From
the Publisher…
GETTING
HIGH ON EXERCISE, CONFERENCES, AND THE FUTURE
Heart rate evangelists
love to measure it and show you the data.
Our hearts beat faster when we exercise. And
for most of us increasing our heart rate through
regular exercise is a good thing. It improves
our long-term health, reduces the risk of
debilitating diseases, and makes us feel good
about life.
The same is true
about spending time around professional colleagues.
For me there's an air of excitement, of anticipation
that something good is going to happen. Just
as with exercise, my heart beats faster and
my mind focuses. Worries either evaporate
or are at least temporarily shelved. In the
words of psychologist Mihaly
Csikszentmihalyi I become self-absorbed
in a state of flow: A pleasurable feeling
of engagement and happiness.
I can't really explain
it because over the years I’ve been
to enough professional meetings to have already
seen and heard most of what's being shared.
But I always learn. Sometimes its just reinforcement
of what I'm already thinking. Because I don't
get out into K-12 schools much these days,
regular reality checks are good for me. I
love to see great teaching. Often I'll go
to sessions that I've seen before, or on topics
of only marginal interest simply because I
know the presenter. And I learn a lot from
watching poor teaching too!
Most often the best
part of professional meetings are the conversations
in the corridors between sessions. Work and
family responsibilities absorb so much of
our time that it's a treat to catch up on
news with colleagues we see only annually.
I can't help but believe that if more physical
educators got out of their schools regularly
it would help keep our programs and practices
updated.
This past weekend
was our annual state AHPERD conference. It
was a well-organized and informative event.
AAHPERD President Vicki
Worrell flew in from Kansas. Pediatrician,
Dr.
Stephen McDonough from the President's
Council for Fitness, Sport, and Nutrition
joined us. Both delivered insightful keynote
addresses. We offered mentoring workshops
for teachers interested in supervising student
teachers, and a student leadership conference.
It was the kind of event that left attendees
motivated and reinvigorated to return to their
jobs.
But only a little
over 10% of the physical and health education
teachers in our state attended. I suspect
that's a pretty normal statistic around the
country. Why more don't attend or become supporting
members of our state association continues
to puzzle me. Cost at least for professional
membership is hardly a factor. Disinterest
or apathy is a more compelling explanation.
Sadly this attitude explains to me the lack
of public support for physical education in
our schools and the never-ending efforts to
eliminate PE teaching positions.
What is in our professional
future? Hope, that we can collectively come
up with a strategy to strengthen reasons for
keeping physical education in our schools,
is what excites me this year about NASPE's
PE2020 initiative. Constantly reacting to
changes in our world is a dead-end professional
strategy. Today, we find ourselves puzzling
how to best fit between academic and obesity
trends in an environment of shrinking budgets.
We need to plan for the future rather than
be shaped by what others do. But to do this
we need to share ideas and visions.
PE2020 is
about taking control of what we - you and
I - would like to see physical education become.
It's not about outsiders telling us. It's
not about university professors, schoolteachers,
or students forcing their opinions on us.
It's about all of us being willing to collaborate
in shaping a vision. PE2020 is futuristic
in concept. It challenges all of us to think
beyond today's problems and limitations. But
PE2020 also has a solid practical
purpose.
Thinking ahead several
years gives us time to work backwards and
plot the practical steps we need to take to
achieve our professional goals. If you are
not already familiar, you might want to look
at the US DHHS proposal for "Developing
Healthy People 2020." It extends
from the previous 2010-focused plan. Through
PE2020 we too have the potential
to think collectively and become more coordinated
in what we do.
This past month we've
seen an upsurge in submissions of PE2020 visions.
We are getting close to 500.The numbers are
increasing each day (which pleases me since
it is my sabbatical project!). But that's
not nearly enough. If you have not submitted
please start thinking and writing immediately.
And get your students to submit. People who
have experienced PE are eminently qualified
to tell us what they would like it to be like.
Get your family and friends to share their
views too.
Here are just a few
excerpts from some PE2020 submissions to get
you thinking and responding:
- George (Pennsylvania)
writes, "High school physical education
programs continue to face reductions and
elimination. And they should! Far too many
of them are taught by physical educators
who have not kept up to date, are lazy and/or
are more concerned with their athletic teams."
- Kayla
(Texas) believes, "the number one goal
for physical education teachers should be
to make the activities enjoyable for everyone.
If physical education teachers can make
the activities fun for all ages and backgrounds,
the children will be less likely to grow
up with a negative view of exercise, and
more likely to be able to continue their
active lifestyles after they move on from
elementary school."
- In the year
2020, Derek (Washington)
predicts, "a new groundbreaking national
curriculum is being developed to raise the
level of health and fitness and improve
upon the learning experience for all of
our nation's youth. The National Curriculum
is entitled the "Comprehensive and
Healthy Academic Movement in Physical Education
and Sports," or for short "CHAMPS."
- Lynn
(New York) suggests we need to "find
ways to make movement meaningful for every
individual. Without personal meaning, physical
activity or exercise is at risk of being
considered just another form of work - another
task to add onto a day that is already full
of demands."
What's your vision? Should we get
rid of high school PE? Focus on fun? Create
a national curriculum? Make movement meaningful?
Submit your thoughts to the PE2020
web site and help us create a new tomorrow
for physical education.
Steve
Jefferies, publisher
pelinks4u
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