Tag: Lightning McQueen

  • NASCAR May Hold Key For Kids With Limited Mobility To ‘Go Baby Go’

    NASCAR May Hold Key For Kids With Limited Mobility To ‘Go Baby Go’

    Physical therapist and developmental scientist Cole Galloway has devoted his life’s work to helping young children with limited mobility and other physical challenges explore their world.

    And he may have just found the solution in the world of NASCAR, developing modified toy race cars to get these babies and toddlers moving in order to understand and explore their surroundings.

    “I’m really interested in baby’s behaviors and I’m really interested in getting babies with limited mobility exploring,” Galloway, the founder of the project ‘Go Baby Go’ said. “About seven years ago, we put some very small babies with mobility challenges, four or five months old, behind a mobile robot which they could drive with a joy stick.”

    “We did these studies that showed that if we give you independent mobility, even earlier than your first crawling, that those babies scored higher on language scores and they crawled, walked and explored earlier.”

    “So, what is it about independent driving that gives you this ability? What we came up with is this ‘drive to explore,’ Galloway continued. “When you’re carried around passively, it’s very different behind the wheel and experiencing motion.”

    “As a physical therapist, I have kids with mobility issues that don’t get power chairs until they are five years old so this whole group of kids is sitting around until they are five without movement,” Galloway said. “This is disastrous for baby, brain and behavior, as well disastrous for the families.”

    “The more you start to unpack that you realize that we have to do something really different. So, what do you do?” Galloway continued. “You can’t offer $15,000 robots and the power chair industry is not going to produce this for kids under five because that is very new to them.”

    “We were forced to go to Toys R Us and basically get a toy car that we then modified,” Galloway said. “We started holding workshops to teach families basically how to build their own modified race cars.”

    “You could buy a Lightning McQueen or something cool like a Mater or a Barbie car or a four by four ATV and with simple materials that you would get at Lowes or Home Depot and a couple of hints about bolts and wires and at the end of two hours, you have your own custom-made race car for a kid or a clinic full of kids.”

    While Galloway, an Associate Professor of Physical Therapy at the University of Delaware, has help from other professors, as well as a cadre of students and volunteers, he has become a bit of a victim of his own success.

    “But now we have another big problem because we get about 50 order requests a month to please build us these cars,” Galloway continued. “The industry is still behind building a pediatric power chair. So, you have to do it yourself.”

    “Now we have this small army of parents world-wide and there is this grass-roots effort for this do-it-yourself to help their children,” Galloway said. “All of a sudden, this plastic race car emerges as a solution. Our big problem is that we cannot build enough cars quick enough or do enough workshops to help families build their own.”

    For Galloway, his dream of granting mobility has now reached a whole new level, one that he calls sustainability or, in essence, finding funding to keep up with the science he has created.

    “Every time we talk, we get further and further unsustainable,” Galloway said. “We just had a workshop in Cincinnati where kids and families showed up, kids got in the race cars, they hit the switches, they moved around and they lit up just like a NASCAR racer.”

    “It’s that acceleration that they love and it makes them problem solve in ways they never did,” Galloway continued. “And their brain wants more.”

    “Families see it immediately,” Galloway said. “They don’t see a big, nasty black power chair. Instead they see a bright pink Barbie car. It’s the real deal.”

    “That’s what these kids and families want but the problem is that we have done a good job of outreach but we cannot keep up with the demand.”

    While the car itself is similar to NASCAR, it is also the feeling behind the wheel that mirrors the sport for these mobility impaired children.

    “The key to the whole thing is that the kids get the same feeling that a race car driver gets behind the wheel,” Galloway said. “That ability to explore beyond what I know right now to what I want to know in the future.”

    “Kids can hit the switch with their heads if they can’t move their arms and it’s awesome. If the kids have to stand to get that good adrenalin rush, they will stand. If the kids have to put their feet on the ground or throw themselves around a bit, they will do that.”

    Galloway admitted that he has other projects in the lab that involve other types of real-world technology.

    “But these cars won’t go away,” Galloway said. “It’s something that has impact and is driven by the families and clinicians on a grass roots level.”

    “It really impacts all that mobility means,” Galloway continued. “This is the mountaintop of a human right because moving is a human right. When you have a kid sitting for years and years, you see what that lack of mobility can do.”

    “The lack of that thrill is almost overwhelming in how it changes the brain and the body versus when you get into a race car,” Galloway continued. “When parents see their kids in a race car, the symbol is very, very different than a wheel chair.”

    “A wheel chair is ‘give up’ and a race car is ‘get up and go.’ It’s about the power and empowering your kid,” Galloway said. “You just built that race car for your kid. It’s overwhelming. To see it each time, with a kid, I’m getting emotional just talking about it.”

    While Galloway’s work is based on so many NASCAR parallels, he admitted that he has not even had time to talk in depth with anyone in the sport.

    “I haven’t approached anyone in NASCAR in a meaningful way but we will have to do that in the next year,” Galloway said. “The car modification program is going world-wide but it is me and two project leaders and a gaggle of volunteers.”

    “There are hundreds of great ideas and so much opportunity that we have to balance with writing grants and teaching students,” Galloway continued. “But every day is another day these kids are sitting. That sometimes makes me want to give this project up because it’s tough. If we are building 10 to 15 cars, you feel like I’m not sure we will ever get there.”

    “We try to do what we can do.”

    For more information on Galloway’s project ‘Go Baby Go’ visit http://www.udel.edu/PT/About%20Us/People/galloway.html#BABY or on Facebook .

  • Blake Koch Keeping Faith Into Daytona

    Blake Koch Keeping Faith Into Daytona

    Photo Credit: Breaking Limits
    Photo Credit: Breaking Limits

    Blake Koch, Nationwide driver for SR² Motorsports, has all the faith in the world as he returns to his team and heads into the season opener at Daytona.

