Tim Lee - SJO Daily https://sjodaily.com Thu, 23 Sep 2021 20:52:42 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.8.3 https://sjodaily.com/wp-content/uploads/2023/01/cropped-sjo-daily-logo-32x32.png Tim Lee - SJO Daily https://sjodaily.com 32 32 Oakwood Football field to be named after Marty McFarland https://sjodaily.com/2021/09/23/oakwood-football-field-to-be-named-after-marty-mcfarland/ Thu, 23 Sep 2021 20:52:37 +0000 https://sjodaily.com/?p=13319 By Fred Kroner By FRED KRONER fred@mahometnews.com Some things change, and that is a positive. Imagine finding high school coaches these days if the stipend matched what was offered in the fall of 1970, when Marty McFarland was starting his career in education. “Assistants were paid $200 (at Catlin),” McFarland […]

The post Oakwood Football field to be named after Marty McFarland first appeared on SJO Daily.

]]>
By Fred Kroner

By FRED KRONER

fred@mahometnews.com

Some things change, and that is a positive.

Imagine finding high school coaches these days if the stipend matched what was offered in the fall of 1970, when Marty McFarland was starting his career in education.

“Assistants were paid $200 (at Catlin),” McFarland said.

That’s not per week or per game, but per season.

Some things never changed and that, too, is positive.

The rules McFarland implemented in his first year as the varsity football coach at Oakwood in the fall of 1978 were the same ones that he asked of his players in his final season on the sidelines in 2000.

“We had a hair rule,” McFarland said. “No facial hair and off the collar in the back.”

There was no deviation as the years turned into decades.

“Once it’s established, you can’t go back,” McFarland said. “It’s not fair to the kids you coached before.”

And then there are the things that well into the future will not be changing.

One of those is how the football field at Oakwood High School will be known. As of Friday, Oct. 1, it will be called Marty McFarland Field, in recognition of the winningest football coach in school history (126-93 career record).

The dedication ceremony will take place in conjunction with a home game against Hoopeston Area.

“It says a lot that even after 20 years (following retirement) people are willing to do something for you,” McFarland’s son, Ryan, said. “A lot of fields are named after a person and that creates a memory of that person for a long time.”

No one dropped even the faintest hint of what was in the works until the Oakwood school board had approved the naming at its Wednesday (Sept. 15 meeting).

“I had no idea,” Marty McFarland said. “It was a total shock. Once I retired, I kind of walked away. I thought that’s what you were supposed to do. Your time is done.”

He hasn’t been forgotten, nor has his impact been diminished by the passing years.

It was while honoring the Comets’ 1988 state quarterfinal team in 2018 that Tim Lee – who was then the principal – knew what needed to be done.

“I saw the response when Marty was on the field and decided to move,” Lee said. “Marty was a big part of the whole school culture and so well thought of in our community.

“I’m thrilled we are doing this. It probably should have been done sooner. We have had outstanding coaches, but we haven’t had long-term outstanding coaches.”

McFarland is in his high school Hall of Fame (Mattoon, Class of 1965) and the state coaches association Hall of Fame.

One of his first colleagues at Catlin, Dan Hageman, began his coaching tenure the first year that McFarland started.

The field-naming honor is significant, Hageman said, because of where it originated.

“Someone on the outside only knows what they read or hear,” said Hageman, who is now in Year 52 of coaching high school football in the (expanded) district where he started. “Those that you work with know the real person.

“This is long overdue. Marty deserves this.”

Mike Waters is now the athletic director at Westville. He was in a similar position at Oakwood when McFarland arrived.

“He came over from Catlin and immediately got things going,” Waters said. “He’s an institution.

“He and Bob Sermak (assistant coach) set up guidelines and a code of conduct. One reason for the success was the consistency, the way you carried yourself as a football player and as a student at Oakwood High School.”

Oakwood had been to the football playoffs once before McFarland’s tenure began. He guided the Comets into the postseason in nine different seasons.

