John Massengale:
Professional Leader, Colleague, and Visionary
by Steve
Estes, Middle Tennessee State University
John Massengale, Professor Emeritus of Kinesiology at the
University of Nevada, Las Vegas, passed away at home on November
27, 2013. John was a good friend to many of us in NAKHE and
other professional and academic societies, a mentor to still
more, and a leader in kinesiology who helped to develop the
profession of physical education into the discipline of kinesiology.
He will be missed by all who knew him.
John
D. Massengale was born in Pontiac, Michigan in 1939, and grew
up in the Detroit area aspiring to be an athlete. After graduating
from high school in the late 1950s, John moved to Missouri
where played football at Northwest Missouri State University
and studied physical education and sociology. This was the
beginning of a 50-year academic career that revolved around
sport, physical education, coaching, and higher education
and which lasted until his retirement in 2008.
John's first professional duties were as a high school physical
educator and coach from 1963 to 1967, first in Kansas City
and then in Illinois where he earned his masters degree at
Illinois State University. In 1967 John moved to Albuquerque,
New Mexico, where he studied for his doctorate while working
as an assistant football coach and adjunct instructor of physical
education. It was at this point that John demonstrated the
ability to balance his professional life as a coach with his
academic life, a skill that the developing field of physical
education promoted and which many of his contemporaries aspired
to, but which few mastered as well as John.
John was proud of the New Mexico doctoral program of that
period and spoke fondly of his days there as a student. He
often noted that all of the graduates in his cohort at New
Mexico either became a department chair or senior academic
administrator, or published textbooks in physical education.
Led by faculty such as Larry Locke, John's fellow students
at New Mexico included Ron Feingold, Chuck Corbin, and others
who would became well-known scholars in our field.
In 1969, John moved to Eastern Washington University taking
the position of assistant professor of physical education
and assistant football coach. In the late 1960s the "model"
faculty in higher education physical education was being redefined,
and John took advantage of these changing times by living
as a "Renaissance Man," a faculty capable of teaching, coaching,
and writing. Not all of his contemporaries agreed with this
model (at the time the idea of publishing was relatively new
in physical education) but John excelled at all three and
thereby demonstrated that this model was doable.
John moved through the faculty ranks at Eastern Washington
in record time, earning associate professor and tenure two
years after joining the faculty, and promotion to professor
- and promotion to head football coach - in 1975. It is amazing
to think that anyone could achieve tenure and promotion to
professor in six years, let alone promotion to head football
coach while earning tenure and academic rank. John managed
to do all of this simultaneously, a simply remarkable achievement.
Similar accomplishments are unheard of in contemporary kinesiology.
In retrospect these achievements show how John was a leader
in the field. He was the kind of person who believed that
one should take advantage of the opportunities that present
themselves, and he did just this in his own career.
In 1975, John accepted the position of Department Chair
of Health and Physical Education at Eastern Washington University,
a role that began his career as an academic administrator.
He also served as Athletic Director. As AD, John argued that
there were faculty and coaches who could perform both academic
and coaching duties, and set about demonstrating this by hiring
coaches who held doctorates.
His successes illustrate how universities were changing -
and how senior university administrators can be hypocritical
about intercollegiate athletics. As AD, John was under increasing
pressure from his university president to hire coaches who
could win, and this implied 100% commitment to their coaching
duties and a lesser role for their academic responsibilities.
John argued that he could hire coaches who were also academics,
qualifications that his president felt could not be met.
John proceeded to hire basketball and baseball head coaches
who held the doctorate. In classic doublespeak, Eastern Washington's
president proceeded to boast in the press that Eastern Washington
was the only university in the country to have head coaches
in all major men's sports who held the doctorate! John's career
as an athletic director ended unceremoniously, though, when
he went on vacation one year and, upon his return, found that
Eastern Washington had a new, full-time athletic director.
When asked how he felt about this change and the way it was
made, John characteristically explained his president's actions
in terms of how higher education and intercollegiate athletics
were changing; with humor, without animosity, and with insight.
It was during this time that John established himself as
one of the leaders of what is now the National Association
for Kinesiology in Higher Education (NAKHE), and what was
at the time two separate societies: the National College Physical
Education Association for Men (NCPEAM) and the National Association
for Physical Education for College Women (NAPECW). In the
late 1970s, John and other leaders of these organizations
worked to combine them, and this effort led to the formation
of the National Association for Physical Education in Higher
Education (NAPEHE, and later NAKHE), an organization over
which he would preside in 1995. The joining of the NCPEAM
and NAPECW was politically difficult, and John noted that
NAPEHE membership dropped from over 2,000 to around 1,200
as a result of the merger. John, however, worked steadily
to promote both the field as well as NAPEHE, and presided
over the organization during its most successful conference
with Ernest Boyer, then the President of the Carnegie Foundation,
keynoting.
John left Eastern Washington to take the position of founding
dean of the College of Human Performance and Development at
the University of Nevada, Las Vegas in 1986. It was in this
role where John flourished as an administrator, and he continued
on as a faculty member in 1993 after stepping down as dean.
John picked up where he left off as faculty, publishing his
fifth book with Dick Swanson, History of Exercise and Sport
Science, in 1997. He continued to teach and write up until
his retirement in 2008. In retirement John traveled to all
of his professional society meetings with regularity and continued
to mentor those of us who sought him out in that role.
As a professional friend and mentee, and later a personal
friend, I realize in writing these words that no obituary
can capture a life. These highlights and anecdotes of John's
life simply do not describe the richness that John brought
to all of us who knew him and who came to love him. He simply
lived life excellently, and those of us who looked forward
to seeing him at every NAKHE conference or other professional
venue were influenced by him in ways too numerous to fully
describe in such a short space. It will have to suffice to
say that John Massengale was simply a "man in full," one who
really did strive to be excellent in every capacity. And what
is so remarkable is that he took so many of us along with.
As one who benefited so much from his mentorship and advice
I can say that I am thankful for having known him, and known
him well. For that I will always be grateful. Farewell, old
friend.
Biography: Dr. Steve Estes is professor and
chair of the Department of Health and Human Performance at Middle
Tennessee State University. Steve did his undergraduate and
masters studies in kinesiology and physical education at San
Diego State University, and received the doctorate from The
Ohio State University with an emphasis on the humanistic study
of sport. He was a rower in college and trained and competed
for the United States National Rowing Team in the 1970s and
1980s. His current research and teaching interests include leadership
in kinesiology, and he works with Army ROTC on their leadership
curriculum. Steve is the current president (2014-2016) of the
National Association for Kinesiology in Higher Education (NAKHE).
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