Hello, welcome and Happy New Year to you all. If you don't mind, I'd like to make this,
my first editorial, a personal one and start by introducing
myself. I, Isobel Kleinman, live in New York City, and am the product of
an urban school system; a wonderful four year
professional preparation from SUNY at Cortland,
and a thirty one year career teaching physical
education in a suburban School District. I am
also the author of Complete Physical Education
Plans for Grades 7-12, a book and CD ROM
combination published by Human Kinetics and newly
available at www.HumanKinetics.com.
I hope
that my extensive experience - first teaching
girls ages 7-9 for eight years, then coeds 7-8 for
nine years, and then fourteen years of working
the secondary spectrum ages 7-12 - allows me to offer
you some valuable insight and ideas. One thing is
certain, I am familiar with the joys, problems
and issues confronting today's secondary physical
educators, and for that reason I plan to focus my
efforts on everyday issues that confront you in
the locker room, in planning, in the gym, on the
fields when the weather is inclement, or when
school policy, difficult clientele, or grading
issues affect your plans and can make you gray.
Obviously
I do not have all the answers or questions, and
can do best if you are generous with input.
Please feel free to e-mail me your questions,
reactions, topics of concern, or hints about good
sources and I'll do my best to forward it to
those who sign on.
Thank-you.
Isobel Kleinman Section
Editor |
|
Title IX helped create wonderful opportunities for women in sports, but along with the good has come some bad. For one thing, like it or not, sex has entered the classroom: in modeling, in expectations, in power plays, and in harassment. - An HBO documentary called "Playing the Field" takes a look at another side of the issue of sports and sex. It aired the first time in December. Watch for it again.
- On December 15, 2000, The New York Times discussed how HBO handled "Playing the Field". It left us all working with sport, some food for thought.
It is perhaps time for physical educators to examine how the presence of both sexes in one class has affected curriculum, district hiring practices, student performance, class effort, sexual attitudes, general behavior, role modeling, and self esteem.
|
Sports figures can be held up as heroes when they do something we'd like others to do:
When the President of a University can cite an athlete for academic accomplishment. When a guy making 16 million dollars a year feels he needs an education and goes for it.
When the President of LSU can joke, "I'd like to thank Mr. O'Neal for dramatically increasing the starting salary of this graduating class."
- the man he is talking about is Saquille O'Neil; a hero. He could be your student's hero too, if you mentioned him in class.
|
As educators we should thank Shaq for reminding whoever learns that he recieved a diploma for completing college, that the game is not everything. Saquille O'Neal not only stands tall on the basketball court, he stands tall in life. In a cap and gown, he spoke to his graduating class and the world saying, "For people who think money and fame are important, they are only a small piece of the pie. You need an education to feel secure...I can get a real job now."
|
|
"If we only knew what we were about, perhaps we could get about it better"
- Abe Lincoln
|
|
|  |
Secondary PE Teaching Ideas |
Maximizing The Learning Experience
I don't know about you, but my kids could have
used gym everyday for an hour, but just had it
alternating days for forty two minutes. That
included dressing time.
What this means is conflicting
goals and circumstances: little time, a desire
to give classes a great learning experience and
their need for fun too. What to do?
Use the first ten minutes the students are on
the gym floor wisely.
First, leave the equipment out so that kids
coming out of the locker room can use it
instantly. I call this Free Play, others might call it Instant Activity. Whatever you call
it, leaving equipment available before the formal
start of class maximizes the opportunity to play
and practice what you've already taught without
students worrying about game scores, or that
others are looking on.
That's because each is
doing their own thing. If there is enough
equipment available, it cuts down on misbehavior
in the locker room and on the gym floor. Students
want to move. They are tired of sitting around in the
classroom. Give them the chance.... immediately
and they will be productive.
Second, instead of doing standard warm-up
exercises, try turning warm-ups into an
opportunity to have the class practice movement
patterns that they will be using later. I call
this "mimetics" because student mime an
action without equipment.
