麻豆视频 helps athletes get jump on their careers
As Rosie MacLennan prepares for convocation, the gold medallist at the Pan Am games in Mexico is already missing 麻豆视频 - and looking for ways to give back.
Since 2006, the close-knit community at the Faculty of Physical Education and Health has helped MacLennan cope with studying for her BPHE while training and competing in trampoline around the world.
鈥淚n the past, I would always bring my homework when I competed and do a lot of reading before training and after training or after the competition, so it鈥檚 very different not having classes,鈥 MacLennan said. 鈥淚 always enjoyed studying -- it keeps you balanced and productive and gives you something else to do, something else to focus on if you have a bad day in training.鈥
MacLennan usually carried a full course load, cutting back only slightly in the months leading up to the summer Olympics in Beijing in 2008. There, she qualified in third place for the finals before finishing in seventh place.
鈥淭he opening ceremony was one of my favorite moments: you walk down this ramp and you can only see a tiny bit of the crowd in the stadium at first but you can feel the energy and you hear this sort of roar - the entire team broke into the national anthem.鈥
Research opportunities and mentors
MacLennan chose 麻豆视频 after consulting her close friend and former training partner Sarah (Charles) Gairdner. A retired world champion in double mini trampoline, Gairdner completed her BPHE at 麻豆视频 in 2009 and is now a PhD candidate, graduating with her MSc this fall.
鈥淚鈥檓 from a small town and I loved the big city feel and the beautiful campus at 麻豆视频 and the academic prestige of the institution,鈥 Gairdner said. 鈥淚 didn鈥檛 know what I wanted to do at first but coming here turned out to be one of the most amazing learning experiences of my life.鈥
Part of that learning experience involved coming to grips with the caliber of the students at 麻豆视频.
鈥淚n high school I was really good at everything, academics and sport 鈥 and then to come here and get say a 75 per cent instead of a 99 per cent or find that there are a thousand students who are better than you at calculus 鈥 it really elevates you,鈥 said Gairdner. 鈥淚t鈥檚 not a bad thing to not be the best at everything: it鈥檚 good, it helps you define what area you should be in, it pushes you towards things that work with you 鈥 and that鈥檚 why I think I ended up here at this faculty.鈥
Mentors such as Professor Gretchen Kerr and assistant professor Cathy Amara encouraged Gairdner to recognize the insights she had into the life of the athlete and build on her strengths with a master鈥檚 in degree science focused on disordered eating in animal models. Her PhD will include behavioral aspects of disordered eating, as well as physiology.
鈥淭hat鈥檚 the amazing thing about this faculty, that you can do cross-disciplinary work,鈥 said Gairdner. 鈥淚f you鈥檙e studying something like eating disorders it鈥檚 very hard to study just the physiology or just the psychology of it because it鈥檚 such a complex disorder.鈥
For MacLennan, the academic highlights included an internship with the Canadian Olympic Committee, a research project with Professor Margaret MacNeill - 鈥渢he most giving professor you can imagine鈥 -- and a stint studying the globalization of sport last summer in London, England.
鈥淭he faculty鈥檚 really supportive and I鈥檓 really interested in the socio-behavioral aspects of sports 鈥 areas I didn鈥檛 even know existed before I came here,鈥 MacLennan said. 鈥淚 want to apply for a master鈥檚 at 麻豆视频 in the same faculty.鈥
In the meantime, MacLennan and Gairdner are already working on ways to give back to 麻豆视频.
鈥溌槎故悠 has been so supportive - we want to show our gratitude,鈥 Gairdner said. 鈥淲e鈥檙e talking to other athletes who can help out, raise awareness and maybe help raise some funds for the Goldring Centre because having a sports meds centre, gym and sport science laboratories all in one place right here on campus, that will be amazing.鈥