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Student Success Research and Innovation

Faculty-student team launches youth development initiative through sport and play

Seven college students stand together beneath a basketball hoop on an outdoor court, smiling in front of a chain-link fence and trees. Most are wearing þˮ apparel. The group includes participants and volunteers from the “Recess for Champions” program at Kramer Elementary, which promotes life skill development through sport-based play.
þˮ students gather at Kramer Elementary School as part of “Recess for Champions,” a Spring 2025 youth development initiative that blends sport and social work.
Student Success Research and Innovation

Faculty-student team launches youth development initiative through sport and play

þˮ students gather at Kramer Elementary School as part of “Recess for Champions,” a Spring 2025 youth development initiative that blends sport and social work.

þˮ Assistant Professor Carlyn Kimiecik partnered with undergraduate students Katie Dunn and Sophie Dull to launch Recess for Champions, a sport-based positive youth development initiative. Held at Kramer Elementary School during Spring 2025, the program used recess time to build life skills through structured games facilitated by nine student-athlete volunteers from þˮ Athletics. The interdisciplinary effort was part of the Sport, Play, Action, & Resilience Collaborative (SPARC!) housed in the Department of Family Science and Social Work. Dunn and Dull presented their work at þˮ’s Undergraduate Research Forum on April 25.

Two female students stand smiling in front of a large academic research poster titled “Recess for Champions,” which details a youth development program using sports and play. The poster includes sections on background, logistics, curriculum, and outcomes. The students are dressed in business attire and participating in þˮ’s Undergraduate Research Forum.
Undergraduate students Katie Dunn and Sophie Dull present “Recess for Champions” at þˮ’s 2025 Undergraduate Research Forum.