That's the whole course listing for Easterns AT program. Might give you an idea of what you're looking at.
ATTR 288 Clinical AT I
339 Athletic Training
340 Adv. Proc & Mod
341 Rehab in Ath Train
388 Clinical AT II
428 Ortho Evaluation
429 Ortho Evaluation
430 Sports Med Issue
488 Clinical AT III
490 Capstone in SM
491 Curr Topics in
HLED 192 Sports Safety Tr.
256 Medical Term
370 Environment Hlth
372 App. Nutrition/Fit
PHED 249 Anat. Kines
250 Phys. Kines
252 Mech. Kines
335 Strength & Cond
452 Adapted PE
CEDP 316 Psych of Adjust
BIOL 232 A and P
233 A and P
234 A and P
CHEM XXX Chemistry Class
350 Prin. of Pharmaco
Athletic Training Major
- Vaulterchick88
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- PVPhD
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- Expertise: College Coach, Former College Vaulter, Masters Vaulter, USATF Biomechanist
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- Favorite Vaulter: Mike McGinnis
- Location: Cortland, NY
I may be biased - but SUNY Cortland has an excellent Athletic Traning program. We're relatively close to Maine and our winter weather probably wouldn't bother you. Most Cortland students come from New York, but I have had several students in my biomechanics classes from other states. Last semester one of the athletic training students in my class was from Minnesota. I can recall at least one athetic training student who was from Maine. Several years ago one of my woman vaulters was from Maineas well.
Check out the SUNY Cortland Athletic Training website at:
http://www.cortland.edu/esss/majors/training2.htm
We have a OK vaulting program for NCAA Div III - lots of poles, several pits, a decent indoor facility, a core group of 5-10 vaulters (men and women) each year, and a volunteer coach (that's me) dedicated to pole vaulting.
Check out the website and if you are interested - email me. I'm a professor in the Department of Exercise Science and Sport Studies - where the Athletic Training major is housed.
Vault high and land safely-
Peter McGinnis
Check out the SUNY Cortland Athletic Training website at:
http://www.cortland.edu/esss/majors/training2.htm
We have a OK vaulting program for NCAA Div III - lots of poles, several pits, a decent indoor facility, a core group of 5-10 vaulters (men and women) each year, and a volunteer coach (that's me) dedicated to pole vaulting.
Check out the website and if you are interested - email me. I'm a professor in the Department of Exercise Science and Sport Studies - where the Athletic Training major is housed.
Vault high and land safely-
Peter McGinnis
- VaultMarq26
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That is what happend to me and one of my teammates. We were two of the 22 accepted into the athletic training program for that year, and the dean told us that it isn't impossible to be an athlete in athletic training, but it is improbable. Alot of times the student trainers follow an athletic team, and you can't train for a team you are on.
Man Up and Jump
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