STUDENTS MAY BE DENIED GRADUATION BECAUSE OF WEIGHT
Inside High Ed - More than two dozen seniors at Lincoln University, in Oxford, Pa., are in danger of not being able to graduate this spring -- not because they're under disciplinary probation or haven't fulfilled the requirements of their majors, but because they were obese as freshmen.
All had body mass index scores above 30 -- the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services' threshold for obesity -- when they arrived on campus in the fall of 2006, but none have taken college-sanctioned steps to show they've lost weight or at least tried. They're in the historically black university's first graduating class required to either have a BMI below 30 or to take "Fitness for Life," a one semester class that mixes exercise, nutritional instruction and discussion of the risks of obesity. . . .
Students interviewed for the story seemed upset by the requirement and, perhaps, a bit blindsided by it. "It's not up to Lincoln to tell me how much my BMI should be. I came here to get a degree and that's what the administration should be concerned with," said Lousie Kaddie, a sophomore. . .
James C. Turner, president of the American College Health Association and director of student health at the University of Virginia, said he had "never heard of something like this before." He added that he was unaware of any studies showing a semester-long class "to be effective to help someone lose weight in the long term."
0 Comments:
Post a Comment
<< Home