More Than Fun and Games
advertisement
Resource Center
Club Industry Trade Shows
Club Industry trade shows are the most comprehensive events in the fitness industry. Learn more about these exciting conferences and expositions.
Industry Events & Trade Shows
The industry-wide calendar features listings for educational events, trade shows and more.
Buyers Guide
Find industry businesses by product or service categories, view company profiles and more.
Classifieds
View classified ads for health club equipment and services, plus business opportunities and job postings.
Current Issue
Read stories from the latest print issue of Club Industry magazine.
Club info and News
Read news about some of the biggest names in the industry.
- 24 Hour Fitness
- Anytime Fitness
- Bally Total Fitness
- Crunch Fitness
- Club One
- Curves
- Equinox
- Gold's Gym
- Health Fitness Corp.
- LA Fitness
- Life Time Fitness
- Lifestyle Family Fitness
- Planet Fitness
- Plus One Management
- Snap Fitness
- Spectrum Athletic Clubs
- Sport & Health
- Town Sports International
- Sports Club Co.
- Urban Active
- Wellbridge
- Western Athletic Clubs
- World Gym
Latest From Twitter
TAMPA, FL—Interactive fitness may have received a boost this month when the School of Physical Education, Wellness and Sports Studies at the University of South Florida (USF) in Tampa, FL, opened the first university interactive fitness research lab for youth on Jan. 8. About 100 Y operators, school district personnel, manufacturers and other interested parties attended an open house on Jan. 26 at the XRKade Research Lab to see the equipment in action.
“We had kids on equipment and as soon as people saw how much fun kids were having and how much they were sweating—it was the visual that you can’t capture with words,” says Lisa Witherspoon, doctoral student at USF. Witherspoon heads the lab, which was created because of her interest in this subject for her doctoral program. She plans to use the research to create curriculum for physical education programs using interactive fitness programming.
The XRKade lab was created through donations from iTECH Fitness and the company’s corporate partners. Equipment included in the lab are X-Board, Dance Dance Revolution, Game Bikes, 3-Kick, Trazer, iJoy, CoreTrainer and Korebalance.
The lab will investigate the growing movement related to assisting children in becoming physically active and increasing fitness levels through use of technology-based interactive game activities. This movement is being called interactive fitness or exergaming and is increasingly being used by public school systems, YMCAs, recreational centers and private fitness clubs to help children of all ages increase physical activity levels and maintain a healthy weight, says Mike Hansen, CEO and president of iTECH Fitness.
Some of the studies planned involve other departments at USF including the departments of psychology, physiology, behavioral science and special education.
“There’s no concrete research being done on interactive fitness as a whole,” Witherspoon says. “You can find some on individual pieces of equipment but not as a concept as a whole.”
Beyond physiological studies, Witherspoon plans studies related to equipment with screens vs. nonscreens, skill development and the motivational factor of interactive fitness.
The subjects for the studies come from the fifth grade classes at three elementary schools on the USF campus. Each class spends one PE session each week at the lab. In the future, Witherspoon may expand the research beyond fifth graders and beyond the three schools on campus, she says. She already has a waiting list of children whose parents who have seen media coverage about the facility and want their children involved.
In the future, Witherspoon may expand her research to include adults and senior citizens, she says, adding that much of the equipment can help with balance and core.
“If we can publish something that says interactive fitness and exergaming does encourage the population to be physically active, it’s a powerful statement,” Witherspoon says. “We want to prove that exercise can be fun.”
Some fitness groups already are seeing the benefits of the interactive equipment even before studies have been completed.
“The Ys are already going crazy over this,” Witherspoon says. “I won’t be surprised if the health clubs won’t start picking up on this. Retention is their problem. If you can improve retention, that’s what those clubs want. If it’s proven that these programs improve retention, it would be a no brainer [to install interactive fitness equipment].”
Want to use this article? Click here for options!
© 2009 Penton Media Inc.









Acceptable Use Policy blog comments powered by Disqus