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June/July 2006 Vol. 8 No. 6
SUBMIT IDEA OR EXPERIENCE  
CONFERENCE/WORKSHOP CALENDAR
 Editorial

Summer is here! As you wade through the mire of field days, report cards, and final equipment inventories, I hope you'll take a moment to revisit the wonderful work that you have done throughout the year. What have you done?

Well, if you are the typical Physical Education teacher reading this webpage, you have provided thousands of practice opportunities for skill practice, hundreds of bits of corrective and encouraging feedback, an environment in which your students felt safe enough to try new skills, make mistakes, and get better. You have also taught students about working together with others as leaders, followers and supporters for one another, you have empowered them to teach each other, and you have modeled care and compassion for others. So what have you done?

You have changed the lives of countless children...for good!

Cindy Kuhrasch
Interdisciplinary Section Editor

"For Teacher, By Teacher" Activity Plan Contest

Toledo  PE Supply
 "Thinking On Your Feet"

by Jean Blaydes

This section within the Interdisciplinary page is updated each month with a new idea from Jean Blayde's book "Thinking on Your Feet."

This month's activity is called "Hackey Sacks" and focuses on helping to organize the brain hemispheres.

Find out more information about Jean Blaydes and Action Based Learning.
Nutripoints
 Eye Protection

Guide to Eye Protection for Sports - Each year there are more than 100,000 sports-related eye injuries that are reported to physicians. The most common kinds of eye injuries related to sports are detached retinas, lacerated corneas, contusions and corneal abrasions as well as cataracts, hemorrhages, and the loss of an eye. With proper eye protection it is estimated that 90% of these injuries can be prevented. Because of this, the American Academy of Ophthalmology supports mandatory eye protection for young athletes. Read the statistics/facts on sport related eye injuries.

Information About Vision Loss And Blindness - There are 500,000 eye injuries every year in the USA. The leading cause of blindness in children is eye injury. 90% of injuries can be avoided by using proper eye protection. This is a pretty good page of great information. That's why it's included in this section, so how about taking a few minutes to read on this important topic. See also, Avoiding Eye Injuries.

First-Aid for the Eyes - To reduce the risk of permanent damage caused by eye injuries, it is important to treat eye injuries immediately. Consult your child's physician or ophthalmologist (eye care specialist) as soon as possible.

Children’s Eye Health and Safety - Sports can endanger your child's eyes if he or she does not wear appropriate eye protection. Sports are the leading cause of eye injuries in children. See Recommended Sports Eye Protectors, and Tips for Buying Sports Eye Protectors.

 Resources

End of the Year Program Evaluation. How Did You Do?

NASPE Physical Education Checkup - This is the time of year that we all take a few moments and evaluate our programs. This necessary and useful process is made easier with the help of a good evaluation tool. Check out this link, and print out the program evaluation materials so that you can take a healthy look at your program. You might also use some time this summer to consider ways to make your good program even better!

NASPE Teacher’s Tool Box for May - The Teacher’s Tool Box contains a wealth of information on ways to celebrate National Physical Fitness and Sport month. The site includes an idea for a bulletin board, a fitness calendar, coloring book page, and a puzzle.

The Web Puts “Fizz” into Phys-ical Fitness - This web page has a variety of activities that can be used to promote physical activity during the month of May. You will find a Physical Activity IQ quiz to challenge your students to be healthier individuals. In addition to the IQ quiz, you will find a variety of games and activities to use in your physical education classes.

 Your Online Summer Tool Kit

For All Ages - Your Summer First-Aid Guide
An A to Z of common children's ailments and injuries
Summer is going to produce health related problems for you and your child, but will you know how to treat the problem? What are the symptoms? This is a very good site to 'bookmark' as a reference resource for summer!

CPR Update - for infants under 1, and for children 1 to 8.

Boo-Boos, Bruises and Bumps - Common Skin Problems in Children. Sometimes it's hard to distinguish between a bite, a rash, an allergic reaction or an ongoing skin problem that needs attention.

What are the symptoms of dehydration? - The degree of dehydration is graded according to signs and symptoms that reflect the amount of fluid lost. Read the differences.

Tips for safe swimming - You can greatly reduce the chances of you or your friends and family becoming drowning or near-drowning victims by following a few simple safety tips:

Physical Education teachers typically see their students so infrequently that I wonder if it is reasonable to expect us to teach more than movement-based and health promoting activities. While I am convinced that movement activities can be utilized to teach all types of academic content, I tend to think that it should be the regular classroom teachers who do more to integrate movement into their learning activities.

