Message from Department Head Carla Santos



Dear Alumni and Friends,

Welcome to the fall issue of RST E-News! We have had a whirlwind start to academic year 2022-23, enrolling 296 student majors and adding four new professors to our tenure-track and specialized faculties. In this issue, we’ll introduce you to Assistant Professor Nicholas Pitas, Associate Professor Mariela Fernandez, and Teaching Assistant Professors Renata Endres and Jacob Fredericks.

You’ll also read about fascinating research led by RST professors Joelle Soulard, Liza Berdychevsky, Julian Woolf, Mikihiro Sato, and Jon Welty Peachey and graduate student Wonju Lee. We’ll introduce you to graduate student services advisor Tim Tiger and undergraduate student Emily Jordan, who talks about her experiences in RST. 

Several undergraduate students also share their thoughts on the 2022 professional applications class, which culminates in a two-week tour of major RST facilities in New York, Pennsylvania, Indiana, Ohio, and Massachusetts. We are so proud to continue to offer that experience to our students. As you’ll learn, not only do they gain incredible insight into the behind-the-scenes operations of major recreation, sport, and tourism venues, but they also forge strong, long-lasting bonds with their classmates. 

Our faculty, staff, students, and many alumni and friends all help make the Department of Recreation, Sport and Tourism a community with purpose. RST faculty is innovative and fully dedicated to our students. Our staff supports both our faculty and students in successfully achieving their goals. RST students are committed to the vision of a world in which everyone has access to safe and healthy leisure opportunities. And our extraordinary alumni continue to stay engaged with the department and its students. I am proud and humbled to be at the head of such a dynamic community. Thank you for your continued interest in and support of this department. As we move swiftly toward another holiday season, I wish you peace, prosperity, good health, and great fun!

Dr. Carla Santos
Professor and Department Head

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RST 180 a ‘once-in-a-lifetime-trip’



RST 180, which returned in 2022 after a two-year hiatus due to COVID-19, is a three-credit course that concludes with a 12-day tour of recreation, sport and tourism-related destinations in Indiana, Ohio, New York, Massachusetts, and Pennsylvania. This year’s trip included stops in sites such as the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame, Niagara Falls, the Baseball Hall of Fame, the Olympic training site in Lake Placid, the site of Woodstock in Bethel, N.Y., the 9/11 Memorial in Shanksville, Pa., and the Ohio State Reformatory, the site of the movie “The Shawshank Redemption.”

On May 23, more than two dozen students, along with RST Clinical Associate Professor Mike Raycraft, boarded a bus and set out from the University of Illinois campus on their way east.

As much as the trip is about learning the logistics and operations of iconic RST sites, it is also an epic road trip—complete with a five-hour delay due to a bus breakdown.

“My favorite part of the trip was meeting some of the best people and friends that I have ever met,” said rising sophomore Matthew Wargo. “From the beginning, we had to hang out with each other while we waited 5-plus hours for a new bus, and those hours really helped us to bond as a group before we embarked on the bus journey.”

Rising sophomore Nicole Dudek agreed.

“My favorite part of the trip was bonding with all my classmates and making lifelong friendships,” she said. “One instance that sticks out to me is when we all went on a cruise around Glimmerglass Lake in Cooperstown [upstate New York]. We had a free day to spend however we liked, but all of us chose to spend it with each other. It was really a moment where we bonded despite being from different walks of life.”

Rising senior Olivia Butters was another student on the trip. Butters is studying business management and is minoring in RST, with an emphasis on Sports Management. Ideally, she would like to work in a collegiate athletics department in operations or facility management,and this type of trip allows her to see those operations up close.

Butters said she was especially excited to meet with Mark Thomas—the recently retired Western District Director for State Parks in New York—whose role  included oversight of Niagara Falls.

“I was very excited to hear about his experience running such a large state park,” Butters said. “He had so much knowledge and gave us such a great experience at the Falls.”

Dudek, who plans to pursue a career in outdoor recreation/tourism, was also excited to meet with Thomas, but the most important visit to her was unexpected.

“Cooperstown ended up being the site that was most significant to me, which initially came as a surprise,” she said. “Going into the trip all I knew the town for was the Baseball Hall of Fame, which I was interested in but didn’t expect to fawn over. It ended up being two of my favorite days of the trip.”

Visiting new places and spaces is fun for the students, but they also understand the importance of the trip, in terms of their futures.

“I wanted to explore what career options there were in the field, as well as network with professionals across the country,” Dudek said.

