Vinyasa Flow with Monica
Cycling with Claire
Vinyasa Flow with Brie
Running Program with Isabella
Mat Pilates with Adina
Published: July 14, 2020 By

Beth Schwartz began her fitness class like normal.

鈥淗i, and welcome to your SET class 鈥 strength endurance training.鈥

Except this wasn鈥檛 a normal class. Schwartz, an instructor at 蜜糖直播 Boulder鈥檚 Rec Center and administrative assistant at the Leeds School of Business, was filming the class in her home听 for The Rec鈥檚 virtual training library, which has replaced in-person classes since the COVID-19 pandemic forced the campus to go fully remote in March.听

鈥淲e are in my lovely garage, so please ignore the mess,鈥 she added before beginning the lesson.

In the initial haze of closures, The Rec was required to stop in-person fitness classes on March 16, the same day students began the transition to remote learning. In response, the fitness and wellness team not only put together a library of filmed instruction, but also have continued live classes such as yoga, meditation and cycling over Zoom for students and faculty.

It was important to the team that students stay engaged: 鈥淏ecause group fitness is grounded in community, it seemed a natural way to connect students, faculty and staff,鈥 said Denise Adelsen, assistant director of FitWell, the rec center鈥檚 fitness and wellness department.听

As was for most in the U.S., the transition was quick, and there was little time to prepare to go virtual. Adelsen and fitness coordinator Annie Tuck (IntPhys鈥14) had to learn as they built the program.

鈥淲e didn鈥檛 have time to plan, research and gather what we would need,鈥 said Adelsen. 鈥淲e reached out to other campuses that were in the same boat, and shared ideas.鈥澨

The team created a 10K program, for instance, originally designed to prepare runners for the now-cancelled Labor Day BOLDERBoulder.听

Since making the switch, there have been nearly 400 participants in live classes, which currently run at six time slots every week. In the virtual library, Schwartz鈥 High-Intensity Interval Training, or HIIT, has the most views with more than 520.听

Yet, the road wasn鈥檛 always easy. There were some unexpected hurdles.听

Adelsen explained, 鈥淲e are strong in developing and offering fitness programs, not in the production, IT requirements and AV necessities.鈥

Monica Nabholz headshot

Monica Nabholz teaches听virtual classes in Vinyasa Flow Yoga, among others.

It took some getting used to for Monica Nabholz (Comm鈥90), a yoga, core and strength instructor.

鈥淭eaching to a screen rather than having the in-person, interactive connection with students and staff continues to be a challenge,鈥 she said.

She also faced some of the challenges that many who made the transition to working at home faced: loud construction, family-member photobombs and the like.

鈥淢y dogs try to get into my shot, and lie down on my yoga mat,鈥 she said.

It can be difficult to teach, let alone hold, a proper mountain pose with all these distractions, she said. Yet, Nabholz has made it work.

鈥淭he most important thing I鈥檝e learned teaching virtually is to continue teaching your class and ignore all interruptions鈥 she said. 鈥淣o losing your train of thought or getting rattled.鈥

The hectic transition and on-the-job training has settled into routine, with virtual classes scheduled to continue for FitWell members after the fall reopening of campus. The Rec will also be up and running, although things won鈥檛 look quite the same as they did before, with COVID-specific protocols being implemented such as plexiglass dividers and social distancing measures.听

鈥淚鈥檓 used to teaching virtually now,鈥 said Nabholz, 鈥渂ut I鈥檓 looking forward to teaching in-person at the The Rec and seeing all the people I鈥檝e missed.鈥

To learn more about virtual Rec classes, visit /recreation/fitwell-virtual-classes.

Photos courtesy 蜜糖直播 Boulder Fitness and Wellness; Bottom: courtesy Monica Nabholz