
Connie Fox
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Contact: Mark McGowan, NIU Office of Public Affairs
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August 30, 2005
DeKalb — Connie Fox turns to glance outside her office window on the second floor of Anderson Hall, home to Northern Illinois University's Department of Kinesiology and Physical Education.
Fox hopes to see the nearby tennis courts alive with friendly competition – after all, it's a gorgeous day, and the first in a long while without oppressive humidity and temperatures in the 90s – but finds them vacant.
Such inactivity on the part of Americans and the epidemic of obesity are the targets of the American Association for Physical Activity and Recreation, which Fox will lead the next two years as its first president.
“The downside of technology is that you can sit at your desk all day and be entertained and get some work done, but that doesn't get you out to be active,” Fox said. “There's an increasing level of obesity in children and adults, but we don't really eat so much. We're inactive. It's what we're not doing.”
Fox is the first president of AAPAR, a new 8,300-member group formed through the April merger of the American Association for Active Lifestyle and Fitness and the American Association for Leisure and Recreation. It combines school-focused and lifelong-focused work.
She and other AAPAR leaders plan a January national announcement in Washington , D.C. Their message also is spread through word of mouth, publications and advertising.
Among the group's missions:
Despite her research work in measurement, Fox attributes her 21 years at NIU to another inspiration.
“My real passion is in teacher education,” she said. “I want to see kids in schools maximize their potential. I want to see kids in schools love physical activity and get the most out of their lives. My work at NIU with future P.E. teachers allows me to make a much bigger impact on the quality of daily P.E.”
A college athlete – basketball, volleyball, field hockey and “whatever was in season,” she said – Fox knew her career lie in physical activity when she realized “the only thing consistent is that I'm doing sports.”
Now more likely to play golf, walk, pedal a bike, lift weights or trail behind her big dog, she still seizes any opportunity for physical activity. “This is cool stuff,” she said. “Let's get people active. Let's get 'em up and doing something.”
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