By ELIZABETH STUART
POWAY, Calif., Jan. 14, 2007 — - Step aerobics, tennis,
yoga, swimming, cross-training -- they sound like activities
you'd find at a fancy gym, or even a country club.
But believe it or not, they're all activities taking place
in high school physical education classes across the
country. It's the new face of physical education, which is
not just about kickball and dodge ball anymore.
At Westview High School in Poway, Calif., a suburb of San
Diego, students are exposed to sports and exercise with the
hope they'll find something they want to participate in for
life. Traditional physical education classes focused on
playing sports. The new P.E. focuses on leading a healthy
lifestyle.
Paige Metz, one of Westview's physical education teachers,
tries to get kids excited about leading active lives.
"We've reached a time in society where kids aren't just
going outside and playing," she says. "There are things that
they've got to do that they're fitting into their schedule.
And at the same time, they've lost the ability to just go
out and play and to be kids."
Westview and schools nationwide are turning their physical
education curriculums away from traditional team sports to
encourage everyone to be active -- not just those who are
more athletically inclined.
Metz and her fellow phys ed teachers work hard to give their
students a wider variety of activities, with the hope that
everyone will find something they enjoy.
One of Metz's activities is a series of cross training
exercises aimed at getting her students to do 18 minutes of
continuous cardiovascular activity. The students rotate
through various stations, including jumping rope 50 times,
climbing up and down stairs around the football field,
running backwards and sidestepping quickly up a ramp.
By varying the activity, they may not realize that they're
actually getting a full workout.
Her students seem to be responding. They're having fun,
yelling encouragement at each other and working up a good
sweat.
Ninth grader Nelson Seilhan says he enjoys actually getting
a good workout.
"In grade school, yeah, we played some games," he says. "But
we didn't really get into that target heart-rate zone at
all."
Yes, a ninth grader is talking about his "target heart-rate
zone." Something must be sinking in.
The challenge Metz and her colleagues face is an important
one. Their students are in high school, which tends to be
the last time in their lives many kids have physical
education class or play on a sports team. By offering yoga,
Pilates, Filipino dance, pool exercises, aerobics and other
activities, kids may find something they enjoy enough to
stick with as they move onto college and adulthood.
"I think you really empower kids to make healthy choices,"
says Metz. "When they leave your class, they're not just
leaving in better shape than when they came in. They're
leaving with strategies [so] that they can maintain a
healthy lifestyle from now, for the rest of their lives."
Hope for Obese America?
These freshly inspired physical education courses have
arrived at a critical time. Over the last 20 years, the
Centers for Disease Control and Prevention say the number of
overweight children has doubled, and the number of
overweight adolescents has tripled.
The statistics are even worse for adults. According to the
National Center for Health Statistics, more than 60 million
adults in the United States -- 30 percent -- are obese. The
United States has the highest rate of obesity in the world
among developed countries.
Getting kids active early and keeping them active through
adulthood may be crucial to the future health of the United
States. A recent study by the Institute of Medicine predicts
that one in five kids will be obese by 2010.
For the first time in U.S. history, today's children may
have a shorter lifespan than that of their parents.
Some states are taking action. In the last year, 28 states
have restricted selling soft drinks in vending machines at
schools. Some are also changing the lunch menu to eliminate
foods that are high in sugars, salt and fat.
But the inactivity of many American children is still
weighing them down. The biggest offenders? Television and
video games.
So perhaps a new outlook on the way physical education
classes are conducted will encourage young people to live
healthier lifestyles.
The National Association for Sport and Physical Education (NASPE)
says 41 states have developed state standards that align
with all six of the national standards for physical
education.
It's Never Too Early
NASPE has developed its own system of recognition for
schools that have outstanding programs in physical
education, calling it "STARS" status.
So far, 16 states have schools that have achieved that goal.
One of those schools is Oliver Heckman Elementary School in
Langhorne, Pa.
Richard Grafius has been teaching physical education there
for 37 years. He believes kids can -- and should -- start to
learn about overall health and physical fitness as early as
possible. Some of his students at Oliver Heckman are in
kindergarten and first grade.
Grafius says that young kids will be active when they're
having fun. He tries to teach his students the basics --
throwing a ball, catching a ball, moving in space and
different locomotive movements. He keeps his program fun
with equipment like scooters, and by making physical
activities into games.
The activities he teaches have a purpose, he says.
"They are to provide a basis for future activities," Grafius
adds. "We teach movement skills, manipulative skills, so the
kids can try other things later on in life and have a skill
base on which to draw from."
Grafius' fifth graders are learning safety as they whiz back
and forth in front of the school on scooters. The students
are wearing helmets and protective gear, and they have to
stop at each of the marked points, and make a visual and
audible motion as to which direction they're heading before
they continue on.
The second graders are using yellow bouncing balls and
learning how to throw, kick and move them in different ways.
Walking around as they bounce and roll the balls around the
room is good exercise, and they're having a good time as
they scream to retrieve balls that have bounced too far or
too high.
Lifetime Activities
In nearby Levittown, Pa., Carl Sandburg Middle School is
also a "STARS" status recipient.
Students there are in sixth through ninth grade, and are not
only offered a variety of activities to choose from, they're
also taught health, nutrition and first-aid skills like CPR
and how to save someone who's choking. The physical
activities range from biking and inline skating to step
aerobics, water polo and even snorkeling.
"We want to see every student learning a variety of lifetime
activities," says Terry Martian, head of the school's
physical education department. "We teach them the skills to
be successful so that. … they choose then to do that for the
rest of their life."
Teachers at all these schools say team sports are important
and should have a place, just not in physical education
class.
"The 'old' P.E. was strictly team sports; sides were
chosen," says Martian. "We have much better ways of dividing
kids into teams, if we need teams, where kids don't feel
left out."
According to the theory, the less a child feels excluded,
the more likely they'll be able to enjoy the class, even if
they aren't the best at it.
Across the country in San Diego, Paige Metz agrees.
"Nobody should ever be the last kid ever picked for any
team," she says. "It should be about all kids being able to
participate successfully at the same time."
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