Today's students spend far too much time sitting passively in their classrooms and would respond with much more enthusiasm if teachers utilized movement as an instructional strategy. It seems to me that in the future, physical educators could serve a role in our schools, not only as teachers of movement skills, but also as movement resource coordinators for regular faculty. With their expert knowledge of movement, physical educators are ideally placed to be able to help other faculty develop activities to enhance the learning of all types of classroom content. What do you think? Please post.

 Summer Fun

Summer Ideas - Are you a teacher AND a parent? Wondering what to do with your own kids this summer? Check out this terrific website full of ideas! It's got everything from language to sensory activities, as well as gross motor fun as well!

Summer Fun for Kids, By Heather Hatfield
School's out, the long days of summer are upon us, and your kids are restless. Short of shipping them off to summer camp, how can you keep them happy and busy, and without letting them catch on, make sure they're learning along the way?

Here are tips on what to keep in mind when you're planning summer activities, as well as some easy ideas for little tykes, preschoolers, and school kids that will keep them entertained all the way through August.

Games Kids Play - Looking for kids games? How about rules for playground games, verses for jump-rope rhymes, and much more? This site has listed lots of new games recently and are in the process of giving the site a makeover! We hope this site brings you lots of happy memories.

Backyard Games - If you are tired of seeing your children glued to the television set watching cartoons or playing video games, then it’s time to get them into the back yard for some good old fashioned fun. There are plenty of games that can be played that cost no money, can include as many players as you have, and are loads of fun. If you get out there and play with your child it will make you feel like a kid again. The following games are tried and true favorites and perhaps you can remember some of your own. Go outside and play!

Fun-Attic Game List - The best game ideas, resources and activities for birthday parties, picnics, youth groups, summer camps, company events, educators, family life, home schooling or just for the fun of it.

Digiwalker
 From PE Central

Finding lessons for the summer is a challenge, since most of us spend these three months at home with our families. But, whether or not you are teaching in a year round school, or organizing the neighborhood gang at home, these activities are sure to help!

Fourth of July Fitness Fun (grades 3-5)
Subjects: Fitness
Objective: To increase the heart rate and improve fitness by moving for an extended length of time.

Spongy Hydration (grades K-2)
Subject: Health-Nutrition
Objective: After the lesson, the students should be able to understand why humans need water to live and function best.

Aerobic Frisbee Golf (grades: 4-8)
Subject: Math and Science
Objectives: Students will work cooperatively to accurately throw a Frisbee and learn about fitness components and different systems of the body.

The Water Dance (grades: K-2)
Subject: Science
Objective: To teach the students about the changes in the four seasons by moving like water in each season (i.e. in the summer it is hot, so it moves fast and in the winter it is frozen, so it does not move).

Sunshine and Snowflakes (grades: K-2)
Subject: Science
Objective: To teach students about hot and cold while practice chasing and fleeing skills.

 Summer Safety for Kids

Keep your kids safe and happy this summer with some common sense tips from these great sites.

Playground Safety - This article highlights common playground hazards and ways to prevent them.

Sun Safety - It's hot outside, everybody's jumping around in their seats, and the bell rings. Finally you can play outside! But if you're going to be out in the sun, especially on a hot day, you need to stay safe. Find out how.

Bike Safety - It's a beautiful day, the sun is shining, and the birds are chirping. What could be more perfect than a bike ride? But wait! Before you pull your bike out of the garage, find out how to stay safe on two wheels.

 Protecting Your Child's Eyes

Fireworks Safety Months
June and July

Activities during this period will alert parents and children to the dangers of playing with fireworks. Prevent Blindness America will offer safer ways to celebrate the Fourth of July. For information, email shecker@preventblindness.org, or call 1-800-331-2020. See Prevent Blindness America Fact Sheets.

One in four school-age children has a vision impairment. More than one in twenty preschool-age children has a vision problem that can cause permanent sight loss if left untreated. Find out more.

Selecting Sunglasses for Children - Sunglasses without UV protection shade the eyes from the bright sun, but cause the pupils to dilate, actually allowing in more harmful rays. Find out why your kid NEED to wear sunglasses in the sun, and how to go about selecting the right pair for your child.

Safe Summer Celebrations - To help keep your 4th of July safe this year, Prevent Blindness America offers these safe suggestions.

