Teaching to the beat
Michael Miller
Parents who send their children to Hiba Shublak’s dance classes can
rest assured: Their sons and daughters will not come home singing
songs by rapper Eminem.
However, the family stereo may be blasting hip-hop for a few days.
Under Shublak, a 30-year-old Costa Mesa resident who has taught
physical fitness since high school, students learn how to groove to
50 Cent, Missy Elliott, Destiny’s Child, Usher and other popular
artists -- and even get a workout in the process.
“I loved rap music since I was a little kid,” said Shublak. “I was
listening to N.W.A. and Eazy-E, which is gangster rap, but I loved
the beat of it. I didn’t pay attention to the lyrics.”
Nowadays, in preparing classes for children as young as preschool,
Shublak observes the words carefully. She chooses danceable songs
from pop artists like Justin Timberlake, or, if she ventures into 50
Cent territory, uses the cleaned-up radio versions of hits. Her
efforts paid off this summer, as the Lebanon native won the
first-ever California Assn. for Health, Physical Education,
Recreation and Dance “Innovator of the Year” award.
Shublak defeated two other contenders for the award, which was
co-sponsored by the association’s local chapter and the Orange County
Dept. of Education. Along with a plaque, Shublak will receive free
registration at the association’s state conference in Garden Grove
next March.
“I had nominated Hiba for Innovator of the Year based on a couple
of criteria,” said Chris Corliss, the physical education coordinator
for the Orange County Dept. of Education. “She was doing something
completely new and something that was based in solid science and
research data, and something that was actually being applied in low
income urban schools with successful student outcomes.”
A positive spin on rap
Shublak’s hip-hop exercise classes are part of her Active Learning
Experience program, which combines physical education with math and
literary aspects. Shublak sought to put a positive spin on a genre
that many find offensive, and by editing out some of hip-hop’s
raunchier lyrics, she allows her students to concentrate on the
music’s complex rhythms.
“It’s kind of like when rock ‘n’ roll came into the music
industry,” she explained. “It stirred a lot of change. A lot of
people were scared of it.”
Far from threatening, however, Shublak sees hip-hop as a cultural
uniter.
“It’s very eclectic,” she said. “It captures sounds from Asia, the
Middle East, Africa and Latin America and combines them into this
beat and rhythm. We live in this melting pot, and hip-hop is so
symbolic of culture.”
Shublak’s own life story is eclectic as well. Born in Lebanon, she
moved with her family around the Middle East and Europe before
settling in Los Angeles at the age of 8. When she was 15, her parents
enrolled her at Holiday Spa -- now Bally Total Fitness -- in
Huntington Beach. Although she’d never been athletic before, Shublak
grew so addicted to the gym that two years later, she applied for a
job as a fitness trainer.
“It was the first time I’d found myself being successful at
something,” Shublak said. “I was never good at sports, and though
I’ve always been passionate about dancing, I always felt afraid to be
a cheerleader or a dancer at school.”
All energy and motivation
Her shyness behind her, Shublak has taught fitness and aerobics
for the last 12 years -- at Bally, Sports Club/Irvine and her own
apartment complex, the Lakes at South Coast. Most of her time,
though, is spent traveling to schools around Southern California to
lead children of all ages in exercise classes. Shublak, who has
contracts with 11 school districts in Orange County, sometimes
teaches up to six sessions a day.
Late last month, Shublak led her last school classes of the year
at Pacifica High School in Garden Grove. This fall, she may be
working closer to home. Sharon Moore, a grant nutritionist who works
for the Newport-Mesa Unified School District, has spoken with Shublak
about leading training sessions for elementary teachers next year.
“She’s pretty energetic, and she’s great about talking to people
in layman’s terms,” Moore said. “We’re looking at trying to empower
elementary teachers to get kids to learn fun ways about getting fit,
and people like Hiba can provide teachers with the energy and the
motivation to do it.”
* MICHAEL MILLER covers education and may be reached at (714)
966-4617 or by e-mail at michael.miller@latimes.com.
All the latest on Orange County from Orange County.
Get our free TimesOC newsletter.
You may occasionally receive promotional content from the Daily Pilot.