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Interdisciplinary Physical Education
July 2, 2001, Vol. 3, No.14

CONFERENCE/WORKSHOP CALENDAR

 Featured Article

Exercise Seen Boosting Children's Brain Function
Article by Delores King
Boston Globe; November 9, 1999

"It is helpful to think of the brain as a muscle. One of the best ways to maximize the brain is through exercise, movement. Everybody feels better after exercise. There is a reason for it."
Dr. John J. Ratey, Harvard Medical School.

Reading, 'riting, 'rithmetic, and running?
Emerging new research in animals and humans suggest physical exercise may boost brain function, improve mood, and otherwise increase learning according to findings presented yesterday at a meeting of neuroscientists and educators. While it is too soon to conclude that children who do not exercise fare worse in school, the research raises questions about the recent national trend toward cutting physical education programs, some scientists and educators said. Such cutbacks are a "crime" considering the new research showing exercise's benefit to the brain by improving blood flow and spurring cell growth, said Dr. John J. Ratey, clinical associate professor of psychiatry at Harvard Medical School. Ratey presented some of the latest findings at a Boston conference titled "Learning and the Brain."

A 1997 survey by the National Association for Sport and Physical Education, the latest available, found that only one state, Illinois, mandates daily physical education for students in kindergarten through 12th grades even though federal guidelines call for such regular activity.

In addition to the findings about exercise and brain function, educators yesterday learned what the latest animal research is showing about the ability to grow new brain cells, and what the latest developmental psychology studies are revealing about how young children learn. They also heard how to structure a classroom to take advantage of the latest brain research findings.

But the findings about physical education and brain function seemed the most intriguing, reflecting a growing understanding of the brain's amazing ability to adapt and develop.

"It's helpful to think of the brain as a muscle," said Ratey to hundreds attending a session called "The Care and Feeding of the Brain." "One of the best ways to maximize the brain is through exercise and movement. Everybody feels better after exercise. There's a reason for it." Ratey cited a variety of researches in animals and humans, showing how physical exercise increases cerebral blood flow and levels of a brain cell growth hormone (BDNF). He also pointed to the studies of exercise's positive effect on mood altering brain chemicals known as neurotransmitters.

Elizabeth Gould, a Princeton University neurobiologist who also spoke at yesterdayıs conference, cited research by California scientists in mice showing that physical activity increases the number of brain cells in the hippocampus, and that learning improved with exercise.

But Gould urged caution in using animal research as a basis for educators to change classroom practice. "I think what's interesting from the perspective of education is that this is new information about how the brain works, and it also gives us a sense of how the brain is structurally changing throughout life."

Physical education teachers like Jean Blaydes of Richardson, Texas, and Tolken, who heads the program at Wellesley public schools, said they are convinced by the research so far, and their own experience of the importance of exercise to school children. Physical activity adds to the children's overall education and keeps them from becoming obese as so many children and adults are in this country, they said.

"Yet we are cutting physical education programs left and right," said Blaydes, an elementary school physical education teacher who attended Ratey's talk. The research suggests that exercise "seems to be really important in the learning process," she said, "yet physical education programs are often 'considered fluff.'" Tolken, who was not at the conference, said, "What we're doing in the schools, I think, is flying in the face of research."

 Contribute YOUR Ideas

If you have ideas, comments, letters to share, or questions about particular topics, please email one of the following Interdisciplinary PE Section Editors:

 Editorial

Thank you for visiting the "Interdisciplinary PE" section on PELINKS4U. We hope you find this section a valuable use of your time.

If you have teaching tips for successfully integrating PE with other classroom subjects at any grade level, please share them with me.

Also, I would be happy to try to find answers to any questions you may have. Feedback, questions, and contributions will assist in our quest to make this page beneficial to you.

Cindy Kuhrasch
Section Editor


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Thoughts to Share?

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 Integrated Teaching Ideas

All Aboard

Lay a piece of rope tied in a loop on the ground which is large enough to fit all of the students in your class. When they accomplish this, congratulate them for working together, but challenge them to do better. Make the rope smaller (or box taped on the floor) and see how they accomplish that. Keep continuing this until they run out of solutions. Eventually it gets too small to put everybody in and they must get very creative and very close to solving the problem.

