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Marshall University athletic training professor named best in WV

Article reposted from Herald-Dispatch
Author: Herald-Dispatch

Dr. Zachary Garrett of the Marshall University College of Health Professions received the Athletic Training Educator of the Year award Saturday, March 4, at the annual West Virginia Athletic Training Association Sports Medicine Conference, according to a news release from the university.

Garrett, an assistant professor and clinical education coordinator in the college’s Department of Athletic Training, was nominated by senior athletic training student Grace Jarrell.

Garrett said he was surprised by the nomination and grateful to receive the award.

“It’s truly an amazing feeling to know what you do for a living is impactful and that your students appreciate the time and effort you put in trying to be a great educator,” Garrett said in the release. “It has been a trying year with the completion of my doctoral degree, teaching classes and preparing students for their board of certification exam. To have students appreciate your dedication in the classroom and putting them in positions to become successful is an amazing feeling.”

Dr. Dan Martin was the first Marshall University professor to receive this award, in 2004. Dr. Joseph Beckett, director of Marshall’s athletic training program, also received the award in 2013 while at Concord University.

Garrett said the university has been working diligently over the last five years to provide exposure for the athletic training program at the state, district and national levels.

“Marshall’s athletic training program has had great success recently with students passing their board of certification exam and gaining opportunities for employment or acceptance into graduate schools. We have recent graduates practicing as athletic trainers in professional sports, collegiate settings, high schools, hospitals, industrial settings and outpatient therapy clinics,” Garrett said. “That’s probably the most rewarding part of my job – to see students go on and do big things. To know what you’ve done has impacted them in a positive way is rewarding, and I am grateful for the opportunity to work with them.”

For more information about Marshall’s athletic training program, visit www.marshall.edu/athletic-training online.

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Marshal Program Director Selected for NATA Committee

Article reposted from The Parthenon
Author: Noah Gillispie

Dr. Joseph Beckett, director and Professional Master of Science in Athletic Training Program at Marshall University, was selected to be on the NATA Professional Responsibility Committee for the District III Mid Atlantic Athletic Trainers Association.

The goal of the committee is to support the legal, ethical and regulatory standards by defining, encouraging and supporting adherence.

Beckett was the only representative from West Virginia to be chosen for the committee.

Some of the other schools included in the PRC are University of Arizona, University of Southern Arkansas, University of Rhode Island and Northern Illinois University.

“I would like to see us here at Marshall be a school that other institutions look to in terms of these legal, ethical and regulatory standards,” Beckett said.

An example that Beckett gave of what the committee would be doing, was developing practical situations that adhere to the standards in order to educate more effectively in the classroom.

Some real issues that athletic trainers might face in their fields; what to do when faced with sexual harassment from coaches, patients (who may be athletes) and peers, patients with suicidal tendencies, patients who have been the victims of hate crimes related to race or sexuality and avoiding slander and libel on social media, may not always be addressed or clear cut. This committee will work on defining the ethical and legal standards on what to do in those difficult situations as an athletic trainer. It will give trainers knowledge and resources in order to handle them confidentially and confidently.

“We want to inform students the proper preventive actions so they don’t get named in a lawsuit,” Beckett said. “But on the other hand, say you do get served. Somebody shows up at your door. They serve you with papers. What do you do? A lot of people don’t know.”

Beckett said this committee is a founding committee, which means that this is the first time this group has been brought together.

Beckett said the committee was important because the field is changing so much that they don’t want any trainers to not know what to do, or worse, to think there is nothing they can do.

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West Virginia High School to Use Marshall Athletic Trainers

Article reposted from Charleston Gazette-Mail
Author: Laura Haight

Putnam County Schools is trying out a new type of athletic trainer for Hurricane High School.

The Putnam County Board of Education approved an agreement between Putnam County Schools, University Physicians and Surgeons and Marshall University to hire a graduate assistant athletic trainer.

This position will come at no cost to the board or Hurricane High School.

Superintendent John Hudson told the board this agreement will be a trial run, and if all goes well the other high schools in the district may be included.

“It’s a win-win for both people,” Board Member William Legg said of the graduate assistant getting experience and the high school getting a free service.

The graduate assistant would have to meet all provisions as required in state code, Hudson told the board. He was also confident that the contract would prevent the schools from any legal issues if something were to go wrong.

The board also accepted a Major Improvement Grant contract from the West Virginia School Building Authority to renovate Buffalo Elementary School.

The elementary school will receive new window replacements, ceiling tiles, lighting fixtures and a new cafeteria to bring the school up to date. Renovations would have come sooner, but the district had been exploring the option of building a new school with Mason County. However, that agreement fell through.

“This specific project is much needed at Buffalo Elementary,” Hudson said.

The board still has to go through with the bid process and hopes to begin work on the school by late spring 2017.

Most of the work would be done while students aren’t in school, and Hudson said at a previous meeting that he expects the project will be complete by fall 2017.

In total, the project will cost a little under $700,000, with the district paying roughly half of that.

The Putnam County Board of Education will meet again Aug. 15 at 7 p.m. at the central office in Winfield.

Reach Laura Haight at laura.haight@wvgazettemail.com, 304-348-4843 or follow @laurahaight_ on Twitter.

