDPI Shellie Pfohl, Be Active North Carolina Brett Everhart, Appalachian State University No Award Given No Award Given No Award Given Dan Grube, Western Carolina University No Award Given Tammy Schilling, UNC-Greensboro Michelle Wallen, NCDPI Ann Hulslander, Wake County Schools
1979 1980 1981 1982 1983 1984 1985 1986 1987
NCAAHPERD Honor Award 1966 1967 1968 1969 1970 1971
1972
1974 1975
1976
1988 1989 1990 1991
Oliver Kelly Cronwell, UNC-Chapel Hill Julia E. Grout, Duke University Charles E. Spencer, Jr., NCDPI No Award Given Ethel Martus (Lawther), UNC-Greensboro Sally Southerland, Charlotte-Mecklenburg Nell Stallings, East Carolina University Helen Stuart, NCDPI Harold Barrow, Wake Forest University Ruth White Fink, UNC-Chapel Hill Doris Hutchinson, Greensboro City Schools Elizabeth Bookout, Duke University Paul Deer, NC State University Norman E. Leafe, NCDPI LeRoy T. Walker, NC Central University Margaret Ann Green, UNC-Greensboro H. Carroll King, Ravenscroft School Randa D. Russell, NC A&T University Helen M. Hartshorn, Western Carolina University Rosemary McGee, UNC-Greensboro Eva Doris McKinney, UNC-Greensboro William Henry Peacock, UNC-Chapel Hill Clarence E. Gaines, Sr., Winston-Salem State Univ Edgar W. Hooks, Jr , East Carolina University John L. Clements, Wake County Schools Virginia Hart, Mars Hill College Jay Davis Massey, Meredith College Floyd Monroe Woody, NCDPI Joseph Richard Amendola , Salisbury City Schools Rosalie Bryant, Charlotte-Mecklenburg Schools Jim Tudder Hamilton, Western Carolina University Otto Hugh Spilker, Western Carolina University
1992 1993 1994 1995 1996 1997 1998 1999 2000 2001 2002 2003 2004 2005
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No Award Given George Parker Powell, Charlotte-Mecklenburg Adele Celeste Ulrich, UNC-Greensboro Gail Murl Hennis, UNC-Greensboro Ruth Rogers Magher, Queens College Marjorie Crisp, Wake Forest University Ronald W. Hyatt, UNC-Chapel Hill George Shackelford, Jr, NCDPI Ernest Marvin Allen, UNC-Chapel Hill Edward Lamar Cloyd Jr., Atlantic Christian College Marie I. Riley, UNC-Greensboro Robert Blackburn, Gardner-Webb University Phyllis Pharr, Queens College Marian Solleder, UNC-Greensboro John Federick, Duke University Harvey Murphy, UNC-Charlotte William Russell, Winston Salem/Forsyth County Dorothy Casey, Wake Forest University Vaughn K Christian, Appalachian State University Jan C. Watson, Appalachian State University Kenneth B. Wheeler, Henderson County Schools William G. Alston, Cumberland County Schools Walter C. Cornwell, Catawba County Schools Lynne P. Gaskin, UNC-Greensboro Robert C. Barnes, East Carolina University Larry Bostian, UNC-Charlotte Jane R. Jenkins, Lenoir-Rhyne College William P. Walker, Mars Hill College Herb Appenzeller, Guilford College Frances Burns Hogan, UNC-Chapel Hill Linda Harrill Rudisill, Gaston County Schools David Gardner, Jr., Wake Medical Center Donna Breitenstein, Appalachian State University Paula J. Hildebrand, Alice Aycock Poe Center Kate R. Barrett, UNC-Greensboro Larry G. McDonald, NCDPI Angela Lumpkin, NC State University Beverly Sanford, Science Museums of Charlotte Lynn Berle, NC State University Jim Rich, NCDPI Artie Kamiya, NCDPI No Award Given No Award Given John LeBar, Duke University Ron Morrow, UNC-Greensboro Cathy Thomas, NCDHHS John Bennett, UNC-Wilmington Bonnie Ferneau, Carteret County Schools Kathy Teer Crumpler Sherry Lynn Salyer, UNC-Chapel Hill No Award Given Betsy Beals, Wake County Schools Fredia Gooch, Guilford County Schools Patricia Pertalion, East Carolina University Anne Whitmire, Henderson County Schools
C.E. U. Renewal Credit Form • To get 1.2 CEU credits, you must be at the convention Thursday and Friday OR Friday and Saturday. • To get 1.8 CEU credits, you must be at the convention Thursday, Friday and Saturday. Renewal credit forms may be picked up on Friday between 4:30 p.m. and 5:30 p.m. at the registration desk by completing and turning in this renewal credit form. On Saturday, renewal credit forms may be picked up between 11:30 a.m. and 12:30 p.m. at the registration desk. No forms will be mailed. No forms will be mailed. No forms will be mailed. Please answer the following questions: 1. Of the sessions you attended, which three had the most significant professional impact on you? a. b. c. 2. What has been the most important thing you learned at the NCAAHPERD convention? 3. Identify three things you learned that you could take back to your professional situation & use. a. b. c. 4. I am applying for 1.8 CEU credits and have attended this conference the equivalent of 18 hours. My signature below validates this attendance. ______________(initials) I am applying for 1.2 CEU credits and have attended this conference the equivalent of 12 hours. My signature below validates this attendance. ______________(initials) __________________________________ __________________________________________ Print Name Signature __________________________________ __________________________________________ Address City, State, Zip You may turn in this renewal credit form on Friday between 4:00pm and 5:00pm at the registration desk and pick up your 1.2 credits. On Saturday, renewal credit forms may be turned in 12:00-1:00pm for 1.8 credits. Please do
not ask us to give you credits early. We have been given strict guidelines by DPI.
