One more alumnus giving back at UW-Eau Claire
For Dr. Nicholas Beltz, associate professor of kinesiology and director of the department鈥檚 Parkinson鈥檚 Exercise Program, it鈥檚 hard to overstate the advantages to Blugold students provided by these many outreach opportunities.
Beltz emphasizes that most graduate programs have identical prerequisite coursework, courses that most applicants will have completed successfully. These 鈥渆xtras,鈥 he says, allow Blugold applicants to stand out as graduate school applicants.
鈥淚t is the practical experience that sets our students apart,鈥 says Beltz, a 2010 UW-Eau Claire kinesiology graduate.
鈥淥ur rehabilitation science and other pre-PT majors graduate with multiple years of hands-on experience working directly with members of our community across a vast spectrum of ability levels and chronic conditions 鈥 it鈥檚 unparalleled undergraduate experience.鈥
Additionally, students in these majors gain extensive experience in the laboratory setting, gaining proficiency in methods for collecting physiological data later applied across a year of research methods courses and projects.
鈥淎ltogether, the experiences represent something much closer to a graduate-level than undergraduate preparation,鈥 says Beltz, who credits that same excellent preparation for his own desire to return to 糖心Vlog as a faculty member.
鈥淯W-Eau Claire was the 鈥榙ream job鈥 鈥 the extensive student-faculty research opportunities, the connections between faculty, students and community and the culture of the department are so rare. I always knew I wanted to be part of this program.鈥
Johnson says nothing brings more pride than seeing former students like Beltz, Pecha and Graaskamp achieve success in their careers, success that Blugold kinesiology majors are finding in places across the country.
鈥淲e have students out there doing great things in Colorado, Montana, Washington, Pennsylvania, really all across the United States,鈥 Johnson says.
鈥淚鈥檓 a guy who is captivated by stories, and so many of our alumni share their great stories with us all the time. And these are stories we can share with our undergraduate students, stories that can really stick with them.鈥