In the two decades since he retired, Oakwood has made an additional eight playoff appearances.

The school season record for wins in the football program is nine, held jointly by McFarland’s teams in 1983 and 1988.

“You can’t be someone else’s puppet, but he’s good at listening to the right people,” Hageman said. “He’s an excellent coach and an even better person.

“I know if I needed something, 20 minutes from now he would be at my doorstep.”

Among the players that McFarland coached was his son, Ryan, who grew up around Oakwood football.

When he became a high school player, he didn’t have to wonder what to expect.

“Everything was exactly as I remembered it as a little kid,” Ryan McFarland said. “The routine of practice never changed. The routine of summer never changed. The workouts never changed.

“There’s something to be said for consistency. You know what to expect when you get into high school.”

McFarland said he stopped wearing a wristwatch after his first year as a head coach. The length of his practices wasn’t going to be determined by a clock.

“We were not on a time schedule,” he said. “If we didn’t do it right, we did it again, and we did it again.

“It was not unusual to have three- or four-hour practices. I told the kids I would never ask you to do something I haven’t done. Whatever we did, other people had done it before you.”

McFarland’s reputation as a stern task-master preceded some students to high school. That was when Lee saw a different side of the person.

“When I got there, I had Marty for P.E.,” Lee said. “He protected the younger kids. He was a good role model.”

For years, McFarland invited the entire varsity to his house on Sunday afternoon to watch the game film from the most recent contest.

“That way, we didn’t lose any practice time (by watching it on Monday afternoon),” McFarland said.

Marty McFarland remembers the one exception he made about altering the routine.

During two-a-day workouts, he scheduled practices to start at 7:50 a.m. and 3:50 p.m.

In 1983, due to heat warnings, he pushed the second session back to the early evening.

“Our best running back (senior Randy Durbin) died (in an afternoon drowning accident),” McFarland said. “That was the last time I did that. It’s terrible to lose a kid.”

The 1983 Oakwood football team, which had nearly two dozen seniors, went on to become the first – and only – one in school history to go undefeated in a nine-game regular season. (The 1949 team was unbeaten in a seven-game season.)

Team meals were a part of the weekly ritual on the Thursday evening of home games.

That tradition started, in part, McFarland said because, “I found out some kids hadn’t eaten all day and it bothered me.”

A few years into his tenure, team breakfasts began on the Friday morning of games at a local truck stop.

“That was the kids’ idea,” McFarland said.

Coaching and teaching wasn’t his original pathway when he enrolled at Eastern Illinois University.

McFarland thought he would become a certified public accountant.

The few classes he took toward that major, he said, “bored me to death,” and he moved to the education field as a sophomore.

“I’m glad I made the switch,” he said.

He had some anxious moments, however, in the early years of his coaching career.

In his first year at Catlin, the football head coach was fired after four games. McFarland was hired on an interim basis to finish out the season, with Hageman serving as his assistant.

“I was 22 years old,” he said, “just four years older than some of them.

“My first group, they’re 69 or 70 now. That puts things in perspective.”

McFarland’s 74th birthday is Sept. 28, three days before the Oakwood football field is named in his honor.

Teaching and coaching wasn’t a financially lucrative profession in 1970.

“My first contract was under $6,000 (annually),” McFarland said, pointing out that gas was also 27 cents a gallon at the time. “I lived paycheck to paycheck.

“When I got to Oakwood, I took a job as a custodian at a bank three nights a week to get some extra money.”

School personnel soon found ways to supplement his salary, including driving a bus.

In return, McFarland said, “I would get to work early and leave late.”

He expected a similar commitment from his athletes.

“The bus never left at 4,” McFarland said. “It left at 10 ‘til 4.

“That’s part of the discipline. You ride with me and you get to play.”

While McFarland is recognized as the winningest football coach at Oakwood, he said there is plenty of credit to share.

