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Recreation and Parks Leadership StudiesCredits
In this course we will explore the importance of the natural world and how individuals and societies interact with and impact nature. Students will apply ethical frameworks of sustainability, rights, and justice to understand conservation and resource management practices in public and private lands. Students will analyze and reflect upon complex narratives that guide how diverse people and natural systems interact.
- Graduation Requirements:
- Goal Area 3 - Natural Sciences
- Areas of Interest:
- Government and Public Administration
- Programs:
A broad survey course that is concerned with game and non-game wildlife species. Habitat is stressed throughout the course as a necessity for maintaining a species. Funding of wildlife programs and changing attitudes of the public are concerns throughout this course.
- Graduation Requirements:
- Goal Area 10 - People and the Environment
- Areas of Interest:
- Government and Public Administration
- Programs:
This course covers various topics for undergraduates in Recreation and Parks Leadership Studies and related fields. Students are exposed to best practices and current challenges in the industry and are given experiential opportunities to make connections for career advancement. Additional fees may apply. May be repeated, as topics vary.
This course is designed to be an overview of Therapeutic Recreation Services in a variety of human service settings with emphasis on the assessment, planning, implementation and evaluation of leisure and recreation programs performed by therapeutic recreation specialists serving persons with physical, mental, emotional or social limitations.
Through interactive assignments, students will learn and practice the skills and techniques used by direct leaders in the Recreation and Parks profession. Topics include an introduction to leadership practices, program planning, activity selection, and activity facilitation for diverse groups.
- Graduation Requirements:
- Goal Area 1B - Speech and Oral Reasoning
- Areas of Interest:
- Government and Public Administration
- Programs:
This course addresses leisure wellness and incorporates leisure into life as a balancing force for healthy living. Leisure is studied in relation to: work, time and money management, stress management, healthy relationships, life choices and decisions, personal and community resources, career opportunities and in relation to current issues in politics and in the work place.
- Graduation Requirements:
- Goal Area 11 - Performance and Participation
- Areas of Interest:
- Government and Public Administration
- Programs:
This course is designed to be taken two semesters before students completes their practicums. It will help students identify and secure a practicum. It will also help students establish reasonable expectations for a quality practicum experience.
An introduction to experiential education practices, methods for instruction and planning in outdoor settings, and outdoor skill development.
- Areas of Interest:
- Government and Public Administration
- Programs:
This course will explore research design with emphasis related to the areas of recreation, parks, and leisure sciences. Basic overview of research methodologies commonly utilized in leisure sciences and approaches to RPLS research will be explored through review of original research. Students will be required to produce and revise scientific writing with specific focus on presenting material to audiences in the RPLS field. Team-based problem centered research questions will be developed and investigated using methodology with current RPLS-related issues.
- Graduation Requirements:
- Writing Intensive
- Areas of Interest:
- Government and Public Administration
- Programs:
Students will be introduced to various methods and skills used to design and deliver interpretive programs and materials to various audiences. Students will also apply the philosophies, concepts, theories and practical skills necessary for implementing effective interpretive programs.
- Areas of Interest:
- Government and Public Administration
- Programs:
This course is a survey of commercial recreation and tourism that examines the basic types of commercial recreation and tourism providers, some basic trends in commercial recreation and the social, economic and environmental impacts of commercial recreation and tourism.
- Areas of Interest:
- Government and Public Administration
- Programs:
This course introduces students to basic management and operations techniques for a wide variety of indoor and outdoor recreation facilities.
- Areas of Interest:
- Government and Public Administration
- Programs:
This course is designed to provide students with knowledge, skills, and tools to effectively implement technology in recreation. Students will have the opportunity to explore practical applications of technological in recreation. The objective of this class is to introduce the student to the variety of ways computers and other technologies are used in everyday recreation management.
- Prerequisites:
- RPLS 272 or with instructor permission.
- Areas of Interest:
- Government and Public Administration
The emphasis of this course is on the program planning process-from creating the idea through evaluation of the program-and how it fits into the agency profile. Various formats such as leisure learning, tournaments, trips and outings, and special events are highlighted for a variety of leisure service agencies.
- Areas of Interest:
- Government and Public Administration
- Programs:
Focuses on the total planning, implementation and techniques of effective public relations.
- Areas of Interest:
- Government and Public Administration
- Programs:
Focuses on the total planning, implementation and techniques of effective public relations.
Students are required to complete the Field Experience in order to be eligible to enroll in RPLS 495 Practicum. Students will contract with the advisor to complete 100 hours of volunteer or paid experience in a leisure services organization. Written permission required from the advisor.
Diversity, equity, and inclusion within RPLS has evolved from a focus on control by othering to a strategic-level effort to enhance quality of life and wellbeing in our communities. While we aspire to create a community climate that acknowledges and appreciates diversity, equity, and inclusion, current community practices lag behind this aspiration. We will explore language around diversity, equity, and inclusion to engage in discourse that requires us to acknowledge our history and ways we can learn, heal, and advocate for equitable practices related to recreation programming and access to spaces.
- Graduation Requirements:
- Writing Intensive
- Areas of Interest:
- Government and Public Administration
- Programs:
Curricular Practical Training: Co-Operative Experience is a zero-credit full-time practical training experience for one summer and on adjacent fall or spring term. Special rules apply to preserve full-time student status. Please contact an advisor in your program for complete information.
- Prerequisites:
- At least 60 credits earned; in good standing; instructor permission; co-op contract; other prerequisites may also apply.
- Areas of Interest:
- Government and Public Administration
Students will learn about and gain experience with assessment as it is practiced in therapeutic recreation settings. The course focuses on the basics of assessment, the four most frequently utilized information gathering techniques, and commonly used assessment instruments.
- Prerequisites:
- RPLS 272, RPLS 274 or with instructor permission.
- Areas of Interest:
- Government and Public Administration
This course explores the philosophical and theoretical foundations of therapeutic recreation. Specifically, the relationships among recreation, leisure, health and well-being are examined as articulated by a number of authors. Students critically analyze the required materials and discuss potential implications for therapeutic recreation and therapeutic recreation specialists.
- Prerequisites:
- RPLS 272, RPLS 274, or with instructor permission.
- Areas of Interest:
- Government and Public Administration
This course details the Therapeutic Recreation process: assessment, planning, implementation and evaluation in relation to individual treatment programs in Therapeutic Recreation Service. Emphasis is on interpreting assessment data, writing measurable goals and objectives, implementing an actual program and documenting program results in terms currently used in human service settings.
- Prerequisites:
- RPLS 272, RPLS 274, or with instructor permission.
- Graduation Requirements:
- Writing Intensive
- Areas of Interest:
- Government and Public Administration
This course is designed to teach a wide variety of interventions and facilitation techniques used in therapeutic recreation programs to give the student knowledge, practice and ability in the implementation of leisure and recreation programs for persons with special needs.
- Areas of Interest:
- Government and Public Administration
- Programs:
Students will study the recreation needs of various groups of people and learn the best practices for serving those needs. The emphasis will be on program planning guidelines appropriate for each group across the lifespan and for diverse groups.
- Areas of Interest:
- Government and Public Administration
- Programs:
This course will explore transdisciplinary research design with emphasis related to the areas of allied health and nursing sciences and disciplines. Basic overview of research methodologies commonly utilized in health sciences and approaches to transdisciplinary research will be explored through review of original research. Students will be required to produce and revise scientific writing with specific focus on inter/transdisciplinary studies. Team-based problem centered research questions will be developed and investigated using transdisciplinary methodology with current health-related issues.