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JUMP ROPE/ HOOPS FOR HEART 2006 GRANT APPLICATION (Deadline to return this grant July 1, 2006) NORTH CAROLINA ALLIANCE FOR ATHLETICS, HEALTH, PHYSICAL EDUCATION, RECREATION AND DANCE Name:__________________________________ ____________________________________ School:________________________________________ _____________________________ Address: _______________________________________Phone during day: ______________ City:_________________________ State:_________ Zip: ___________ LEA: _______ County:___________
NCAAHPERD Member? ___yes
Number of years you have coordinated a JRFH/HFH event: _________ How much money was raised at your last event? ______________ Population of school: _____ Number of students daily _____ classes per day _______ Have you ever received a JRFH/HFH grant? _______
What year(s)?________
1. Describe your present physical education/healthful living program, i.e., the facilities, your goals/objectives and what makes your program unique. 2. Describe why applying for this grant will improve your overall physical education program and promote healthy active learners. Connect your project with the Standard Course of Study and the Healthy Active Children’s Policy. Include how and which students will benefit from this grant and include a timeline. Explain the rationale for applying. Provide plan for evaluating your project and include a blank evaluation in this grant application. 3. I understand that if I (we) receive this grant, my evaluation of the project will be submitted to Karen Lux, NCAAHPERD Joint Project Coordinator by July 1. With my signature(s) below, I state that I am a current member of NCAAHPERD as of July 1st and that I will coordinate a JRFH or HFH event during 2005-2006. Applicant(s) Signature: ____________________________________Date________________ ____________________________________Date________________ Attach this cover sheet to the top of your grant proposal. (Limit to one page please.) Return all grant applications by July 1st to: Karen Lux, Joint Projects Coordinator, NCAAHPERD, P.O. Box 27751, Raleigh NC 27611-7751. Questions call: 1-888-8406500.
Jump and Hoops Hotline 1-800-208-5605
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Hotel Map 1
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Hotel Map 2
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2006 59th Annual NCAAHPERD Convention ”Sailing into a Healthy Active Future” Program Proposal Form November 16-18, 2006 Greensboro, North Carolina Form is available and can be completed on the web: www.ncaahperd.org First name: ________________Last name: _______________E-mail: ___________________ To propose a program for the 2006 NCAAHPERD convention, provide the following information. All proposals must be received no later than March 31, 2006. All requests will be considered and screened by the program committee. Those selected will be notified prior to August 1, 2006. You must be a current member of NCAAHPERD and register for the convention to present. 1. Title of proposed program:____________________________________________________ 2a. For consideration submit a 250-300-word summary of your proposed program: (type on separate sheet and attach)
2b. Submit a 2 or 3 sentence for the convention program beginning with action words, i.e., Explore, learn, discover, engage, collaborate, organize, etc. (type on separate sheet and attach) 3a. Speaker Name: ____________________NCAAHPERD Member Due Date: _____________ □ Check if new member Street Address: _____________________________________________ City: ________________________________State: ______Zip: ________ School/Business: ____________________School/Business Address: ______________________ City: _______________State: ____Zip: _______ Phone (W): ___________ Phone (H) ________ 3b. Second Speaker Name: 3a. Speaker Name: ____________________NCAAHPERD Member Due Date: _____________ □ Check if new member Street Address: _____________________________________________ City: ________________________________State: ______Zip: ________ Email: ____________ School/Business: ____________________School/Business Address: ______________________ City: _______________State: ____Zip: _______ Phone (W): ___________ Phone (H) ________ 3c. If more people are presenting, attach a list, provide name, phone number and email. 4. Suggested Presider: Name:_______________Phone: ____________Email: ______________ 5. Association: Select only ONE: NCAAE (Athletics) NCAAHE (Health) PEA (Physical Education) NCAIR (Intramurals/Recreation) DANCE SMA (Student Majors) 6. Suggested Program Length: 60 minutes 75 minutes 1/2 day workshop 7. Space Requirements: Lecture Activity-based Panel Breakout/group discussion 8. Expected Audience Size: 0-25 26-50
51-100 101 up
9. Audio-Visual Requirement: Overhead Projector TV/VCR Slide Projector Internet Connection None Other: Note: "Other" Audio-visuals cannot be guaranteed.
