By
Bonnie Coblentz MISSISSIPPI
STATE -- Eight girls from a group home in West Point spent a
week with horses as part of a therapy program hoped to be
the first of many offered around the state. Mississippi
State University's Horse Park hosted FOCUS, a day camp from
July 15 to 19 designed for girls age 12 to 17 for "Finding
Out about Communicating, Understanding and
Succeeding." The
girls from Community Counseling Services' Parkview Group
Home spent each morning learning how to groom, saddle, mount
and ride horses. Mary Ford, MSU Extension Service
therapeutic riding coordinator, said using horses in therapy
is known as hippotherapy and can be useful in a variety of
situations. "Therapeutic
riding serves socially, emotionally and behaviorally
challenged people," Ford said. "These girls are learning
about relationships and communication. They have to build a
relationship with their horse to communicate with it and get
it to do what they want it to." Diane
Matthews, youth care specialist at Parkview Group Home, said
by late in the week, the girls who are usually quite loud at
home had learned to be quiet and calm around the
horses. "They're
getting positive reinforcement at this camp. They're getting
attention, but in a positive way," Matthews said. Angela
Wigginton, crisis coordinator with Community Counseling
Services, said the girls are also learning cooperation and
building confidence, trust, self-respect and
self-esteem. "We
were very skeptical at first about the program, and wondered
what a week with a horse could do," Wigginton said. "Now I'm
excited. It's been good for the girls." In
addition to learning how to care for and ride a horse, the
girls completed MSU's team-building ropes course, completed
arts and crafts projects, and heard about educational and
scholarship opportunities at MSU. Among
the many staff and volunteers making the camp happen were
four Oktibbeha County 4-H girls who assisted with the riding
and provided peer support. Allegra Dowdle, 15; Faeh Herring,
16; Ericka Farrer, 16; and Paige Guin, 14, are all involved
in 4-H horse projects. They volunteered their time for the
week-long camp, and helped teach the girls how to work with
horses. "Seeing
them smile when they learned something and accomplished
something makes it all worth it," Guin said. Lina
Beall, Clay County administrator for Community Counseling
Services, said the state Department of Mental Health has
offered a few other FOCUS camps across the state, but this
is the first that involves horses. If it's successful, the
innovative camp will be a model for others wanting to offer
a similar experience in their area. "They're
collecting data on the front end, at the end of the project
and after the first nine weeks of school to see how it has
impacted the girls and their own perception of targeted
areas they're working on," Beall said. "We're also getting
input from staff who are working directly with them, and all
the onsite information has been very favorable." FOCUS
was sponsored by the Mississippi Horse Park, the Mississippi
Department of Mental Health, the MSU 4-H TEAM therapeutic
riding program, Community Counseling Services and First
United Methodist Church in Starkville. For
more information on therapeutic riding or this FOCUS camp,
contact Ford at (662) 325-3350. Released:
July 22, 2002
Community
News
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Horses give
therapy to
special-needs teens
Contact: Mary Ford, (662) 325-3350
Visit: DAFVM
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Last Modified: Friday, 19-Dec-08 10:28:14
URL: http://msucares.com/news/print/commnews/cn02/020722.html
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