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Lisa Hicks and Dan Schmidt

There is a tremendous need for wellness programming at all university levels as well as the United States as a whole. Healthy lifestyles benefit the workplace through lower healthcare costs, lower rates of injury and absenteeism, higher productivity, and improved morale and retention. This paper describes two innovative programs in higher education, the Healthy DiplomaTM and Healthy Titans, which are designed to improve the health and well-being of both students and employees. Two universities addressed the health and wellness of students (Healthy DiplomaTM) and employees (Healthy Titans) by utilizing the strengths of their respective kinesiology department students and faculty members. The Healthy DiplomaTM program was designed to lead university students to a healthy lifestyle while enhancing their postgraduation contributions as healthy entry-level employees. The Healthy Titans program was designed to provide University of Wisconsin Oshkosh employees and their families an affordable fitness program with an onsite clinical setting for kinesiology students to gain practical experience with fitness programming. Students were provided the opportunity to gain personal health and wellness skills and competencies, and practice their future profession in an applied, yet highly-supervised setting. Practitioners were provided current research and best profession practices. These two programs at two different universities further illustrate both the practicality and advantages of faculty and student collaborations for campus-wide wellness. Programs addressing wellness at the university level have demonstrated appropriateness as well as benefits for students, employees, and community members, and suggest expansion of similar programs to other university settings.

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Steven J. Petruzzello and Allyson G. Box

movement as an important part of the daily culture and giving students the tools they need to develop healthy and hopefully lifelong physical activity habits. Other steps include the assessment of physical activity whenever students visit their campus health care provider as well as making connections

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Oliver W.A. Wilson, Kelsey E. Holland, Lucas D. Elliott, Michele Duffey, and Melissa Bopp

examining PA promotion among college students as a part of the American College of Sports Medicine’s Exercise is Medicine ® On Campus initiative indicate that campus health care providers and communication and marketing departments are among the most important and sought-after PA promotion partners. 43

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Aidan D. Kraus and Erica Tibbetts

. Additionally, at the conclusion of the survey, a message was included for all respondents that contained contact information for the campus health and counseling center, off-campus counseling services, online counseling services, and national mental health support lines. Furthermore, a therapist at the campus

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Jackson M. Howard, Bonnie C. Nicholson, Michael B. Madson, Richard S. Mohn, and Emily Bullock-Yowell

gratification, and taking a strengths-focused approach ( Bashant, 2014 ). Third, we ask that university athletic departments and campus health professionals emphasize how grit may assist student-athletes beyond sport including understanding grit in many different domains, such as with career decision making and

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Shannon C. Mulhearn, Pamela Hodges Kulinna, and Collin Webster

having access to an off-campus health club looked at increasing female youth’s PA levels through a community partnership. Various psychosocial questionnaires were used to collect preintervention and postintervention measures from 17 freshman. K-12 students Miller & Lindt ( 2018 ) A 2-week, crossover