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College of

Education

Visit our home page at www.unocoe.unomaha.edu                              

 

Professor Jen White

Bound to be active

Professor Nick Stergiou:

One-of-a-kind research

 

Bound to be active

Have you started several exercise programs in your life only to stop the program after a few days or weeks? Have you wrestled with your conscience and won? How can you develop a healthy lifestyle pattern?

 

UNO Professor Jennifer White might not have answers for everyone, but what she has to say is intriguing. For instance, women with high self-worth, notes White's research, are more likely to adhere to a regular physical activity program. Why so?

Such women often are more motivated by quality of life rather than physical appearance.

"The first step in developing a lifestyle that will result in a quality life," White says, "is related to improving your feeling of self-worth."

An assistant professor in the School of Health, Physical Education and Recreation, White has focused on developing programs for adult women and for young children enrolled in after-school programs throughout Omaha. The programs focus on cognitive strategies to enhance a participant's feeling of self-worth rather than focusing on participation for weight loss.

 

A popular program with adult women involves the Women Bound to Be Active book club. Participants meet on a regular basis and read books that focus on exercise and healthy lifestyles. No exercise or prescribed physical activities take place during a book club session. Instead, participants become motivated to develop their own healthy lifestyle patterns through education, social contact and discussion.

 

Where boredom or a negative feeling toward an activity might lead some to discontinue their efforts, book club participants learn how to make their exercising a positive experience. For example, a treadmill located in a poorly lit basement is not an inviting place to be. Positioning it amid light and beautiful surroundings, however, promotes more activity.

 

Women who participated last year in book club activities demonstrated increased feelings of self-worth, believed they had an improved quality of life, and took an average of 708 steps a day, according to pedometers. Their feelings of self-worth and regular attendance at the book club sessions were predictors of their physical activity.

 

White also has developed and directs a program for children, funded by a grant from Alegent Health and involving the Douglas County Health Department, the Visiting Nurses Association, Boys and Girls Club, Campfire, USA, Girl Scouts and the YMCA (78th and Maple Streets). It enrolls 669 youth between the ages of 5 and 14; 33 percent are Hispanic, 32 percent white, 28 percent African-American, and 7 percent from other ethic groups.

 

White and two graduate students complete staff training at the participating institutions and conduct data analysis to determine the results of the activity. The youth are involved in 60 to 90 minutes of physical activity per week, in addition to education relative to healthy lifestyles, including nutrition education and intervention. A family night once a month extends the training to others in the youth's home.

 

"My goal in these programs is for the participants to learn cognitive strategies to be active for a lifetime," White says, adding that such knowledge and participation will result in healthier women and youth.

 

For more information regarding the Women Bound to Be Active book club, contact White by email at jenniferwhite@mail.unomaha.edu.

 

Jen White photo by Tim Fitzgerald, University Relations.

 

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Professor Nick Stergiou:

One-of-a-kind research

 

What would you do if you had all of the money in the world?

 

Many of us probably have played this game after purchasing a lottery ticket, dreaming that this time the jackpot will be ours.

Nick Stergiou, professor in the School of Health, Physical Education and Recreation, knows exactly what he would do with unlimited funds: expand his groundbreaking research and work toward advancements in diagnosis and treatments for babies and adults who demonstrate movement difficulties.

 

Stergiou carries out "the only research of its kind on the planet" by investigating the dynamics of the development of sitting postural control in infants with cerebral palsy.

 

It is funded by a three-year grant from the U.S. Department of Education and the National Institute on Disability and Rehabilitation Research, and a five-year award from the National Center of Medical Rehabilitation Research (NCMRR).

 

The study includes infants age 5 months to 2 years who are developing typically, and infants who are at-risk/diagnosed for cerebral palsy. Stergiou is collaborating with colleagues Reggie Harbourne and Dr. Wayne Stuberg from the Munroe-Meyer Institute at the University of Nebraska Medical Center.

 

The research involves a measurement of the sway of the infant in a sitting posture.

"All babies sway, but the pattern of sway of a cerebral palsy baby differs from the sway of a typical infant" Stergiou explains. "When we learn more about the differences, we work on developing treatment plans."

 

Parents take their children participants to the Munroe-Meyer Institute, where UNMC graduate student Anastasia Kyvelidou and physical therapist Stacey Dejong conduct a motor evaluation of the child. The grant also provides for a translator who assists in communicating with those parents who speak Spanish. Analysis of the data is conducted at UNO by Joan Deffeyes, a UNL doctoral student, and other graduate students.

 

Parents receive a motion diagnosis of their baby, a small stipend and follow-up treatment until the baby can sit. The treatment includes physical therapy at Munroe-Meyer and a home treatment plan. Stergiou also plans to develop biomedical devices that can assist physical therapists working with the baby at home.

 

The NCMRR grant provides additional training for Dr. Stergiou. A quantitative scientist especially recognized for his expertise in nonlinear analysis, Stergiou is enrolled in classes and is mentored by Dr. Brad Schaefer, a professor of pediatrics at UNMC, Dr. Jeff French, a UNO professor in behavioral psychology, and Dr. Jack Heidel, a UNO professor of mathematics. This training will provide Stergiou with additional knowledge in medical, behavioral and mathematical analysis.

 

Stergiou's excitement about the potential of this project is tempered only by the realization that he could be doing so much more if additional funds were available. He currently maintains a hectic schedule that in addition to the research design and direction involves numerous speaking engagements to share the nature and results of his research.

 

"You can tell I do not do this for the money," he says. "I do it because of the satisfaction I receive from helping kids and parents and others in the community. I sleep well at night."

 

For more information or to support Stergiou's research, contact College of Education Dean John Langan at jlangan@mail.unomaha.edu.

 

Photo courtesy Dr. Nick Stergiou

Motor evaluations of children in Stergiou's research takes place at the University of Nebraska Medical Center's Munroe-Meyer Institute.

 

 

Happenings schedule

College of Education alumni can read more about fellow alumni, faculty and current students in Happenings, a newsletter mailed in early November.

 

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