Industry | Parks and Recreation |
---|---|
Founded | 1944[1] |
Headquarters | , |
Area served | Illinois |
Services | Quality training for professionals with regards to parks and recreation |
Revenue | Non-for-profit [1] |
Website | ilipra |
The Illinois Park and Recreation Association (IPRA) is a professional non-for-profit organization and public interest group that is committed to providing the people of Illinois with quality park and recreation opportunities by providing continuing education and seminars for professionals in the field of recreation[1]. After conducting many surveys, it was found in 1921 that professional preparation of recreation leaders was needed[3]. Hence, the IPRA focuses on keeping professionals prepared for issues in recreation by holding annual conferences (the IPRA conference) where members of the organization can come together and collaborate on how to implement recreation opportunities in Illinois more effectively. IPRA also awards parks and professionals for outstanding contribution to recreation opportunities in Illinois.
History
editAccording to Kay Forest, the first attempt to start a state-wide recreation association was in 1935. A few meetings were held until 1937 when the Works Project Administration (WPA) was established by President Theodore Roosevelt. The WPA built many of Illinois' first swimming pools. The next documented event of a recreation association in Illinois was in 1944 when a conference of Illinois recreation workers was held at the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign. Thirty-five people attended this conference and most of the education was focused on post- World War 2 planning and training people in the field of recreation. Attendees of the conference decided that it was time to organize an official state-wide organization called the Illinois Recreation Association (IRA). Its main purpose at the time was to continue having a conference for Illinois recreation workers, address legal issues regarding recreation as well as to conduct postwar recreation planning. The conference was the highlight of the year for its members and is still an annual tradition with IPRA. Russel Perry, recreation director of Aurora, Illinois, was selected to create the constitution which was completed in 1945. By the bylaws of this constitution, it was to be updated every five years. Early on, research was a high priority among IRA members. They studied salaries, youth programming, recreational use of schools, and legislation. [4]
In 1947, the first newsletter of the IRA was published with Howard Copp, superintendent of recreation in Wilmette,Illinois, as the editor. This newsletter was renamed to the Illinois Park and Recreation Quarterly in 1965. The IRA became affiliated with the American Recreation Society in 1948. By the 1950s, the IRA branched into new areas of concern: youth, day camps, and athletics for women and divided the state into four regions: Metropolitan, North, Central and Southern. The IPRA still uses these regions today. More formal committees were established to deal with legislation, publications, membership, girls/women's issues, awards, and research. 30 total committees were formed[4].
The IRA held a joint meeting with the Illinois Association of Park Districts, IAPD in 1960 in Joliet, Illinois. This joint meeting provided collaboration between the organizations and helped combine recreation departments into park districts[5].
The IAPD continued to communicate with the IRA as the IAPD became part of the annual recreation conference held by the IRA since 1966.
In 1964, the name of the Illinois Recreation Association changed to the Illinois Park and Recreation Society (IPRS) to include parks. A part-time executive director was employed, and the IPRS office was located in Cicero, Illinois until 1970. By the end of the 1960s, IPRS had a membership of 612[4].
In 1970, the first formal agreements between the IPRS and IAPD were made as they created a joint committee that proposed a resolution that each organization retain its separate identity, yet join together for particular efforts, including a statewide bi-weekly Illinois Parks and Recreation magazine as well as sponsorship of an annual conference[5]. The IPRA and the IAPD are still creating the magazine and sponsoring an annual Illinois recreation conference today. The IPRS office was moved to Springfield, Illinois to be housed with IAPD[4].
In 1976, a group of recreation leaders of Illinois in the IPRS gathered in Joliet for three days to plan for the future of IPRS. During these series of meetings, they changed the name of the organization to what it is referred to today. The IPRS officially became the Illinois Park and Recreation Association (IPRA) with six special interest sections. Also, these meetings provided a better base to the organization as they established professional membership requirements, changed the executive secretary's title to director, and added one full-time secretary to the leadership staff of the organization [4].
IPRA has continued to grow and most recently signed a partnership agreement on October 5, 2011 with the United States Communities Government Purchasing Alliance to make online purchasing easier for supplies used in common recreational activities[6].
References
- ^ a b c About the IPRA, retrieved 12/5/2011
{{citation}}
: Check date values in:|accessdate=
(help) - ^ Illinois Park & Recreation, 1997, retrieved 12/5/2011
{{citation}}
: Check date values in:|accessdate=
(help) - ^ Sapora, Allen V., Brief Summary History of Professional Park and Recreation Leadership at the University of Illinois, retrieved 12/5/2011
{{citation}}
: Check date values in:|accessdate=
(help) - ^ a b c d e Forest, Kay (1997), History can be Fun, retrieved 12/5/2011
{{citation}}
: Check date values in:|accessdate=
(help) - ^ a b History of the Illinois Association of Park Districts, retrieved 12/7/2011
{{citation}}
: Check date values in:|accessdate=
(help) - ^ Arnold, Jan (October 5), http://www.il-ipra.org/forms/US%20Communities%20Partnership.pdf, retrieved December 5, 2011
{{citation}}
: Check date values in:|date=
and|year=
/|date=
mismatch (help); Missing or empty|title=
(help)