“I was blessed with unbelievable assistant coaches,” he said. “If I said practice was at 8, they’d be there by 7:30.

“It was a ‘we’ deal all the way through.”

Among the other assistants, besides Sermak, who had lengthy tenures with McFarland were Bill Blair, Mike Nolan and Dyke Wilson.

It was his own time as an assistant coach – under Don Lashmet at Catlin – they helped establish the coach that McFarland became.

“He was discipline-oriented and helped me set my mind on what needed to be done,” McFarland said. “That was one of the best things that happened to me as far as my philosophies of coaching.”

Another significant moment was when Oakwood principal Glenn Keever sought out McFarland, when he was still at Catlin, and asked if he would be interested in a job he hadn’t applied for.

“The timing was good for everybody,” Waters said. “Marty had enough years under his belt as an assistant to a legend and was ready to get out on his own and try things his own way.”

McFarland and his wife, Jan, celebrated their 51st wedding anniversary in August. He knew where to start after his hiring at Oakwood was official.

“I called every boy in school and asked him to come out for football,” McFarland said.

“It took a while to get on track, but once we got ‘em, we were really good in the ‘80s.”

Lee found it interesting which students went out for football.

“Marty got kids out who didn’t play any other sports,” Lee said. “He made them feel like they were a part of something bigger than themselves.”

In the last eight years of the 1980s, McFarland’s teams were a combined 60-21 with six playoff appearances.

“He got talent, and did a lot with it,” Hageman said.

McFarland said it is difficult to express in words what the honor means.

“I’ve been blessed for so many years,” he said, “and this is another one.

“It’s an unbelievable feeling. I’m glad I’m alive to look at it and enjoy it.”

Waters has less difficulty explaining the significance of the meaning of Marty McFarland Field.

“It’s a testament not only to what the school thinks, but what the community thinks about what you did for them in an honorable, upfront manner,” Waters said.

The post Oakwood Football field to be named after Marty McFarland first appeared on SJO Daily.

]]>
Schools look to tackle teen vaping with staff and student education https://sjodaily.com/2020/02/06/teen-vaping/ Thu, 06 Feb 2020 00:04:37 +0000 https://sjodaily.com/?p=6487 BY DANI TIETZ dani@sjodaily.com At the time current administrators and teachers were preparing to work with students, vaping was not something they were expecting to face. At the time parents of today’s teenagers had their children, “juuling” wasn’t a term. In fact, while many of those educators were working towards […]

The post Schools look to tackle teen vaping with staff and student education first appeared on SJO Daily.

]]>
BY DANI TIETZ
dani@sjodaily.com

At the time current administrators and teachers were preparing to work with students, vaping was not something they were expecting to face.

At the time parents of today’s teenagers had their children, “juuling” wasn’t a term.

In fact, while many of those educators were working towards their degrees, vaping or “juuling” was not even in their vocabularies.

They did know, though, that teen drug use would likely be something they would have to deal with at one point or another. The good news was that teenage use of cigarettes was on the decline.

According to the American Lung Association, after a spike in cigarette smoking among teenagers from 27.5-percent in 1991 to 36.4-percent in 1995, efforts to educate teens on the dangers of smoking began to take hold throughout the early 2000s as those percentages dropped to 8.8-percent of teen cigarette use in 2017.

Around that same time, vaping or “juuling” exploded onto the market.

Promoted as the cigarette that “Tastes and Feels Better Than a Real Cigarette,” vaping requires a battery-powered device, an e-cigarette that heats a liquid for consumption. Once inhaled, the substance inside the vapor is released into the body.

With the elimination of tell-tale signs of cigarette smoking, the e-cigarette device was advertised as a way to “Smoke In Style” as a cigarette box was converted into a device that often resembled a USB drive and the odor associated with smoking was replaced with flavored liquids.

While it remained illegal in all 50 states for children under the age of 18 to purchase and consume nicotine, by 2018, 37-percent of high school seniors reported vaping, according to News In Health.