This is basketball season. Why don't you
start by having kids use a shooting arm motion,
and wrist snap toward a target you make up...a
spot on a wall, or a word in a banner. Do it five
or so times. Then add whatever footwork and body
position they'll need for successful shooting.
Practice five or six times before adding anything
else. Then add a jump. For younger kids, you
might want them jumping to shoot. For the older
ones you might introduce the jump shot by having
them jump and when in the air, make believe their
shooting. Each time, repeat the action five or six
times. You can go on to a jump shot without the
ball or even how to turn - jump - shoot.
You can teach fundamentals of rebounding
too... jump, reach up and pull the imaginary
ball down. By using mimetic, each improvement
they need to make can be drilled, in unison,
without the ball and you have started the
learning process and refined it without the worry
of the kids getting negative feedback.
You can teach - in warm-ups - as much as your
imagination allows you. See Complete Physical
Education Plans for Grades 7-12 for more
ideas on how to use mimetics to help kids learn
new skills.
|
|
If we could read the secret history of our enemies, we should find in each man's life sorrow and suffering enough to disarm all hostility.
-- Henry Wadsworth Longfellow
|
|
|

Secondary Health Teaching Ideas |
Medically Excused Kids
Can they funtion in class? Yes, and here are some ways how:
- Give them a whistle, have them learn the rules along with the rest of the class, and teach them to officiate.
- Ask them to keep score, stats, or coach a team.
- Have them create a rules sheet, basketball bulletin board, or a "play" that they teach the class.
- Have them research the best way to recover from their medical problem, and what exercise they could do until they are fully back to health.
|
If you have ideas, comments, letters to share, or questions about particular topics, please email one of the following Secondary PE Section Editors:
|
Help to support quality physical education and health education by contributing to this site.
|
|
|

|
 |
|
Need Basketball Information?
A great search engine for finding information is Looksmart.com .
There you can find: High School Basketball, with news, guides, recruiting information, state by state results, and developmental programs.You can also find information on Women's Basketball.
For college results, programs, eligibility, recruiting, and reporting, see NCAA Basketball.net
You probably should review this before suggesting it to your class, but there is a recent video out called "Love and Basketball" that might be worth a look.
Check out what teachers Craige McKenna and Deborah Reedy are doing at Dalton Intermediate School in Radford, Virginia. This site includes over 25 video clips you can view with free software such as Windows Media Player and/or Real Player.
Check out this
site of Lois Mauch from Fargo, North
Dakota. I have the pleasure of knowing Lois, and to
me at least, she exemplifies a secondary physical
educator making a difference in the lives of her
students.
|
|
Please let your colleagues know about PELINKS4U, and remember you can catch up on a year's worth of news in our PE Archives.
|
|
PELINKS4U is made possible through the generous support of several site sponsors. This month, we welcome two new sponsors: Athletic Stuff and Direct Case. Please show your appreciation for their support by clicking on the banners and logos of our sponsors, and taking a few minutes to visit their web sites. Thanks.
|
Hot Ideas from PE Central |
This link directs you to PE Central's Best Practices
Program which is intended to help share some of the
exciting things teachers do to enhance physical education
programs.
|
|
Would you like to reduce unnecessary email, but still stay professionally connected?
Instead of using our listservs to discuss topics, start posting Secondary PE questions to the PE-Forum, then email your favorite listserv to invite comments ON THE FORUM rather than to everyone on the email list!
The PE-Forum is easy-to-use once you complete a first time registration. Check it out !
|
|
PE-News is a biweekly digest bringing you the latest news, and reminding you to view the current PELINKS4U web site. If you are not already receiving the digest, please fill in your e-mail address below. Submit your name, and type "Subscribe" in the Subject line of the message. Please send the addresses of colleagues who might be interested in PELINKS4U, so that we can also inform them about this site.
|
|