As much as the journey  provided students and future professionals with lifelong benefits—especially crucial experience that will inform their future careers—it also included something unique.

“My favorite part of the trip was meeting everyone. I got onto the bus on the first day only knowing two people in the class, and by the last day I could easily call each person on the bus a friend,” Butters said. “I couldn’t say no to this once-in-a-lifetime opportunity.”

Matthew Wargo agreed.

“We all had a great time together—even now, a few weeks after the trip ended, we are already making plans to hang out with each other in the fall and later this summer,” he said. “I wouldn’t trade the friends I made on this trip for anything in the world.”

Editor’s note:

To reach Vince Lara-Cinisomo, email vinlara@illinois.edu.
 

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RST Staff Spotlight: Tim Tiger

The College of Applied Health Sciences has an array of faculty that are renowned in their areas of research and instruction. But AHS would not be able to operate as efficiently without its staff, who are the backbone of this great college. Periodically, we will shine the light on one of these staffers so their colleagues can get to know them better. This time, it’s Tim Tiger, a graduate student services advisor in the Dept. of Recreation, Sport and Tourism.

Q: What drew you to the University of Illinois?

A: I was recruited here for the MFA in Jewelry & Metals, which I completed in 2001.

Q: How long have you been in AHS?

A: I started working with RST in fall of 2007.

Q: What’s your favorite part of your job?

A: Working with and assisting students and helping them feel part of the Illini family!

Q: What’s your favorite spot on campus?

A: The Quad.

Q: The best part of being an Illini is …

A: Knowing that we are at one of the best education institutions in the world!

Q: What’s your favorite movie?

A: “Star Trek II: The Wrath of Khan.”

Q: What’s your favorite TV show?

A: Past: “X-Files”

Current: “Curse of Oak Island”

Q: What’s your go-to snack?

A: Fun-sized Krackel

Q: What’s the last book you read?

A: An Indigenous Peoples’ History of the United States for Young People

QUOTABLE

“Tim’s an integral part of RST, and he has a genuine desire to be of service. Our faculty, students and staff count on him, and he manages to make it all happen with a smile and a great attitude. Thank you, Tim!” — Carla Santos, Department Head, Dept. of Recreation, Sport and Tourism.

Alumni Spotlight—Kelsey Beccue

Alumni of the College of Applied Health Sciences have myriad career options thanks to the tremendous diversity of programs. We periodically will put the spotlight on an alum to find out what they’re doing now, what experiences they had and what AHS means to them. This week, we talk to Kelsey Beccue, an RST alum who is development manager for the Urbana Park District.

Q: Why did you pick AHS?

A: Choosing AHS was primarily a function of it being the home of my preferred major—Recreation, Sport, and Tourism.

Q: Which professors had the most impact on you?

A: This is kind of a toughie, but I’ll go with Professor (Cindy) Wachter. I was in the second semester of my sophomore year and still undecided. I had registered for a host of classes, attended them all my first week and promptly dropped them and registered for new ones. One of the classes I registered for was an Intro to Recreation, Sport, and Tourism class taught by Professor Wachter, and I LOVED IT! Once I was in there, I felt like I finally had some sense of direction and selected RST as my area of study. I still had some figuring out to do career-wise, but was finally taking classes that resonated with me.

Q: What course did you most enjoy?

A: I can’t remember the official course title anymore, but I did take a recreation programming class with Lori Kay Paden that was outstanding, and a great “real world” type of experience.

Q: Did you enter AHS knowing your career path, or did AHS help you decide?

A: I definitely did not know my career path when I headed into AHS, but with help from my RST advisor, I got a push in the right direction. When I first came into RST, I thought I wanted a concentration in Tourism Management, but after working through things with my advisor, it became quite obvious that Recreation Management was the right direction for me, and that set me on the course that brought me to where I am today.

Q: Did your AHS experience lead to your current job?

A: Yes—thanks required internship!

Q: What is your current job?

A: I am currently the Development Manager at the Urbana Park District.

Q: What was your favorite on-campus experience?

A: I worked in the concessions division of the Department of Intercollegiate Athletics during college, and getting the opportunity to work the different sporting events was really cool. I attended a lot of sporting events I might not have attended otherwise. The football game days were fun, too. Long, but fun—great crew to work with! Seeing Sara Bareilles perform at Foellinger with some of my best pals ranks highly, too!

Q: What would you say to recommend AHS to a prospective student?

A: I’d say that it’s a great college—it’s smaller so you don’t get lost in the crowd as much, and the faculty and advisors are great!

College of Applied Health Sciences
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