The gamecock. (Columbia, S.C.) 1908-2006, April 13, 2005, Page 7, Image 7
More Christian schools opting for faith-based cheerleading
By KRISTEN WYATT
THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
LAWRENCEVILLE, Ga. — Bare
midriffs. Short skirts. Bump-and
grind routines.
Cheerleading has strayed far
from the 2-4-6-8 routines of
yesteryear, and that can leave
parochial school cheerleading
squads wondering how to craft
routines that fit their values
without looking downright retro.
That’s where Christian
cheerleading camps come in. A
growing number of Christian
schools, put off by the sometimes
seductive dances and cheers taught
at secular camps, are opting instead
for faith-based camps and
competitions. It’s where Bible study
meets basket tosses and the music
doesn’t have to be bleeped out.
Jaime Fulton, cheerleading
coach' at Western Christian High
School in Covina, Calif.,
remembers going to regular
cheerleading camps when she was
in high school. When her Christian
school squad got home, they’d have
to rewrite many routines, putting
them to music that didn’t fit and
r t
taking out hip movements.
When she heard about the
Fellowship of Christian
Cheerleaders a Lawrenceville, Ga.,
company that mixes religious
messages with cheerleading Fulton
signed up her 20-girl squad for a
camp and found it a perfect fit.
“It's very different,” she said. “I
would never go back to a secular
camp. What we’re trying to teach
our girls goes against all the media,
all the sexual stuff and bad
sportsmanship.”
At FCC camps, Fulton said,
cheerleaders learn they don’t have
to sacrifice modesty to have hip
routines: “It’s not dorky. It’s not
‘80s cheerleading. They just take
out the gross stuff.”
It’s an approach that’s growing
into big business for the two
leading Christian cheerleading
companies, FCC in Georgia and
Christian Cheerleaders of America
in Winston-Salem, N.C. FCC now
works with 15,000 cheerleaders a
year in faith-based camps and
competitions, with a staff of 100
coaches. CCA teaches 7,000
cheerleaders a year and recendy
built a 27,000-square-foot gym.
I
“We felt that Christian schools
needed somewhere to go that’s just
for them,” said Rose Clevenger,
founder and president of CCA. At
secular camps, “they can feel
uncomfortable with the dress code,
or maybe they have inappropriate
music. Typically cheerleaders look
like sex symbols and don’t dress
appropriately.”
The camps work just like secular
ones, but with devotional time
added in mornings and nights.
Most of the instructors are college
cheerleaders who went to Christian
schools when they were younger,
and they’re encouraged to talk
about their faith. They tell campers
that cheering is a God-given talent
that can spread Christian lessons.
“We think it can even be an act
of worship,” said John Blake,
FCC’s event coordinator. “Being
excellent at what you do in any
facet of life, that can be a
testimony about your faith.”
The wholesome approach isn’t
just to soothe parents.
Cheerleaders from Christian
schools say they’ve felt left out at
regular cheerleading camps, either
because their skirts are too long or
their coaches veto the music. At
Christian camps, they all fit in.
“There’s not the pressure,” said
Tracy Handey, a 15-year-old
cheerleader at Humble Christian
School in Humble, Texas. Handey’s
squad went to a CCA camp, where
no one snickered at their skirts that
fall to 4 inches above the knee. “I
like our uniforms because they don’t
show everything.”
In addition to cleaner music and
dancing, there’s also a stronger
focus on good sportsmanship at
Christian camps, coaches said.
Handey’s coach, Vicki Howell,
said that the growth of competitive
cheerleading has led to more
taunting and off-color cheers.
When her squad placed eighth
at a recent competition, but won
CCA’s Spirit of Competition
Award for good sportsmanship,
she remembers telling her girls,
“That’s the only trophy you’ll take
into heaven with you.”
“My goal is not just to coach
cheerleading but to make well
rounded women,” Howell said.
Cary Coleman, founder of FCC,
said the company is doing so well it
plans to expand into churches.
Many churches already have
softball or basketball teams, so why
not recreational cheerleading?
“We’re calling it ‘impact
cheerleading,’ to impact your
community through cheerleading,”
said Coleman. The first church
squad will be assembled at a metro
Atlanta Baptist congregation this
fall, with more planned. Coleman
envisions a day when cheerleaders
can go through a faith-based
program their entire careers, from
learning to cheer at church as a pre
teen straight through high school
or college.
The mixture of religion and
cheerleading is a natural fit, he
said, because while sometimes
sports programs focus on culling a
few superstars for professional
athletics, everyone knows
cheerleading isn’t a career.
“They’re not going to be doing
it forever,” Coleman said. “We’re
trying to teach kids to use their
talents and abilities to glorify
Christ, and that’s something that
will stay with them a long time,
maybe their whole lives.”
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