Sensor Presented 2008 Cramer Award
Valley Forge, Pa. (1/14/08) -
The Eastern Athletic Trainers' Association (EATA) in association
with Cramer Products presented Kean University Chief Athletic
Trainer J. Timothy Sensor this year's Cramer Award
at the recent convention held in Valley Forge, Pa.
This award was developed by Cramer Products in 1966 to provide a
method for the Eastern Trainers' Association to honor those members
who have provided excellent leadership in serving the EATA and in
doing so, advanced the profession of Athletic Training.
Each award winner must have been a member of the EATA for at
least 10 years while also serving the EATA as a committee member
and executive committee member.
Sensor has been the Chief Athletic Trainer and chief clinical
supervisor for the Kean University Department of Athletics since
1983. In that time, he has managed to help build one of the most
widely recognized athletic training programs in the region.
The program at Kean is one of just four programs among all New
Jersey universities recognized by the Commission on Accreditation
of Athletic Training Education (CAATE).
Along with his staff and students, Sensor treats as many as 600
student-athletes per year which encompasses approximately 2,000
injuries and 6,000 treatments.
Sensor's responsibilities certainly are not limited to the
treatment of Kean's student-athletes. Kean University now
offers a Bachelor of Science degree in Athletic Training and
Sensor, along with several members of his staff, educates and
supervises students in the program who then become eligible to take
the National Athletic Trainers Association Board of Certification
exam. Those who pass then may apply to the New Jersey Board of
Medical Examiners, or in whatever state they choose, for the
credentials to practice as athletic trainers.
A 1977 Ramapo College graduate with a Bachelor of Science
degree, Sensor is generally credited with building the Ramapo
athletic training program from the ground up, first as a
student-athlete, before being hired as the Mahwah, N.J., school's
first professional athletic trainer. He was formally recognized in
2004 when he was enshrined in the Ramapo Athletic Hall of Fame
along with a number of athletes for which he helped care during
their college days.