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Hands-on experience among benefits of W. Virginia HS Athletic Training program

Article reposted from Jackson Newspapers
Author: BRIAN HARPER

The Ripley High School Athletic Training program provides its students with invaluable experience, both in the classroom and on the playing field. But it also provides its students with a path to a career, both in high school and beyond.

Former Ripley AT student and current University of Charleston Athletic Training major Erica Gibson is one such example of that career path.
Gibson, a 2014 Ripley High graduate, is spending the 2016 football season assisting Ripley Athletic Trainer Steve Lough and his staff of student-trainers as a part of her continuing education. For Gibson, the Ripley AT program not only started her on the athletic training path, but continues to enrich her with hands-on experience in the field.

“I’m an athletic training major,” Gibson said earlier this season, “We do a lot with the sports teams, so we have a certain amount of clinical hours we have to get. I’ve participated in sports my whole life, but when I was [at Ripley] I thought it was definitely something that I could do and made it seem more fun.”

Gibson is among the latest Ripley AT program alumni that has moved on to the “next level” of athletic training. Like any endeavor, one of the marks of success of a program is the number of those that take the lessons learned and apply them going forward. When Lough began utilizing student-trainers six years ago, which allowed the program to flourish and reach the level it has today.

Gibson, along with this year’s crop of student-trainers–seniors Allie Hamilton, Brooklyn Hively, Olivia Ludtman, Laurel Miller and Allison Phillips–have spent countless hours on the various athletic fields tending to the needs of the numerous Ripley High athletes.

It’s a demanding task, to be sure, but one that goes a long way in providing its students with the necessary tools and real-world experience that can put them on a track toward the athletic training profession.

“The biggest thing is when we have students that come through our program here and their excitement with athletic training and they want to go on into the profession, it makes us feel a lot better,” Lough said, “It is a very long and tiring profession. You have to be accepted into programs. They only accept 12 to 15 into the program at UC and myself being a preceptor for them as a clinician, it is a real benefit for [the students].”

While the Ripley AT program provided students like Gibson with the opportunity to further their interest in athletic training, it’s the actual hands-on experience it provides that really drives home the reality of being an athletic trainer.
“I definitely got to be a pro at making Gatordade,” Gibson said with a laugh, “Soccer games were really fun. I couldn’t work football games in high school because I was a band member, so I worked soccer games with Mr. Lough. The whole, overall aspect of it was nice. They were my classmates, but then I also got to help them and see how they did with their sport.”

With a solid track in place, the hope now is that examples like Gibson will continue to provide an illustration of life after the Ripley AT program. As far as Lough is concerned, getting them to the next level is a welcome byproduct of the time spent in the program.

“Who wants to continue on is the biggest thing,” Lough said, “I get to see these kids progress and enjoy the program as much as I do. I think with the Athletic Training 1 class, which is a junior level class, it gives them the basic information about the medical field. As they go on, it gets more in-depth as to what it’s like to be a trainer. Then by the time they’re seniors, they go through what it’s like at the college level: they go through an interview process, an application process and so on. With some students, they want to become chiropractors or phsyical therapists. This is a great way to start it and they have the hours to do that.”

 

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West Virginia High School Student Aides Put Athletic Training Lessons to Use

Article reposted from WCHS8
Author: BROOKE THIBODAUX

Ripley takes on Huntington on its home turf Friday.

While most will be focusing on the game, a group of young women will be on the field, ready to help atheles right away.

Steven Lough joined the Ripley Vikings ten years ago and established the school’s athletic program in 2010.

He said students learn hard work and determination

“The ability to go place to place ability to change time frames to work extra hours. Some coaches will say we start at 3 o’clock and will be done by 9 o’clock,” Loug said.

Lough said many students are athletes and have to complete hours outside of their own practice, like Laurel Miller, who is also a cross country runner.

To him, the five seniors taking the course this year stand out,

but the class can be intimidating.

“I think the most intimidating is seeing an injury they haven’t seen before such as a fracture or seeing someone just laying there, not knowing what to do at that point,” Lough said.

Miller ran into that a few weeks ago during a cross country meet.

“This time last year I would have had no idea what to do,” Miller said.

Miller was running when she came across a girl who had fainted on the trail and no one had stopped to help her.

she tried asking the girl if she was okay.

“I asked her to move a finger if she could here me and she didn’t move. So at this point I knew something was wrong, so I ran back, got my coach got help and waited with her until the ems got there,” Miller said.

Miller said class prepared her and helped her act quickly.

“What if I hadn’t of stopped. Would anyone else would have? And it’s just one of those things that’s scarry to thing about. But I’m definitely glad that I stopped,” Miller said.

Lough was named atheletic trainer of the year for the state in 2012 and 2014.

Miller said she’s interested in studying sports medicine or physical therapy when she graduates.