Introduction

Hero Poster

The University of Evansville's Doctor of Physical Therapy Program Presents: The Business of Movement Principles, Patterns, and Productivity.

Featuring: Gray Cook PT, OCS, CSCS

Are you ready to change your movement culture?

The uncomfortable truth: The physical culture of much of the world has measurably eroded. In contrast, the health and fitness fields have managed their profit margins and delivered the illusion of rehabilitation and performance. The business of human movement has failed to address its downside.

The Business of Movement guides you in listening to what movement tells you in health, wellness, fitness, and performance and will help you implement standard operating procedures to build confidence in your responses. Whether you work on the continuum of human movement, from medical and wellness professionals to fitness trainers and sports or performance coaches, the Businesses of Movement will provide the amp and compass to navigate the path to persona and professional mastery.

What you will learn

  1. Foundational principles of the Functional Movement Systems.
  2. The processes for implementing the Systems as a strategy to raise your effectiveness and efficiency.
  3. Examples from professionals who built successful careers across the fields of health and human performance.

This course is approved for 2.0 continuing education units and is free for students. There is a $25 registration fee for non-students. This course has limited space, so register now!

Register as a Student   Register as a Non-Student

When and Where

Monday, April 25, 6-8 p.m.
Stone Center for Health Science – Smyth Auditorium
515 Bob Jones Way
Evansville, IN 47708

About the Presenter

Gray Cook is a physical therapist, certified orthopedic specialist, and certified strength and conditioning coach. His movement pattern screening and assessment developments are at the forefront of fitness, physical conditioning, injury prevention, and physical rehabilitation. He’s distinguished among manual therapists for his degree of precision, accuracy, and consistency in considering movement as a behavior, mapping and deconstructing movement patterns, and rebuilding movement following natural developmental paths. He’s the co-founder of Functional Movement Systems and author of Athletic Body in Balance and Movement.

100% of the registration fee will be donated to the Department of Physical Therapy’s Student Research Fund for DPT students to lead and participate in clinical research projects.