Encourage students to ask questions. They will eventually ask: "Did you say we had to get our entire body in the circle, etc.? Make sure to talk about what you observed and praise them for working together during the activity.

Developed by Cindy Kuhrasch
Assistant Professor
University of Wisconsin-Madison
Madison, WI 53706


You cannot light the way for others without brightening your own path.

Self Motivation

My profession is running a dance school for the past 17 years. In doing so, I have learned many things about children; one being that self motivation is really not an inherited characteristic. It is a learned behavior.

In the corporate world that we live in now where it's a race to keep up, some of our children are losing their battle before it ever begins. At times, I feel like my job requires more than just a dance instructor. I encounter children who cannot even fathom the thought of self motivation.

Why? Because their parents are probably too busy in their own corporate climb up the ladder that they've forgotten to notice their own offspring. They've forgotten that it's just as necessary to teach their own children how to be successful and to succeed - how to be creative and to create.

In my own effort to be successful at what I do, there is one point I push every day that I walk into my studio: "You only get what you give". It may not look like much right off the bat, but if you look at the words really careful and read between the lines, it really says a lot. I have one other quote that I use in teaching expression: "You are like a paint brush on canvas. You "the dancer" are the paint brush and your canvas is the stage."

Copyright İ 1999 Bonita Jennings

 Hot Ideas from PE Central

Scooter Mania
Purpose of Activity:
To help children understand how to work cooperatively with a partner.
Physical Activity Being Taught:
Cooperative skills.
Suggested Grade Level:K-2

Ditto
Purpose of Activity:
To help children understand how to work cooperatively with a partner.
Physical Activity Being Taught:
Cooperative skills
Suggested Grade Level: K-2



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 Featured Web Sites

TeacherVision Lessons

This site is a wonderful resource for both movement skill and movement concept activities. It also makes connections between other content areas and PE.

Fun Brain

Math Baseball is just one example of the great collection of online games that teach from this site. Have your students access the site to practice math tasks while learning about baseball strategy. Or, help them to play "Power Football." A really fun site for school or home with your own kids!

  Science

Solar System Shuffle
Teaches Locomotor Skills & the Planets

"Describe to the students that they have just entered the solar system. It contains 9 planets and a sun. Give each student a planet picture card. Using cues on their card, they find the matching planet and then read the information card.

Once all students have read the information card, start with Mercury and have the students walk their planets orbit by following the matching poly spots. Each orbit of spots corresponds to the color of the planet information card; for example, Earth has a green card and follows the orbit of green poly spots. If you do not have 9 colors simply use construction paper and attach.

Next have all students walk their own orbit at the same time. One set of students is the Sun and they stand in the center. Have them do ski jumpers or low jumpers to warm up."

To find out more about this integration game, click here.

Recycle Relay
Objective: To work on locomotor skills, while reinforcing recycling ideas

Two teams are lined up at start line. One player from each team races to a trash can/box of recyclable goods. After getting an object from the can, student must go to the earth (big ball) and run a set number of times around it. Next to the earth ball is a sign which indicates the number of "minilaps." As soon as the previous student reaches the sign the next player may begin.

All players repeat until time expires or all objects have been recycled. More than one player per team may be running around the earth ball at a time (in fact it will probably happen often). If all items are not recycled, the winner is the team with the most players complete.

Variation: use the number of "minilaps" as recycled value.
Example: paper=1 lap, cardboard=1 ½ laps, soda bottle=4 laps, sock/shirt=2 laps, wood=3 laps, aluminum can=3 ½ laps, *points equal to laps.*

To find out more about this fun integrated game, click here.

 Health/Social Studies

Muscle Match Mania
A relay race format to use the muscle names and corresponding exercises and stretches.

This activity is done after several weeks of introducing and reviewing muscle terms.

Divide the students into 4-6 groups. Give each group a set of velcro muscle pieces. Place each group in front of a body outline, which also has the muscles outlined. On command, the first student chooses a muscle and races to the body outline and attaches the piece. The group continues in relay fashion until all pieces have been attached. Once all pieces are on the outline, check for accuracy.

Round #2: repeat in reverse, taking the pieces off the body. This round add a twist; have the students demonstrate an exercise or stretch which works the chosen muscle. For an added challenge have the teammates name the muscle being exercised before the next student may run.
 

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