What the FDA (Food and Drug Administration) now calls an “epidemic” is seen in junior high and high schools across the nation, including in East Central Illinois.

Mahomet-Seymour Education Association’s President James Heinold said high school teachers have brought up concerns with allowing students to go to the bathroom during class because they may use the space to vape.

Oakwood High School’s Principal Tim Lee said that in 2018, staff were “overwhelmed with students going to the bathroom frequently, causing tardies to class and a variety of other issues.”

St. Joseph-Ogden High School’s Principal Gary Page said that while bathrooms are problematic, they have also had to “address issues with (vaping) happening inside of classrooms and the hallways.”

“Vaping devices are so easily concealed, look similar to USB devices and pens, and they can be concealed so easily, there are some students that have the brass to do it in the very short moment it takes for a teacher to turn around to help another student,” Page said.

“I have a friend that teaches in another school district that told me of a student that wore a sweatshirt that used the drawstring of the hood as a delivery device. The student vaped as they were talking to the teacher. The teacher only knew of it because another student later told them about it.”

While adults, administrators, teachers and parents alike were learning about the new trend, marketers targeted teens with colorful ads, young consumers and flavored cartridges.

Today it is estimated that 5.3 million children under the age of 18 are vaping, according to NPR.

“Outside of the concerns everyone has, the biggest concern is that young people have been lied to and in some cases have convinced themselves that there are not health or addiction risks associated with vaping or at least the health risks are not as detrimental as smoking,” Page said.

Christie Clinic’s Dr. Jeanelle Murphy, who practices Family Medicine in St. Joseph, said that 7 in 10 teens are exposed to e-cigarette advertising which increases the likelihood that the teen will try e-cigarettes and possibly become addicted.

The long-term side effects of vaping are still something to be experienced, but the short-term effects have doctors warning parents and educators to educate their students on how vaping will immediately impact them.

Heritage Community School District Superintendent Tom Davis said the conversation has taken place at Heritage High School for several years.

“We discussed changing our policies as far as discipline, but decided to take a different approach instead,” Davis said. “We emphasized prevention and warning kids especially in our health classes and we also put up a variety of posters, some with some pretty direct messages, about the dangers of vaping.”

Keeping in mind that a student’s long-term health is most important, Oakwood also thought it would be a good idea to place the posters where students were most likely to vape, near bathrooms and locker rooms.

Davis said, “the posters highlight the health issues (vaping) can create. This is a teen health issue foremost, so we wanted that message out there along with enforcing our handbook steps for disciplinary action.”

According to Murphy, research has shown that vaping is more dangerous than smoking.

“The most popular vaping device known as Juul has the same amount of nicotine as 20 regular cigarettes,” she said.

“Juul contains nicotine salts, which allow high levels of nicotine to be inhaled more easily with less irritation of the throat.

“Juul always contains Nicotine even if it is claimed that it doesn’t. Nicotine harms the developing brain and the brain is still developing until the age of 25 years, so the more nicotine, the more harm.”

Murphy said that the e-cigarette aerosol is also full of chemicals that “do not release harmless water vapor, but very dangerous chemicals that can lead to illness and death in the user.

“When e-cigarette aerosol is inhaled many harmful substances fill the user’s lungs including Nicotine, ultrafine particles that can penetrate deep into the lungs causing damage; flavorings such as diacetyl which is a chemical linked to a serious lung disease, volatile organic compounds, cancer-causing chemicals, and heavy metals such as nickel, tin and lead,” Murphy said.

Alongside being linked to an increased risk of depression in teens, vaping has also been linked to damaging the developing brain, causing memory loss, problems with learning, impulse control as well as mood and attention disorders, according to Murphy.

“Depression is already a big problem in teens with suicide being the second leading cause of death in young people ages 12-18 years,” she said.

