In the gym of the MAC Center Annex, you can hear the voices of student trainers echo from one end to the other.
βNice long strides with those feet,β shouts one student trainer.
βLetβs lunge to me,β encourages another.
½ΔΟΜεΣύ exercise physiology graduate students are playing a key role in Fit for Life, an expanded version of the former Faculty/Staff Exercise Program.
Fit for Life is a one-credit, repeatable workshop now open to students, staff, faculty, their families and the general public year-round.
The goal is to improve the health of the ½ΔΟΜεΣύ State community through exercise and diet, while having fun with co-workers, family members and friends.
Ellen Glickman, Ph.D., professor of health sciences in ½ΔΟΜεΣύ Stateβs College of Education, Health and Human Services, helped launch both programs. It is a passion of hers to get the campus moving with the help of graduate students who share her dream of promoting a healthy lifestyle.
βSitting is the new smoking,β Glickman said. βSitting perpetuates inactivity and weight gain. Obesity is a prominent problem, and in order to counter it, we need to look at energy in and energy out by exercising and reducing the calories we eat.β
Fit for Life offers three, 60-minute classes on Mondays, Wednesdays and Fridays starting at
6 a.m., 12 p.m. and 5:30 p.m. The classes offer a wide range of activities from walking, jogging and cycling to boot camp, strength training, stretching and relaxation exercises.
βFrom beginning to intermediate to advanced, whatever level of fitness youβre at, we will work with you,β said Curtis Fennell, graduate student in ½ΔΟΜεΣύ Stateβs School of Health Sciences.
Participants are given a Movband, a daily fitness tracker that records movement. The results are posted online β anonymously β to allow everyone to track their progress, along with others in the class.
The data also helps students conduct research that they present at scholarly conferences. They even use the information to modify Fit for Life.
If you want to know if it works, just ask Pat Nash, executive assistant in ½ΔΟΜεΣύ Stateβs Office of the Vice President for University Relations. Nash has lost 22 pounds.
βMy risk factors are all lower β my blood pressure, my cholesterol and my weight loss have all made me much healthier,β Nash said. βMy energy level and my work productivity have improved. Overall, my mental health is helped because it makes me feel good.β
Scott Weitzenhoffer, LAN administrator in ½ΔΟΜεΣύ Stateβs Office of Institutional Advancement, feels younger.
βIβm back to thinking Iβm in my early 40s, and Iβm in my mid 50s right now β letβs do some math,β Weitzenhoffer laughed. βYes, I feel younger, still not as young as I used to feel, but certainly not as old as I felt.β
βWe believe that exercise makes you feel better about yourself, about other people,β Glickman said. βYouβll lose fat, youβll feel better about the others around you. And we believe that the more people we engage in exercise, the better we will feel.β
At the beginning and end of the workshop, tests are taken to measure aerobic endurance, flexibility and strength. Standard blood work also is evaluated.
And just like the name implies, it really is a program for life.
βActually itβs going to help when I retire,β Nash said. βItβs going to help my retirement benefits because Iβm sure Iβm going to carry this on for the rest of my life.β
The next Fit for Life workshop begins on Monday, July 13.