2. 1. Discuss the relationship of recreation and
leisure to wellness
2. Distinguish between commercial and non
commercial recreation
3. Government sponsored recreation
2
3. Recreation – use of time in a manner
designed for therapeutic refreshment of
one’s body and mind. It is synonymous to
lifestyle and development of positive
attitude.
Leisure – describe as free time from work,
or discretionary time.
3
4. PASSIVE ACTIVE
- Reading - Outdoor activities
- Fishing - Hiking, camping, rock
- Playing musical instruments climbing
- Gardening
- Playing computer games
- Watching movies
- Food and dining
- Shopping
- gaming
5. Defined as an outdoor recreational
activities provided on a fee-for-service,
with a focus on experiences associated
with the natural environment. It includes
theme parks, attractions and clubs
6. terms for a group of entertainment
attractions, rides, and other events in a
location for the enjoyment of large
numbers of people.
7. Theme park attempts to create an
atmosphere of another place and time,
emphasize one dominant theme
(architecture, landscape, rides, shows,
food services, costumed personnel.
8. 1. Educational theme parks:
- Some parks use rides and attractions for
educational purposes. Disney was the
first to successfully open a large-scale
theme park built around education
9. The Holy Land
Experience (HLE) is a
Christian theme park
and registered non-
profit corporation.
10. Dinosaur World is the
name of three
outdoor dinosaur
theme parks in the
US. Locations include
Plant City, Florida,
Glen Rose, Texas
and Cave City,
Kentucky. The parks
each feature over
150 life-size dinosaur
sculptures
11. is a United States
chain of marine
mammal parks,
oceanariums, and
animal theme parks
owned by SeaWorld
Parks & Entertainment.
The parks feature
captive orca, sea lion,
and dolphin shows
and zoological
displays featuring
various other marine
animals
12.
13.
14. A national park is a reserve of natural,
semi-natural, or developed land that a
sovereign state declares or owns. It is
most commonly a natural park.
15.
16.
17.
18. Are places where members gather for
social, recreational, professional, or
fraternal reasons.
19.
20. Country club – one or more lounges and
restaurants, most have banquet facilities.
Members are billed monthly.
City club – predominantly business
oriented (professional, athletic, dining,
university, military, yachting, fraternal,
propriety)
21.
22. Voluntary Organizations
(nongovernmental, non profit agencies,
serving public at large). YMCA, YWCA,
Boy Scouts, Girl Scouts
Campus Recreation (student union,
residence staff, local playgrounds, parks)
Armed Forces Recreation – (sports,
motion pictures, service clubs, crafts,
hobbies, youth activities for children of
the military, open dining facilities, libraries)
23. Employee Recreation – company outing,
recreational facilities (gym, basketball
court)
Recreational for Special populations –
include professional organization (mental
illness, mental retardation, physical
handicapped). Sports fest, physical
fitness, athletic competition
24. Define recreation and its importance to
human wellness.
Briefly discuss commercial from non
commercial recreation.
Briefly explain the purpose of theme
parks and the purpose of clubs.
Explain the concept of recreation for
special recreation.
Hinweis der Redaktion
it is the only theme park to be designed and built under the direct supervision of Walt Disney . In 1998, the theme park was re-branded Disneyland Park to distinguish it from the larger Disneyland Resort complex. Walt Disney came up with the concept of Disneyland after visiting various amusement parks with his daughters in the 1930s and 1940s. He initially envisioned building a tourist attraction adjacent to his studios in Burbank to entertain fans who wished to visit; however, he soon realized that the proposed site was too small. After hiring a consultant to help determine an appropriate site for his project, Walt bought a 160-acre (65 ha) site near Anaheim in 1953. Construction began in 1954 and the park was unveiled during a special televised press event on the ABC Television Network on July 17, 1955.
a movie studio and theme park in the unincorporated Universal City community of Los Angeles County, California, United States. It is one of the oldest and most famous Hollywood movie studios still in use. Its official marketing headline is "The Entertainment Capital of LA", though during the summer it is often advertised as "The Coolest Place in LA." It was initially created to offer tours of the real Universal Studios soundstages and sets. It is the first of many full-fledged Universal Studios Theme Parks located across the world. Woody Woodpecker is the mascot for Universal Studios Hollywood.
Club management is similar in many ways in hotel management. (Planning, forecasting, budgeting, human resources, food and beverage, facility management and maintenance.) The main difference, the guests feel as if they are the owners. Their emotional attachment to the facility is more stronger than of hotel guests. Clubs do not offer sleeping accomodations.
Professional – lawyers, doctors, dentist Athletic – gives the members an opportunity to work out, swim, play tennis, Dining – memberships are often given to tenants who lease space in the office building, offering lunch or dinner. University – private clubs for alumni Military – intended for military officers Yacht club – provide members with moorage slips, where their boats are kept for security. Fraternal – forster camaraderie and often assist charitable causes Proprietal club – operate for profit basis. They are owned by corporations or individuals, wanting to become members purchase a membership not a share in the club (homeowners club)