Education.com

Physical Exercise in School: Fitness for Both Body and Mind (page 3)

By Robert Brooks, Ph.D.
Dr. Robert Brooks

To measure the elusive quality of effort, Lawler purchased heart rate monitors and found that some students who appeared not to be exerting themselves actually were expending a great deal of energy in physical activity. "I started thinking back to all the kids we must have turned off to exercise because we weren't able to give them credit." Lawler not only included running in his PE program, but he built in "small-sided sports" such as three-on-three basketball or four-on-four soccer, in which the students were constantly moving.

Ratey emphasizes, "Instead of being tested on such trivia as the dimensions of a regulation volleyball court, Naperville's gym students are graded on how much time they spend in their target heart rate zones during any given activity. . . . Lawler's tack runs opposite to the trend in American public schools of cutting physical education in favor of increasing study time in math, science, and English-an effort to help students pass tests dictated by the No Child Left Behind Act. Only 6 percent of U.S. high schools offer a daily physical education class."

An important feature of the success of the Naperville program as well as similar physical education programs instituted in different schools in the United States is the recognition that students should be offered a variety of activities from which to choose. As I have long advocated, students are more likely to engage in tasks when they are afforded realistic choices. Lawler and his colleague Paul Zientarski, Naperville Central High School's physical education coordinator, skillfully blended physical activity requirements with options.

Zientarski observes, "I tell people it's not my job as a PE teacher to make kids fit. My job is to make them know all of the things they need to know to keep themselves fit. Exercise in itself is not fun. It's work. So if you can make them understand it, show them the benefits-that's a radical transformation." This emphasis on ownership for one's behavior is reinforced by the curriculum, which "is designed to teach kids the principles, practices, and importance of fitness." Ratey adds, "When they reach high school, students are given a broad menu of options-from kayaking to dancing to rock climbing to typical team sports like volleyball and basketball-and shown how to draw up their own fitness plans." Assessments of fitness begin in the fifth grade and become increasingly comprehensive in high school, combining fitness scores with such variables as blood pressure and cholesterol levels, along with lifestyle and family history.

View Full Article

Add your own comment

Ask a Question

Have questions about this article or topic? Ask
Ask
150 Characters allowed

Washington Virtual Academies

Tuition-free online school for Washington students.