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Running USA Youth Program News and Award Finalists
By Linda Honikman, Running USA Youth Committee
coordinator
Youth runs and fitness programs that are affiliated
with some of the country's best road races are thriving. The top
75 are providing more than 300,000 youth with quality running based
programs annually and the majority of the fitness programs are less
than 5 years old. The Running USA Youth Committee and YouthRunner.com
have announced the following finalists for this year's youth program
awards.
Youth Programs of the Year Finalists
Atlanta Track Club, Kilometer Kids
In just its first year, Kilometer Kids has affected the lives of
many young children who participated over a ten week period in the
fall. The Kilometer Kids were encouraged to meet twice a week, track
their progress along the way and complete a marathon with the culmination
at the Atlanta Marathon on Thanksgiving Day. Impressively, one-third
of the 238 young athletes from 6 Boys & Girls Club sites who
completed their running program are now out of the overweight / obese
category.
Crim Youth Program, Flint, MI
Having a full time Youth Program Coordinator since 1998 has enabled
the Crim Festival to offer the Crim Kids Neighborhood Running Club,
Teddy Bear Trot, Crim Kids Classic and the Crim School Mileage Club.
During the 2007-08 school year to-date there are almost 50 Crim
Mileage Club schools with approximately 8,000 participants. School
assemblies featuring Running Bear and copies of Running Bear Book
have been added to motivate students to begin running and walking.
Over its 20 year history, the Crim School Mileage Club has involved
over 100,000 elementary school students and in the near future programs
will be offered at middle and high schools.
GO! St. Louis Read, Right & Run Marathon®
This successful youth program was launched in 2001 with 400 children
and 30 participating schools. It continues today with more than
3,000 children and 105 schools enrolled. The program challenges
participants to Read 26 books, Right the community with 26 good
deeds, and Run 26.2 miles over a six-month period. All of that hard
work culminates the day before the GO! St Louis Marathon when K-5
students run their final 1.2 miles and the middle schoolers run
a 5K. An estimated 12,550 children have been impacted by the program
since its inception. In 2007, the Ultramarathon of 50 mile goals
and Saturday "training runs" were added for middle school
students. To evaluate the program's effectiveness, eight schools
are taking part in a before and after pilot evaluation.
Healthy Kids, Marine Corps Marathon
The Marine Corps Marathon (MCM)'s Healthy Kids Fun Run was introduced
in 2000. The event seeks to excite children about exercise and running
and create a new generation of marathoners. The just-for-fun one-mile
course is open to children ages 6-13 and held the day prior to the
MCM at the Pentagon. In 2007, the run welcomed its largest race
field of over 1,900 children. In recent years the MCM has introduced
the Healthy School Award that is presented with a donation for PE
to the school that has the most Fun Run participants, bulldog ambassadors
of fitness, Miles and Molly, and an engaging children's book called
"Miles, Run Miles!"
ING Run for Something Better, Miami
Started in 2006, the Fit Miami Foundation and ING created the ING
Run for Something Better Miami, a unique and large scale program
offered free to 88,000 students in all Miami Dade Middle Schools.
The South Florida population has a high risk for obese or overweight
children and the RFSB was designed to foster support for PE and
active lifestyles. Over 15 weeks, children are encouraged to run
25 miles during PE, making running laps exciting, rather than a
punishment. Participating students and coaches are transported to
the ING Miami Marathon® to run the Final Mile, finishing along
with 15,000 runners and thousands of spectators. ING also sponsors
Run for Something Better programs in Atlanta, New York, San Francisco
and Minneapolis.
Junior Great Race, Pittsburgh, PA
The Dollar Bank Junior Great Race, the offspring of Pittsburgh's
Richard S. Caliguiri Great Race 10K and 5K, is a multi-faceted fitness
event that offers three separate non-timed competitions for children
and youth. It began with the concept of having Pittsburgh's avid
parent runner population serve as the example in recruiting younger
children into healthy play behaviors and enjoyable fitness based
competitions. There is the one-mile run/walk for youth 5 & over,
the Tot-Trot for toddlers through 4 years of age and the Diaper
Dash. Participation has ranged from just over 500 to over 1,000
energetic kids during its colorful twelve-year history.