 School Ties Gym in with Learning

Submitted by Phil Lawler: plawler@pe4life.org

School Ties Gym in with Learning
By Melissa Jenco
Daily Herald Staff Writer

Gym class long has been about more than dodgeball and basketball at Naperville Central High School. But now some physical education instructors are taking things further and team-teaching with colleagues in literacy programs to help students who read below their grade levels.

Through the new Zero Hour P.E. class, gym teachers have found a way to take advantage of research that shows exercise can improve learning, says Paul Zientarski, chairman of the school's health and physical education department. By combining the early gym classes with literacy lessons, they think they've found a new way to reach students who struggle with reading.

"It's going to be a major breakthrough in education," said Phil Lawler, director of the PE4life Academy in Naperville who has been working with Zientarski. "It's going to get to the point that physical education is the core class for all learning."

Sporttime

Participating students - there were 11 freshmen during first semester and five during second semester - set their alarms about 45 minutes earlier than most classmates to take part in the program. The students voluntarily took the 7 a.m. Zero Hour gym class, followed a short time later by a literacy class. Now parents and teachers say they're seeing a difference both in test scores and attitude.

When Principal Jim Caudill started a literacy class two years ago, some parents expressed concerns that it took up an elective period. Having read research about exercise and the brain, Zientarski agreed to hold a Zero Hour gym class as long as he could use an English teacher to team-teach it.

Zientarski's confidence in the class rested in the research of John Ratey, clinical associate professor of psychiatry at Harvard Medical School. Ratey found that exercise releases chemicals he said are like "Miracle-Gro" on the brain.  

"What I know from my research ... is that exercise really helps a brain to do all kinds of things much better," Ratey said. "It certainly improves the tension, decreases fidgetiness or impulsiveness, improves mood, and probably also improves motivation." These improvements, he said, make students more prepared to learn.

Reading specialist Maxyne Kozil also was on hand to incorporate literacy drills into typical gym activities. For instance, students practice vocabulary while rolling around the gym on scooters, or watch "To Kill a Mockingbird" while on treadmills. "Over the last 10 years, we've become more audio-visual-oriented," said literacy teacher Debbie St. Vincent. "It makes sense we change how we learn. We're not in the 1950s where we can sit and read books peacefully."

Students also are making use of the interactive electronic equipment the school has received from PE4life, such as Sportwalls, which help with cross-lateral movement, coordination and concentration or Trazers, which are similar to virtual reality games that can provide a cardiovascular workout and enhance agility.

Zientarski said test scores of students in the Zero Hour class are proving Ratey's research to be correct. During first semester, reading scores for students in the program improved by the equivalent of 1.4 grade levels, while literacy students who didn't take the early gym class improved by 0.9.

Speed Stacks

"These were the kids that eventually started taking leadership roles in small groups," said Neil Duncan, who teaches the Zero Hour class. "They were the ones that were speaking out, raising their hand and interacting with the class and the teacher."

Steve Gedutis said his daughter, Krissy, has had more energy, a better routine, and went from being an average student in junior high school to making the honor roll first semester of her freshman year.  

The students said getting up early was tough, but they liked having an extra period for an elective and noticed a difference in themselves the rest of the day. "It gives you a little more focus in your next class," said freshman Joe Devitt. "And you get gym out of the way." Lawler said the affects of exercise last about three hours.  

Now the challenge for Zientarski is getting the word out to other schools, and to administrators, that physical activity can impact learning. Currently, only 5 percent of high schools in the U.S. have daily gym class, according to Lawler.

"The problem is that No Child Left Behind is getting administrators to think that more seat time is better for education," Zientarski said. "And actually we now have proof that's not true. So more time in the classroom isn't the answer, but preparation, getting you body ready to learn through activity, is the way to increase test scores."  

Next year, Caudill said Central will configure its schedule so that all freshmen in the literacy program can take gym during first period, followed by communication and cultures classes, and possibly literacy class.  

Zientarski said special education teachers also are reconsidering how they schedule their students, knowing they can schedule academic classes later in the day as long as they're preceded by gym class. Other counselors also may start scheduling gym class before a student's most difficult class.

Ratey, who has visited Naperville twice, will feature Central's physical education program in two chapters of the book he is writing, tentatively titled "Exercise and the Brain," which is due out next spring.  

"I would encourage schools to encourage ... not just Zero Hour," Ratey said, "but the whole attitude toward physical education that Naperville has instilled as part of their culture now."  

Melissa Jenco (mjenco@dailyherald.com)

TWU
PE Central
Phi Epsilon Kappa
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