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Extension highlights Tai Chi fall‑prevention, youth preparedness and active 4‑H season
Summary
Extension presenters described expanding Tai Chi classes tied to fall‑prevention grants, youth preparedness trainings that certified participants as volunteers, and a busy 4‑H season with contest placements, scholarships and classroom hatching projects involving 374 eggs.
Danielle (S9), an Extension community‑health instructor, said Tai Chi classes targeting older adults have logged 39 instructional hours since February and served 286 participants across sites including Rolling Meadows and Electro Village Apartments. She described outcome stories: a longtime participant regained better balance after 12 weeks and another with neuropathy reported more intentional, stabilized steps.
Danielle said the area agency on aging secured grant funding through Medicare for Tai Chi for arthritis and fall prevention, which supports outreach to people aged roughly 60 and older. She described classes as 45 minutes per session with focused weight shifting and intentional stepping; Rolling Meadows is running classes twice weekly and one cohort completed the full 21‑movement program.
Extension speakers also summarized youth and preparedness programs. A preparedness workshop run with disaster‑recovery partners gave 16 youth 24 hours of training with local volunteer fire departments, United Regional, ham radio operators, EMTs and the American Red Cross. The program generated emergency plans for participating families and certified some youth to volunteer in future responses.
4‑H program highlights (Presenter S10) included district contest successes, college scholarships (a $17,500 John Deere scholarship), and hands‑on projects: a commercial calf program, shooting sports, fashion contest qualifiers and a classroom “hatching” project that set 374 eggs in county classrooms. The presenter said chicks are sold to help cover hatch costs.
Commissioners praised the community‑health and youth programming and encouraged continued partnerships with local agencies, the YMCA and United Regional to sustain fall‑prevention and youth development work.
Next steps: Continue weekly classes and summer camps, expand Tai Chi outreach to more senior sites, and prepare youth travel/participation for state 4‑H events.