Just Run, Big Sur Marathon, Monterey, CA
The Big Sur International Marathon's highly acclaimed youth fitness
program JUST RUN® is continuing to grow by leaps and bounds.
During its second full year of implementation 4,300 children in
41 schools and youth organizations logged over 134,000 miles and
performed 11,500 "Just Deeds." Seven to eight thousand
are expected to be participating by the end of this school year
and satellite programs have begun in several other states. With
the help of Active.com, Just Run has enhanced its comprehensive
website (JustRun.org) including more
Spanish translation. A recent analysis of Just Run statistics in the Monterey
Peninsula Unified School District confirmed that Just Run works. For the five Just
Run schools that had programs in the 2005-06 school year, students
passing the aerobic capacity test went from an average of 58.7%
in 2004-05 to 80.5% in 2006-07. All other fitness categories tested
in these schools revealed improvement. The eight schools that did
not have Just Run actually showed DECREASES in performance in most
categories.
Many Milers, RunVermont
In 1998 RunVermont established the Many Milers fitness and nutrition
program to promote healthy lifestyles from an early age. It is a
statewide, comprehensive program that encourages youth ages 4 to
14 to earn activity and nutrition miles over a 7 month period. Participants
track mileage in educational log books, receive incentives every
10 miles and are encouraged to enroll in multiple running events
sponsored by RunVermont such as the Y.A.M. Scram the day before
the KeyBank Vermont Marathon. Activity miles can be earned by running,
walking, skiing or participating in an organized sport and bonus
nutrition miles can be earned by eating well. The Many Milers Program
was so well-received that schools and community groups in other
states have joined.
Medtronic TC Kids Marathon, Minneapolis
The Medtronic TC Kids Marathon is a community-wide effort to inspire
healthy lifestyles among children in grades K-6. Through an interactive
website (MTCMarathon.org) and
training program, kids in schools and families can start "Running One Mile at a Time"
over the course of 4, 8 or 12-weeks. The final half or full mile of their
program can then be run at one (or all) of three events throughout
the year: in May (Cross-Country), October (Road) and February (Indoor
Track). In the Spring of 2007, 7,500 pedometers were requested by
more than 42 schools and 1,250 children ran in the inaugural May
event. After training in the Summer, 1,700 children ran 1 or 1/2
miles during the October Medtronic Twin Cities Marathon weekend
and 250 students were able to move up to the TC 5K. In 2007, 312
teachers and 1,236 families used the web resources.
Youth Programs Contributor of the Year Finalists
Nike 5K Run for Kids Series
The mission of the Nike 5K Run for Kids is to help kids become healthier
and to raise much needed funding for local school play and PE programs.
Over the past 8 years to date, $1,039,275 has been donated to schools
and 69,285 kids and their families and friends have participated.
In 2007, events were held in Atlanta, Miami, Denver, Seattle, Portland,
Honolulu and Las Vegas. Of the 24,385 runners, 53% were under 18.
Highlights in 2007 included 100% of entry fees and $60,000 of shoes
donated to schools, Kids Training Runs and school visits by NIKETOWN
staff, PE Teacher Appreciation Nights and first class event execution.
Richmond Sport Backers
Since the spring of 2005, Fit for Life programs created by Richmond
Sport Backers to help reduce childhood obesity have encouraged youth
to run or walk 26 miles over the course of a 10-week period, culminating
with either the Richmond Times-Dispatch Kids Run in the fall, or
the First Market Mile Kids Run in the spring. Over 3,000 elementary
and middle school youth participated in the free, incentive based
Fit for Life Kids Challenge last spring and the program's culminating
First Market Mile had a record 1,787 entries. In the fall, Sport
Backers conducted the "Save Our Kids: The Obesity Crisis Conference"
with representatives from seven states who shared information on
what is working to get kids more healthy. More than 170 local teachers,
administrators, health professionals and concerned citizens attended
and the feedback was overwhelmingly positive.