    “I’m really excited to be teaming with SR² Motorsports for the 2013 season,” Koch said. “Our team chemistry is solid.”

    “In the races we completed last season, we worked well together and developed a good understanding for how our race cars need to be set up,” Koch continued. “We have great note packages to build on from last year, which have laid a good foundation for this year.”

    “We grew leaps and bounds last season and I’m optimistic that we’ll continue that this year.”

    Koch’s team owner Jason Sciavicco also has great faith in his 26 year old driver.

    “Everyone at SR² Motorsports is very excited to have Blake Koch return in 2013,” Sciavicco said. “What he believes in as a person really fits our team model and where we’re heading.”

    “We also believe he has the talents behind the wheel to deliver the results we are expecting.”

    With the confidence of his owner in hand, Koch also has his own faith in his ability to not only get back into the race car but to take it straight  to victory lane.

    “I made my first Nationwide start in 2009 and then I ran full-time in 2011 and started with SR² Motorsports last year,” Koch said. “My goals over the last couple of years have been different because I’ve been points racing.”

    “But me, my team and my owner, we’re going to Daytona to win the race,” Koch continued. “We know it’s possible.”

    “We’ll have a great Toyota and our speedway program is probably our best program right now,” Koch said. “We’re definitely going there to win.”

    Koch, like many of his fellow racers, believes that the Nationwide Series will indeed be one of the most competitive in the sport. And he is definitely planning to be right in the mix of the intense competition.

    “I haven’t been in the Nationwide Series as long as others but since I’ve been in, this will be by far the most competitive season there has been,” Koch said. “You have guys that win Cup races on a regular basis, like Brian Vickers, Trevor Bayne, and Regan Smith.”

    “So, the smaller teams have our work cut out for us,” Koch continued. “But at a place like Daytona, anything can happen.”

    “You just have to make friends on the race track, get drafting partners and be there at the end and just go for it,” Koch said. “The season is going to be great.”

    “I’m just excited and blessed to be a part of it for another year.”

    Koch also has faith that the new manufacturer identity and branding will continue to build the sport and increase the popularity of NASCAR even further.

    “Everybody likes a cool, sporty looking car,” Koch said. “So if the car you’re watching winning a race on Saturday in the Nationwide Series looks like the one you are driving everyday on the road, you’re going to have a tighter connection.”

    “You’re going to feel really cool and proud to drive that brand,” Koch continued. “I think it’s cool that our cars look like the street cars.”

    “A lot of fans don’t know a lot about our cars so it’s great for all of the brands.”

    While Koch acknowledges that the Nationwide season may be some of the best racing around in 2013, he also believes that his season will be positive thanks to his own faith, which is shared with many in his fan base.

    “I have a separate and different fan base than other drivers,” Koch said. “A lot of my fans come from the faith-based area.”

    “I do a lot of speaking at churches and I’ve been on Christian television shows,” Koch continued. “So, a lot of fans are following me because they like what I stand for.”

    “And now they are watching NASCAR and becoming fans of the sport,” Koch said. “So, I think that bringing that to the table is cool.”

    “That’s just helping build the sport and build NASCAR.”

    In addition to his strong faith, one of the biggest motivators in Koch’s life is his belief in helping others. Koch had the opportunity to demonstrate this belief by visiting Tripp Halstead, who injured when a tree limb struck his head, and also participating in a golf tournament to raise funds to help the youngster before heading to Daytona.

    “The golf tournament went awesome,” Koch said. “We had a great time and it was awesome to see all the people there support Tripp and his family.”

    “There were 60 plus teams so it’s cool to see people step up for someone in need.”

    “I met Tripp through my team owner, who told me before we went to Homestead for the championship race that we were going to have Team Boom on the car to raise awareness for Tripp and his family,” Koch said. “I’m really glad to be a part of a team with that kind of heart.”

    “Tripp’s signature thing is to run into people and say ‘Boom’, Koch said. “He’s a big Lightning McQueen fan from the movie Cars and a big racing fan.”

    “I met Tripp for the first time on Friday and we saw him and his mother in the hospital,” Koch continued. “It’s tough to see but the family has such a great attitude.”

    “People have been so supportive,” Koch said. “Even Owen Wilson from the movie Cars called and talked to Tripp.”

    “Little things like that have really been inspiring to the family to see how much people care.”

    Koch also has a strong commitment to living out his faith by helping others, especially since he himself is a new dad to his son, born August 5th.

    “I have a new respect for Tripp’s parents now that I’m a new father,” Koch said. “I can’t really imagine what they are going through to have their son in the hospital for so long.”

    “I definitely have a burden in my heart for this and I want to do anything I can to help,” Koch continued. “It’s a love that you have for your child that is unexplainable.”

    “That is why it touches me to see what Tripp and his family are going through.”

    So, will Koch have even added faith and motivation headed into Daytona with Team Boom on his car? And will his faith see him through even though his own future is uncertain?

    “I would say for sure I’m motivated,” Koch said. “I’m a very motivated race car driver so I really don’t need added motivation but I do want to do as well as I can for Tripp.”

    “I want to do the best I can every week,” Koch continued. “We’re going to go to Daytona, unload in qualifying trim and then go right to drafting.”

    “We want to make sure our car sucks good and that we can push and be pushed in the pack,” Koch said. “I’m not going there to points race because I don’t know what the rest of the season looks like.”

    “I don’t know anything else besides Daytona,” Koch continued. “I’m not going to worry about tomorrow.”

    “I’m going to concentrate on today,” Koch said. “I’m going to try to win the race and Lord willing, I hope that happens.”