MURFREESBORO — MTSU’s
Horse Science Center and Tennessee Miller Coliseum will be the site this week
for respective national and regional conferences related to equine-assisted
activities and therapies and therapeutic horsemanship.
The conferences will begin Thursday, Aug. 7, at Miller
Coliseum (http://www.mtsu.edu/tmc/directions.php)
, and include:
• The Aug. 7-8 Uniting Equine Assisted Activities and
Therapies with Higher Education Conference; and
• The Aug. 8-10 Professional Association of Therapeutic
Horsemanship, or PATH, International Region 5 Conference.
Therapeutic horsemanship
helps people with a wide range of emotional, cognitive and physical
challenges, said Sarah Newton-Cromwell, an MTSU Horse Science graduate student
who is scheduled to graduate Saturday, Aug. 9, with a master’s degree and will
be a conference presenter.
Newton-Cromwell
added that anyone can benefit from both therapeutic horsemanship through
traditional riding lessons and equine therapy, where a licensed professional
sets goals and tracks progress, and horsemanship skills may or may not be
taught.
MTSU’s Horse Science program has been a pioneer in this, in
particular working with the Alvin C. York VA Medical Center in Murfreesboro to
provide equine-assisted activities and therapies to veterans.
When no other colleges or universities agreed to host the
national conference with an emphasis in higher education, the regional
conference leadership asked MTSU, which leaped at the opportunity.
“We saw the
need for the higher education conference so we actually developed that idea and
then approached AQHA (American Quarter Horse Association) for a grant to host
it,” said associate professor Holly Spooner, who also serves as Miller Chair of
Equine Health at the Horse Science Center on West Thompson Lane.
About 60 people
preregistered for the national conference, which Spooner believes will be a
uniting of the equine-assisted activities folks with those in higher education
to discuss career opportunities for students, research in the area and future
endeavors, and offers “an opportunity for MTSU to show our facilities as well
as the great work we are doing in the area,” she said.
Spooner and
Newton-Cromwell said national conference attendees would come from Arizona,
Colorado, Texas, New Hampshire and other states.
“It’s a chance
to get everyone together and share what they are doing, talk about research and
what we need to do in the area of research to move this field forward,” Spooner
said.
The regional
conference will bring 120-plus professionals here from Alabama, Florida,
Georgia, Mississippi, Tennessee, Kentucky and Puerto Rico.
Newton-Cromwell
is a PATH International-certified advanced instructor and mentor with 17 years
of equine-assisted activities and therapies experience. She will lead a Sunday,
Aug. 10, session on the collaboration between the Horse Science Center and Veteran’s
Recovery Center — a program that helps veterans who struggle with hope,
self-esteem, trust and community integration because of serious and persistent
mental illness.
Newton-Cromwell
said she will miss her commencement.
“I prefer
missing for an opportunity like this,” she said. “It’s like the best graduation
because I’m out there doing it.”
Late
registration will be available for local residents who might have an interest
in this endeavor.
For more on the
higher education and equine-assisted activities and therapies conference, visit
http://capone.mtsu.edu/horsesci/EAATconference.html.
For more
information on the PATH International and the Region 5 conference, visit http://www.pathintl.org/.
To learn more
about the MTSU Horse Science program, visit http://www.mtsu.edu/programs/horse-science/
or call 615-898-2832.
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