Recently, doctors have been diagnosing cases of a life-threatening condition, EVALI, an e-cigarette/vaping associated lung injury that can present with fever, chills, cough, shortness of breath, chest tightness, belly pain and loss of appetite.

“It is unclear how many chemicals in E-cigarettes cause EVALI but it seems vitamin E acetate is a cause.”

Since Dec. 27, 2019 — little more than a month ago — there have been 2,561 hospitalized cases of EVALI and 55 deaths in the United States and U.S. territories.

Vitamin E acetate is found in cartridges with THC or marijuana. The National Institute on Drug Abuse released a study on Dec. 18, 2019 and reported that 20.8-percent of 12th-graders and 19.4-percent of 10th-graders had vaped marijuana. Those figures were nearly doubled from the 2018 study.

___________________________________________________________________________

According to the CDC e-cigarette usage among teens is higher than cigarette usage:

Grade E-Cigarettes Cigarettes
8 9.5% 3.6%
10 14% 6.3%
12 16.2% 11.4%
  • 5.8% of teens using e-cigarettes report using marijuana in their e-cigarettes
  • 66% of teens using e-cigarettes report using just flavoring in their e-cigarettes however it was found that 99% of e-cigarettes contain Nicotine even if the manufacturer claims the device does not contain nicotine.

___________________________________________________________________________

Vapers are also using liquid laced with DMT (N-Dimethyltryptamine), Spice, or synthetic marijuana, and Flakka.

Health professionals are also learning that it is not only the user that is affected by the vapers, but much like with cigarette smoke, those nearby can be subject to second-hand exposure.

“When an e-cigarette user exhales into the air they are exposing those around them to the harmful aerosol thereby putting others at risk for the lung, heart and brain damage,” Murphy said.

“E-cigarette aerosol is more dangerous to children and teens than adults, so an adult using an e-cigarette around a child or teen is putting that young person at significant risk.”

Murphy added that 50-percent of calls to poison control centers for e-cigarettes are for children ages five years and younger.

Teens who try e-cigarettes are also more likely to start smoking in the future.

“30.7 percent of teens using e-cigarettes start smoking within 6 months compared to 8.1 percent of teens who are not using e-cigarettes,” Murphy said.

“We know that Nicotine is a highly addictive substance and that cigarettes cause cancer and life-threatening lung and heart diseases. We know that half of all people who smoke long term will die because of smoking-related illnesses.

“E-cigarettes also contain nicotine which makes them addictive as well and teens and young people who vape are more likely to start smoking cigarettes.  Studies are ongoing on the harmful effects of e-cigarette use. We likely don’t know as much as we will in the future, so it’s best not to start using e-cigarettes, just like it’s best not to start smoking.”

Schools are taking the message to the classroom. Heritage, Oakwood, Mahomet-Seymour and St. Joseph-Ogden have made sure that the effects of vaping are covered in their health courses, alongside conversations in other classes.

Page said that St. Joseph-Ogden has added educational conversations about vaping in advisory class alongside sending student mentors around to classes to educate their fellow students on vaping.

“A great resource is https://e-cigarettes.surgeongeneral.gov/.  We utilized this website as a starting point for conversations. Last year we shared this link with our parents as well,” Page said.

According to Mahomet-Seymour High School Principal Chad Benedict, the school district modified its policy so that “students violating the policy have to complete a webquest on vaping.  They have to read various articles and complete questions. Our goal is to continue to educate students on the dangers of vaping.”

Educating students only comes with educating the staff, too, though. Several school districts have provided training for teachers and staff to recognize vaping devices and have equipped them with ways to talk to their students.

“Last year we had training on vaping, which exposed the staff to the various paraphernalia to look out for, so much of it looks like ordinary school equipment that the teachers were surprised and were sure they had seen them in their classroom but didn’t know what they were,” Lee said. “There is much less of that now that the staff is more aware.”

Page said St. Joseph-Ogden has taken a similar approach.