– See more at: http://www.wvgazettemail.com/news-putnam-county/20160801/hurricane-high-to-use-graduate-assistant-athletic-trainer#sthash.SLavvLVR.dpuf

 

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Marshall’s Center for Wellness in the Arts names directors

Four Marshall University faculty members have been named directors of the university’s Center for Wellness in the Arts.

To help manage the momentum behind the center for performing and visual artists, co-founders Nicole Perrone, associate professor of theatre, and Dr. Henning Vauth, associate professor of music, were appointed directors along with Dr. Karen McNealy, chair and program director of the Department of Communications Disorders, and Dr. Mark Timmons, assistant professor of athletic training.

Last year, more than 300 performing and visual arts students took part in the education, research and clinical services provided by the center, according to the directors. Music and theatre students attended performance anxiety workshops; theatre students received exercise training to sword fight and simultaneously deliver Shakespearean lines; voice students were screened for vocal nodules and muscle tension dysphonia; music students were offered hearing assessments and provided with ear plugs, courtesy of otolaryngologist Dr. Joseph Touma, to help reduce the sound level and the risk of hearing damage for musicians.

The success of the collaboration between the College of Arts and Media and the College of Health Professions has been welcome, but a bit surprising, said Don Van Horn, dean of the College of Arts and Media and Dr. Michael Prewitt, dean of the College of Health Professions.

“The Center for Wellness in the Arts has developed and matured faster than most thought it would,” said Van Horn. “We are at a point now where the faculty who envisioned the center need to be acknowledged and encouraged to cultivate their leadership. Equally important, as the center continues to grow and gain prominence, we need to be able to direct outside inquiries to those who are in the best position to share the message about the center.”

“No one really understood this would develop like it has, but students and faculty have been so willing to participate,” said Prewitt. “As the center continues to grow, we realize this isn’t just a small activity by two colleges. This is a real asset for Marshall, so we’ve made this step to promote the center on a larger scale. The CWA needs to be more visible as a true center for excellence.”

Perrone and Vauth, co-founders of the center, said the breadth of services now offered by the center surpass their wildest dreams.

“The continuous growth of the CWA into a comprehensive center that takes care of all aspects of artistic well-being, along with its emphasis on collaboration, is something very special and unique,” Vauth said.

Perrone, one of the state’s few certified teachers of the Alexander Technique, said she is most interested in students overcoming tension and anxiety that hinders their performances.

“I’m really excited about the work that I’m doing with Dr. Liz Casey in Health Sciences to help combat that performance anxiety,” Perrone said.

McNealy said her Communications Disorders students gain additional perspective from their work with the center.

“Oftentimes we are at the point where we work with disorders after they happen,” McNealy said. “The awareness that there are prevention strategies for the body and that people have control over issues they might develop, whether it’s hearing, voice, physical movement or psychology, is powerful for my students.”

The National Athletic Trainers’ Association has identified performing arts medicine as an area of growth for the athletic training profession, according to Timmons.

“The CWA provides an opportunity for entry-level athletic training students to gain exposure to the performing arts and for graduate students to gain significant experience working with the performing artist,” Timmons said. “These opportunities are points of distinction for Marshall’s Athletic Training program, and it’s something very few schools can offer their students.”

“We have a responsibility to our students to engender in each one a commitment to better health and wellness,” said Van Horn.

To learn more about Marshall’s Center for Wellness in the Arts, visit http://www.marshall.edu/cwaor e-mailcwa@marshall.edu.

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Beckett wins most distinguished

Dr. Joseph Beckett of the Marshall University College of Health Professions has been chosen as the recipient of the Most Distinguished Athletic Trainer Award from the Mid-Atlantic Athletic Trainers’ Association (MAATA).

Beckett, program director of the college’s Department of Athletic Training, is the only athletic trainer in West Virginia to receive a MAATA award in 2016.

The MAATA Most Distinguished Athletic Trainer Award is a prestigious honor that recognizes qualified MAATA members for their exceptional and unique contributions to the athletic training profession, according to Marty Bradley, associate athletic director for sports medicine at Old Dominion University in Virginia.

Bradley, a longtime friend and colleague, said he nominated Beckett for this award because of Beckett’s tremendous work ethic, commitment and loyalty to the field of athletic training.

“Joe should have been nominated for this award years ago if you look at what he has done to advance and give back to our profession,” Bradley said. “I wanted him to be recognized within the district, but also within his own institution because he is so deserving of this honor and the recognition it brings.”

Beckett received the National Athletic Trainers’ Association’s Service Award in 2008 and he was named the West Virginia Athletic Training Educator of the Year in 2013, but this is the first award he has received from MAATA in his 35 years as a member.

“It’s a very humbling feeling to be recognized by my peers and it validates my work as an athletic trainer,” Beckett said. “My only hope is that my current and prospective students realize how hard work can pay off and they will be inspired to make a sustainable contribution to the field.”

The MAATA District includes universities in Virginia, Washington, D.C., Maryland, North Carolina, South Carolina and West Virginia. For more information about the MAATA and its upcoming awards symposium, visit www.maata.org. To learn more about Beckett and his work with Marshall’s Department of Athletic Training, visit www.marshall.edu/athletic-training.

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