NCCU ATHLETIC TRAINING EDUCATION PROGRAM BECOMES FIRST ACCREDITED
AT HBCU

Dawn Maffucci, program director for NCCU’s Athletic Training
Education Program, (third from left) shows NCCU students how to
properly use some of the athletic equipment in NCCU’s athletic
training program (from left to right) Lorisha Raynor, Kimberly
Porter, Karma Karangelen (sitting), Eva Penny, and Iva D. Ward.
MAY 3, 2005
DURHAM,
N.C. - The Commission on Accreditation
of Allied Health Education Programs (CAAHEP) voted recently
to grant initial accreditation to the Athletic Training Education
Program (ATEP) at North Carolina Central University (NCCU),
making NCCU the first Historically Black College or University
(HBCU) in the nation to have this distinction.
“Our faculty in the Athletic Training Program worked very
hard to secure accreditation,” said Chancellor James H. Ammons. “The
accreditation is going to add value to the degree our students
receive. While we are the only HBCU offering an accredited program,
we are not going to rest on our laurels. We will work toward developing
one of the top programs in the state and nation because we are
committed to increasing minority participation in this field.”
Currently, there are 322 undergraduate CAAHEP accredited programs
nationwide. According to the National Athletic Trainer’s
Association, African-Americans represent only 2% of the more than
30,000 certified members.
“Gaining accreditation in this specialized area is a historical
event for the University and the Department of Physical Education
and Recreation as we are the first HBCU to do so,” said Dr.
Beverly Allen, chair of the Department of Physical Education and
Recreation. “It attests to the high quality programs in the
department and the expertise and dedication of the faculty. This
will increase our appeal to a broader range of students, increase
our enrollment and the number of African American and other qualified
athletic trainers in the field.”
CAAHEP accreditation will allow ATEP graduates to sit for the
National Athletic Trainer’s Association Board of Certification
exam. Certified athletic trainers are allied health professionals
who deal with injury prevention, evaluation and management in physically
active populations. Once certified, an athletic trainer can be
employed in a variety of settings: college/university, high school,
sports medicine/physical therapy clinics, hospitals, industrial/corporate
settings, the military, professional sports, and as a physician
extender just to name a few.
"The achievement of CAAHEP accreditation for the athletic
training education program at this university is a huge step toward
increasing the diversity in the athletic training field,” said
Dawn Maffucci, ATEP program director at NCCU. “With NCCU
becoming the first HBCU to achieve this honor, minority students
will no longer have to choose between attending an accredited athletic
training education program and attending an HBCU. Now they can
attend both.”
The ATEP faculty and staff aren’t the only individuals excited
about this accreditation. Veronica Ampey, chair National Athletic
Trainers Association (NATA) Ethnic Diversity Advisory Committee
said, “CAAHEP accreditation is a wonderful accomplishment
at any institution and I am especially pleased to finally see an
HBCU receive accreditation. Although the NATA Ethnic Diversity
Advisory Committee may have played a minute role in assisting the
process, kudos goes to Lori Vazquez and the rest of the NCCU ATEP
staff for all their persistence and hard work. I look forward to
the positive impact that recruiting, retaining, educating, and
matriculating ethnically diverse athletic training students will
have on the entire association.”
NCCU ATEP students are equally excited about the accreditation.
“I’m very proud that our department has gone through
this process,” said Isaac McNeill, senior ATEP student from
Wilkesboro, N.C. “It has been enlightening. I plan to uphold
the high standards of the ATEP.”
Kimberly Porter, a junior from Durham, said, “I am proud
of this great accomplishment of the Athletic Training Education
Program and understand that as one of the first students that will
graduate from this program I have a huge responsibility to represent
this University. I am excited to add some color and ethnicity to
the athletic training field and create new opportunities in the
field for future graduates of the North Carolina Central University
ATEP.”
Gary Johnson first year student said, "The ATEP program has
opened up internships for me and provided me with future job opportunities."
Dr. Virginia Politano, former chairperson of the Department of
Physical Education and Recreation, was instrumental in the program's
development.
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