“We have done training on identifying different types of vapes as well as disseminating information to teachers on the dangers of vaping to promote education through conversation between teachers, as well as arming teachers with information to be able to have conversations with students.”

The training comes in handy as teachers and staff, and at times students, are the ones monitoring the vaping activity during the school day or at extracurricular activities.

“We monitor it at (Oakwood) by the same old tried-and-true methods of having adults be visible in all the places where this may occur,” Lee said.

Davis said having a School Resource Officer is also an added benefit.

All four school districts have looked into vape detectors to install in designated areas throughout the school, but the price per unit and the effectiveness of the detectors raises additional questions among staff.

Davis said he has seen the collective efforts Heritage has made over the last couple years impact students.

“I will say that we feel the efforts school-wide have made a difference as the number of reports and actual offenses tracked for discipline has dropped significantly over the past 2.5 years,” Davis said.

“A student, (whom) I will, of course, not identify, was forthright with us that he/she had stopped vaping because of the effect it had on their lungs and breathing and their sports.”

School officials hope that education efforts are also taking place at home. Davis said that anytime a student has been caught at Heritage, parents have partnered with the school.

“I have been gratified that when we have had a case of a student caught doing this that the parents are our allies in addressing it with their child,” Davis said. “School is about learning in all facets of life, including making health decisions, so this is another aspect of that we try to teach.

“It is rare that the parent(s) are not supportive in what the discipline will entail, but also joining us in sending the student a message that this can have negative long term effects and we are here to help stop it.”

Lee said even parents who don’t think their child has vaped can step up to the plate.

“I would urge (parents) to talk to their kids,” Lee said. “I was blown away by some of the percentages that students would tell me were vaping last year. If they were right — and they probably know more than I do — then there is a good chance their student had at least tried vaping. It is a serious epidemic that could affect this generation far into the future if we don’t get them to stop soon.”

Just like educators, parents need to know what to look for. For many school districts, recognizing sweet fragrances is often a sign that vaping has occurred.

If a child exhibits behavioral changes, mood swings, agitation, shortness of breath, poor performance, weight loss, nausea, vomiting, mouth sores, abnormal coughing or throat-clearing, chest pain or seizures, it may be time to seek help.

“It is important for (parents) to be diligent in monitoring their children and know what to look for,” Page said. “Too many parents — me included — either choose to bury their heads in the sand or not want to believe that this is something their child would do or at least is feeling the pressure to do.”

Murphy said it is important that parents should avoid criticizing or lecturing their child, but instead help educate the child about the dangers associated with e-cigarette and cigarette use.

“Parents can start the conversation by asking their child or teen what they think about seeing someone smoking or vaping, or when they pass a vaping shop or an e-cigarette or cigarette advertisement.”

“As an educator, I hope that schools can help be a catalyst to address the vaping epidemic that faces our youth, but the responsibility cannot rest completely on the schools,” Page said. “It is going to take diligent parenting, help from community leaders, and government legislation that has real impact in order for this issue to be properly addressed.

“Schools should continue to educate and be a part of the conversation, but until our society says enough is enough schools are chasing their tails trying to address vaping.”

Citations:
American Lung Association. (2020, 02) Overall Tobacco Trends: Tobacco Trends Brief. https://www.lung.org/our-initiatives/research/monitoring-trends-in-lung-disease/tobacco-trend-brief/overall-tobacco-trends.html

News In Heath. (2019, 03). Vaping Rises Among Teens. https://newsinhealth.nih.gov/2019/02/vaping-rises-among-teens

NPR. (2019, 11). More Teens Than Ever Are Vaping. Here’s What We Know About Their Habits. https://www.npr.org/sections/health-shots/2019/11/06/776397270/more-teens-than-ever-are-vaping-heres-what-we-know-about-their-habits

The post Schools look to tackle teen vaping with staff and student education first appeared on SJO Daily.

]]>