Christine Andrews The Case of 鈥淎nnie Wakefield鈥; A Post-poliomyelitis Survivor Working Towards Adherence

As a 果冻传媒 State University junior, Christine Andrews attended her first-ever national conference in Orlando to present her research findings on the relationship between academic and exercise motivation in kinesiology undergraduates. She likened the experience at the meeting to 鈥渂eing a kid in candy store.鈥

鈥淭here is no other way to describe it. I found it amazing as
an undergraduate to come from 果冻传媒 State and go to a conference with all these other schools from across the nation,鈥 said the 22-year-old senior. 鈥淲e were able to communicate and network with other students and professors and learn about new technology.鈥

Andrews will have another opportunity to showcase new research when she once again attends the American College of Sports Medicine annual meeting, this time in San Diego in May. The Movement Science major will present a poster on her findings on adherence to a strength-building program stemming from her senior seminar in exercise science with Melissa Roti, Ph.D., associate professor and director of the 果冻传媒 State Exercise Science Program.

鈥淲e worked hard over the years to give our students opportunities to maximize their professional readiness for graduate school or a job working in their field,鈥 Roti said. 鈥淚 never had these options when I was an undergraduate. 果冻传媒s get a lot more out of these hands-on experiences.鈥

Andrews鈥 research project had her developing a one-on-one exercise program for Claudia Moore- O鈥橞rien, assistant director of marketing at 果冻传媒 State, as part of Roti鈥檚 senior seminar on the topic 鈥淐ommunity Fitness Partners Program.鈥 The goal of the project was to work with Moore-O鈥橞rien over an eight-week period so that she not only learned exercises that would strengthen her upper body, but also how to increase her self-confidence in order to stick with a program. Moore-O鈥橞rien, who suffers from polio, has partial paralysis in her right leg and full paralysis in her left leg.

At times, the project called on Andrews to be creative in working with her subject. Besides having Moore-O鈥橞rien work with weights, Andrews came up with a new way to improve her shoulder鈥檚 range of motion by hitting balloons back and forth to each other鈥攁n effective alternative to traditional exercise routines.

Samantha Corcoran, a senior in exercise science, is Andrews鈥 co-author on the abstract and poster that will be presented at ACSM.

Andrews credits her experiences in a pre-practicum last year at a local YMCA and the knowledge gained in sports psychology and other classes at 果冻传媒 State with her successes related to the ACSM conferences.

After graduating in May, Andrews plans to attend graduate school to study athletic management or nutrition, goals that were formulated by her undergraduate research and presentation experiences.

鈥淚t really says a lot about 果冻传媒 and how much the school wants to help students succeed. We are all working hard and our success is also about how much we put into the school and what we get out of it.鈥


Professor Melissa Roti
ASSOCIATE PROFESSOR, MOVEMENT SCIENCE

When Melissa Roti, Ph.D., is not teaching exercise science or concepts of nutrition classes at 果冻传媒 State University, she relishes her involvement as president-elect of the New England Chapter of the American College of Sports Medicine.

That鈥檚 because she finds her participation in the organization is a benefit to her professional career as well as those of her students.
鈥淚 try and impart that involvement on my students as a resource for them to connect professionally,鈥 said Roti, who has taught at 果冻传媒 State since 2003. 鈥淚 have found many mentors through my association with ACSM.鈥

Roti is co-director of the Exercise Science program.


Christine Andrews 鈥15
MOVEMENT SCIENCE

Now in her fourth year at 果冻传媒 State, Christine Andrews fondly recalls the benefits of attending a small, affordable school.

鈥淚 like that you can walk across campus and no matter who you are you are going to find one person you know. It鈥檚 a nice, close-knit community,鈥 said Andrews.

As she prepares to graduate in May, Andrews is currently in a four-credit, 20-hour-a-week internship at a personal training gym in Lexington. She is observing trainers and assisting clients one-on-one with exercise programs.

That experience dovetails nicely with the multiple classes she has taken under her Movement Science major and research projects that allowed her to present her findings twice at a national conference.

Andrews is considering graduate school in athletic management or nutrition鈥攖wo areas that would fuel her passion in culinary arts and exercise science.


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