Frequently Asked Questions

Academic Year 2022-2023 If your questions are not answered below, please contact our undergraduate academic advisor, Lin Williams, in Loree Gymnasium Room 148, 70 Lipman Drive, Cook/Douglass Campus.  Advising hours are posted here.

Teaching Instructor AY - NTT – Sport Management

The Department of Kinesiology and Health at Rutgers University invites applications for a non-tenure track (NTT) faculty position at the Teaching Instructor rank beginning Fall 2022. This is an academic year appointment, and it is a long-term, career-oriented position with the possibility of reappointment and promotion through the University’s teaching faculty track. We seek candidates with expertise in sport administration, event planning, facility management and/or leadership development within sport, recreation, and athletic environments. Course load will include, but not limited to Leadership Development, Professional Presentations, Facilities Planning and Design, Organization and Administration in College Rec Sports, and Ethics and Values in Sport, and/or other courses as determined by the Department Chair. Administrative duties and services at the University will be expected according to the University requirements and the needs of the Department, as determined by the Department Chair. APPLY NOW

Teaching Instructor AY - NTT - Exercise Science

The Department of Kinesiology and Health at Rutgers University invites applications for a non-tenure track (NTT) faculty position at the Teaching Instructor rank beginning Fall 2022. This is an academic year appointment, and it is a long-term, career-oriented position with the possibility of reappointment and promotion through the University’s teaching faculty track. Course load will include, but not limited to Exercise Physiology, Exercise Physiology Laboratory, Exercise Testing and Prescription, and/or other courses as determined by the Department Chair. Administrative duties and services (e.g. Exercise is Medicine) at the University will be expected according to the University requirements and the needs of the Department, as determined by the Department Chair. APPLY NOW

Dr. Sara Campbell's Study is in the News

March 25, 2016 Can Your Workout Impact Your Gut Health?  Yes—And Here's Why By Lauren Mechling | Vogue Fungi, protozoans, bacteria, nonliving viruses.  It might not be pretty, but the human microbiome is a beautiful thing.  The approximately 100 trillion bacteria that live in our gut (and, to a lesser degree, our mouths and skin) boost indispensable functions that support metabolism, immune systems, and mental health.  Ever-mounting evidence of the powers of the microbiome — some call it “the forgotten organ” — has the health-conscious among us downing probiotic-packed yogurt drinks and investing in prebiotic supplements.  Now, it might have us booking into a Spin class. The link between physical activity and gut flora was noted two years ago, when researchers published a study comparing the national rugby team of Ireland and sedentary men, which found that the elite athletes had healthier guts.  But the study did not control for dietary differences among its subjects, which left room for interpretation.  The latest research, however, confirms what the rugby study suggested:  We can alter our bacterial structure through exercise. “That people who move more have a more diverse microbiome is something that we noticed at my lab several years ago, but we couldn’t prove causality,” says Rob Knight, Ph.D., director of the Center for Microbiome Innovation at U.C. San Diego.  “These studies are incredibly exciting.”  One, published last week in the journal PLOS One, compared two sets of young mice: those that exercised and those that didn’t.  Some of the rodents ate a high-fat diet, others, low fat.  Over the course of 12 weeks, the rodents that ran on a wheel, regardless of diet type, experienced an increase in several helpful bacteria—some by as much as 40 percent.  The study’s lead author, Sara Campbell, Ph.D., at the Department of Exercise Science and Sport Studies at Rutgers University, points out that she found exercise to be extremely effective at raising levels of butyrate, the bacteria that helps protect against colon cancer.  “Exercise might also help you feel less bloated,” she says. Read more

Rutgers Students Explore the Science and the Spirit of the Mediterranean Lifestyle

November 2016 An eye-opening and mouth-watering trip to Greece is becoming a staple The Mediterranean diet it everywhere these days, from the cover of splashy health and fitness magazines to the website of CNN medical correspondent Sanjay Gupta. But a group of Rutgers students and faculty recently travelled to Greece to get beyond the headlines and fully explore the region's overall culture of healthy living, studying its specific physiological, social, and psychological elements. Read SAS Article

Rutgers tests remote lecture halls

March 1, 2017 Scanning the nearly 150 students she could see from the front of her lecture halls, Rutgers University professor Sara Campbell waited for a hand. Campbell was in a test prep session in her exercise physiology course, and when the answers started coming in she quickly called on one of the students in her classroom. After writing that response on the chalkboard, Campbell turned her attention to a large video screen on the lecture hall's back wall and called on a student watching from a classroom on the other side of campus, nearly five miles away. Read full NJ Advance Media Article

Rutgers Pioneers a New Model for Synchronous Learning

March 2, 2017 New classroom initiative could serve as a blueprint for course sharing among Big Ten schools New technology at Rutgers is making it possible for a professor to be in two places at once while cutting down on the need for students to take a bus to class. The university recently unveiled two new classrooms – one on the Cook/Douglass Campus and a second on the Busch Campus – outfitted with high-definition broadcast technology that divides lectures as large as 275 students into two locations. Read full Rutgers Today Article

Exercise Sparks New Life in Aging Adults

April 24, 2017 Rutgers Center for Exercise and Aging celebrates 15 years of bringing students and seniors together in a quest for better health For Ruth Gottlieb, 82, and Jean Timper, 85, and members at the East Brunswick Senior Center, exercise is the high point of their day.  What gets them most excited?  Line dancing. "I even dance around the house.  When I'm vacuuming or cooking, I just stop and dance around and stretch.  I like to be flexible," says Gottlieb, a former teacher who says her only regular exercise before retirement was running after students. Read full Rutgers Today Article

Shawn Arent is 2017 William J. Kraemer Outstanding Sport Scientist of the Year

July 18, 2017 The National Strength and Conditioning Association (NSCA) proudly announced their selection of Shawn Arent as the 27th recipient of the William J. Kraemer Outstanding Sport Scientist of the Year award. Arent is the director of the Center for Health and Human Performance at Rutgers Institute for Food, Nutrition and Health (IFNH), associate professor in the Department of Kinesiology and Health, and director of the Graduate Program in Kinesiology and Applied Physiology. Arent was selected based on his contributions to the NSCA, their community, and breakthroughs in the field of applied exercise and sport science. Read full article

David Sanders - NSCA's Challenge Scholarship Recipient

August 31, 2017 The National Strength and Conditioning Association Foundation announced that David Sanders has been named a recipient of the NSCA's Challenge Scholarship for 2017.  Sanders was selected by the NCSA Foundation Scholarship Committee after a thorough evaluation process of all applicants. Read full article

Kinesiology and Health Helps Puerto Rico

November 7, 2017  Check out all the donations we received to help the residents of Puerto Rico!  

Dr. Campbell interviewed for article

January 22, 2018 Dr. Sara Campbell was interviewed for an article in Vibrant Life titled The Zoo in You: How Your Gut Bacteria Affect Your Brain Health. Read article  

Q&A with David Sanders

January 31, 2018 Read the Rutgers Today Q&A with David J. Sanders on the Athlete in the Artist.  David conducts research at the Center for Health and Human Performance under the direction of Dr. Shawn Arent.

Mike Finkelstein talks to Daily Targum

February 22, 2018 Mike Finkelstein, director of the Global Sports Business M.S. Program, talks to The Daily Targum about the process of moving the graduate program from idea to reality. Read The Daily Targum article
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