DEADLINE: MARCH 31, 2006 Complete and mail to: Convention Program Chair: Donna Woolard, Alliance President-elect, PO Box 27751, Raleigh, NC 27611-7751, Cell Phone: 919-820-0549, Office 910-893-1366, Toll Free 800-334-4111 x1366. Email Address: president-elect@ncaahperd.org. Any changes to your proposal please include the title of your proposal and the Association in which it is reviewed. Questions? 1-888-840-6500. Form is available and can be completed on the web: www.ncaahperd.org
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2006 Spring Physical Education Leadership Training April 27-29, 2006 YMCA Blue Ridge Assembly, Black Mountain, NC Background: The National Spring Physical Education Leadership Training is one of the premier K-12 physical education conferences in the country. Pack your bags to GO WEST and spend a few days in the beautiful North Carolina mountains. We plan to have some awesome presenters to provide you with a variety of ideas and activities to take back to share with your students. The YMCA Blue Ridge Assembly is located in Black Mountain, North Carolina. The town of Black Mountain has something for everyone: pottery & jewelry, outdoor adventures, good food & entertainment, and a General Store that has everything!!! The YMCA Blue Ridge Assembly Conference Center has a unique blend of modern facilities and historic structures surrounded by 1200 acres of hiking trails, mountain streams, and tennis courts.
Enroll Now! And Save $$$$. Fee Goes Up after DEADLINE: April 7, 2006 Questions? Please contact: Cynthia Terrell, SPELT director, at spelt@ncaahperd.org WE WILL SEE YOU THERE!!! Registration Fee: * Circle One: Staying Off Campus: $145.00 Before 4/7/2006
Must be a current NCAAHPERD member. New or renewing member add $30. NO REFUNDS
$135.00
Staying 2 to a room: Before 4/7/2006
Single Room:
$180.00
• Is this your first PELT?
$170.00
$225.00
Before 4/7/2006
New/Renew Member: Total Fee Enclosed:
Yes
No
$200.00
• List dietary restrictions: _________________________________
$ 30.00 $_______
• List any emergency medical needs: ________________________
Limited to the first 100 applicants – Checks will be returned. Form available online at www.ncaahperd.org
*Includes all meals, lodging, handouts and fun that you will have while attending SPELT! Print Name:
(for name tag)
Home Address: City:
State:
Zip:
Male:
Female:
.
(Sending next year’s registration by e-mail) Current Member? Y N
E-Mail Address: I would like to room with:
.
(We’ll try our best to accommodate this… NO promises. Room assignments on first come basis.) NCAAHPERD Membership Information (If you are renewing and information hasn’t changed, leave blank)
Association:
Area of Employment:
Type of Employment:
(Circle first and second choice) First Second 1 1 Dance (Dance Ed.) 2 2 NCAAE (Ath. Ed.) 3 3 NCAAHE (Health) 4 4 NCAIR (Intra./Rec.) 5 5 PEA
(Circle one number)
(Circle one number)
1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. 7.
1 Middle School Teacher 2. Chairperson or Dean 3. Coach 4. College Teacher 5. Elementary Teacher 6. Secondary Teacher 7. Retired
Please make check payable to and return to: NCAAHPERD P.O. Box 27751 Raleigh, NC 27611 1-888-840-6500 Fax: 1-888-840-6329
Elementary Middle School High School Comm./JC Private/Pub. Ag. Central Off. Health Promo.
