College of Education and Behavioral Sciences News
View from the Hill: WKU students play role in Special Olympics USA Games
- WKU News
- Thursday, June 23rd, 2022
When the Special Olympics USA Games were held in Orlando earlier this month, weather was the epicenter of the whole thing.
WKU’s meteorology and emergency management programs played a huge role in making sure the games went off without a hitch as WKU’s Amy Bingham explains in this week’s View from the Hill.
“Our job was to monitor the weather, pay attention to lightning, heat stress, different variables that they were looking for in order to protect athletes.”
Graduate student John Bowen was one of more than twenty students, faculty and staff from WKU tasked with providing weather and support services for the 2022 Special Olympics USA Games.
“Everything that we looked at had a direct impact on the rest of the games.”
Students in Meteorology and Homeland Security Sciences were put to work in the Main Operations Center or MOC as well as out doing field observations at various venues.
“I was in charge of kind of managing the communication between different sports when they finished, when they started and if there were gonna be any delays or anything.”
Star Robertson started out the week as a Geographic Information Science analyst but got called in to assist with transportation and safety.
“I went out and I helped load the buses and I made sure athletes were in there. I counted fifty seats on a bus, fifty people need to be on it. And I just got to congratulate every single athlete as they came off the bus.”
Josh Doyle came along to assist with sports communication and wound up helping ESPN.
“Throughout the whole week I had an opportunity to work with their production crew and help out with athletes, working shot put and working the long jump then track and field.”
It was a multifaceted operation set inside Disney World. Giving WKU students unbelievable access and responsibility in a real-world setting.
“That is something that I never anticipated I would be doing while still in school.”
“I feel like I had the book experience, now I have the real-life experience of putting those things I learned in the classroom on to the field on a big venue.”
“So for us to be picked and to be able to participate was big for us, so we’re excited to see what else we get into.”
The students were accompanied by White Squirrel Weather Director Josh Durkee and Environmental Health and Safety Director David Oliver. The model used in Orlando is exactly what the WKU team has used for events here on campus over the last few years.
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