Saucony Run for Good
Since 2006, the Saucony Run for Good Foundation has awarded more
than $300,000 to 35 organizations who are working to curb childhood
obesity through youth fitness programs. Grant recipients announced
in January include a new fitness program held in conjunction with
the Flying Pig Marathon. The Nutrition Council of Cincinnati is
partnering with the marathon to provide incentives to teach children
healthy habits. The Flying Piglet Kids Marathon program encourages
children to walk, run or wheelchair 26.2 miles over three months.
Other recent recipients include the Fairbanks North Star Borough
School District, Maricopa Council on Youth Sports and Physical Activity,
the Outdoor Industry Foundation's Teens Outside program, the Achilles
Track Club in New York, Boys and Girls Clubs in Ogden, Utah and
elementary schools in Naperville, Illinois and Hartsville, Tennessee.
Winners will be announced at the ING Hall of
Champions Awards Dinner and Auction at the annual Running USA Conference, Monday,
February 11 at the Torrey Pines Hilton, La Jolla, California.
More conference information including registration,
hotel reservations, schedule, speakers and list of attendees is
available at: www.runningusa.org/conference/rusa2008.shtml
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RRCA Seeks Applications for the 2008 Roads Scholar
Class
Since 1996, the Road Runners Club of America
has awarded stipends through its Roads Scholar program to assist
American post-collegiate road runners who show great promise to
develop into national and world class road running athletes. The
RRCA is now accepting applications for its 2008-09 Roads Scholar
Class. The application can be found on-line at www.rrca.org/programs/roadsscholar.
The deadline for applying is Monday, March 31, 2008.
The Roads Scholar program has distributed over
$230,000 to emerging U.S. distance runners. Grants in the amount
of $5000 per year have been awarded to four to six athletes annually
since the program's inception. The driving factor in the creation
of this program was the goal of improving the state of long distance
running in the United States. A sign of the program's success was
the result of the 2004 Summer Olympics where Deena Kastor, a 1997
Roads Scholar grant recipient, captured the bronze medal in the
woman's Olympic Marathon. In 2007, the program's success was again
proven when eleven Road Scholar grant recipients stepped up to the
starting line at the 2008 U.S. Olympic Marathon Trials in New York
City on November 3, 2007.
The program is directed towards runners who:
* Are U.S. citizens
* Have graduated from college (or whose class has graduated)
* Plan to race in top open road race events (not just track, cross
country or U.S.-only events)
* Expect to earn less than $30,000 from all sources during the calendar
year
The Road Runners Club of America is a non-profit
organization of over 700 running clubs and 175,000 members across
the United States. The RRCA chapters organize races, have training
runs, provide safety guidelines, promote children's and masters
fitness running programs and have social programs. For more information,
visit: RRCA.org
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Twin Cities Marathon, Inc. Offers High School
Seniors Scholarship Opportunity
$5000 scholarships available to high school
cross-country and track runners
MINNEAPOLIS - Twin Cities Marathon, Inc. is seeking
applicants for its 2008 college scholarship program. Two $5000 scholarships
are available for one male and one female college-bound high school
senior living in the eleven county metro-area.
Recipients will be selected on academic achievements,
community service, running accomplishments (in either cross-country
or track) as well as a personal essay.
"According to recent studies, the average
cost to attend a public college or university is more than $6000
per year," said Twin Cities Marathon, Inc. executive director
Virginia Brophy Achman. "We hope that this scholarship helps
offset a significant portion of education expenses allowing student
athletes more opportunity to continue to pursue their passion for
the sport of running."
The funds can be used to attend a public or private
institution. Applications are being accepted until Saturday, March
1, 2008. Winners will be notified in May.
2007 winners were Alison Liewen from Minnetonka
High School (currently attending Harvard University) and Kyle Robert
Peterson from Watertown-Mayer High School (currently attending University
of Wisconsin-LaCrosse).
For more information, and an application, visit:
MTCMarathon.org/Partners/Scholarships.cfm
Ryan Lamppa, Running USA Media Director
(805) 696-6232
Ryan@RunningUSA.org | www.RunningUSA.org |