MASTERCARD/VISA INFORMATION Name on card: ____________________________________ Expiration Date: _____________ Amount: $___________ Number: _________-__________-__________-_________
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CALL FOR VOLUNTEERS IF YOU ARE INTERESTED IN SERVING ON AN ALLIANCE COMMITTEE, PLEASE COMPLETE THIS FORM AND RETURN IT TO NCAAHPERD. THE PRESIDENT-ELECT OF THE ALLIANCE WILL USE THESE FORMS TO IDENTIFY POTENTIAL NEW MEMBERS OF STANDING COMMITTEES. RETURN THIS FORM TO: NCAAHPERD, PO BOX 27611, RALEIGH, NC 27611-7751. Name (First, Middle, Last) _____________________________________________________ Mailing Address ______________________________________________________________ ____________________________________________________________________________ School ______________________________________________________________________ E-mail ______________________________ Phone _____________________________ I am interested in serving on the following committees (circle): City/County Directors ● Constitution ● Ethnic Minority Issues ● Friends ● Historical ● Awards ● Long Range Planning ● Membership ● Necrology ● Nominating ● Public Relations/Public Affairs ● Registration ● Scholarship Research Return this to the registration desk and someone will be in touch with you. Thanks for helping! GO TO THE NCAAHPERD WEB SITE TO VIEW THE OPERATING CODES FOR THESE COMMITTEES: WWW.NCAAHPERD.ORG
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FUTURE DATES NCAAHPERD Convention
AAHPERD Convention
2006 November 14-18, Greensboro, NC 2007 November 6-10, Greensboro, NC
2006 April 25-29 Salt Lake City, Utah 2007 March 13-17 Baltimore, Maryland 2008 April 8-12 Ft. Worth, Texas
Southern District AAHPERD Convention 2006 March 1 -5, Virginia Beach, Virginia 2007 Chattanooga, Tennessee 2008 Ft. Worth, Texas Register online for AAHPERD Conventions – www.aahperd.org/
WE SUPPORT JUMP ROPE FOR HEART AND HOOPS FOR HEART!
OUR NORTH CAROLINA HEART TEAM – NUMBER ONE IN THE USA… FOR THE SECOND YEAR IN A ROW! American Heart Association Donna Ashcraft, Vice-President of North and South Carolina Youth Mkt Mid-Atlantic Affiliate, Phone: 919-463-8331 Email: donna.ashcraft@heart.org YOUTH MARKET DIRECTORS
Michelle Gray (Raleigh) Phone: 919-463-8333 Email: michelle.gray@heart.org Judy Howard (Wilmington) Phone: 910-686-3699 Email: Jhoward@heart.org Johnna Snell (Charlotte) Phone:704-374-0632 Email: Johnna.snell@heart.org Jennifer White (Greensboro) Phone: 336-668-0167 Email: jennifer.white@heart.org Deborah Shook (Asheville)Phone: 828-281-4796 Email: Deborah.shook@heart.org Ginger Edmiston (N.Wilkesboro) Phone: 336-667-3833 Email: ginger.edmiston@heart.org Kim Hudson (Elizabeth City) Phone: 757-623-2075 Email: kim.hudson@heart.org Beverly McMillen (Fayetteville) Phone: 843-626-3939 Email: beverly.mcmillen@heart.org NCAAHPERD Task Force – Jump Rope/Hoops Regional Reps Karen Lux – Coordinator (06), Cindy Drake (05), Jennie Jones (05), Cheryl Edwards (05), Anne Whitmire (06), Colleen Buchholz (06), Sharon Carter (06), Marie Flowe-Dawson (07), Melanie Champion (07), to be filled (07), Demo Team Coaches: Karen Lux, Kim Berg, Cheryl Edwards, Susan Cruickshanks, Kenny Connors
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NCAAHPERD wishes to acknowledge all the many teachers and students who participate in Jump Rope for Heart and Hoops for Heart. You contribute to Heart Research and NCAAHPERD. Please continue your support of these outstanding educational programs. We are very proud of our more than twenty-eight year partnership with the American Heart Association and look forward to many more years.
NCAAHPERD is a 501(C)(3) not for profit organization of Athletics, Health, Physical Education, Recreation, and Dance professionals whose mission is to provide advocacy, professional development, and unity for health, physical education, recreation, dance, and athletics professionals and students in order to enhance and promote the health of North Carolinians. Memberships available 1-888-840-6500. PO Box 27751, Raleigh, N.C.27611. Email ncaahperd@ncaahperd.org.
NCAAHPERD PO Box 27751 Raleigh, North Carolina 27611-7751 1-888-840-6500 â—? 1-888-840-6FAX(329) WWW.NCAAHPERD.ORG
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