Combating Childhood Obesity with a “Health Club
Model” in Secondary Physical Education
We have all seen the extensive press coverage of the rise in childhood
obesity rates and the detrimental health impact we can expect in
the future on both individual youngsters and our nation’s health
care system. As teachers promoting healthy lifestyle decision-making,
we are on the frontline when leaders such as the Surgeon General
refers to the “call to action” needed to address obesity rates and
sedentary living.
I suppose in some weird twist of fate (or perhaps my own biased
view of the world), when we hear that obesity and sedentary lifestyles
constitute an “epidemic” health problem --- we also hear an invaluable
positive opportunity for school-based physical activity programs!
Among other reasons, I believe that is one reason why the “health
club model” in secondary physical education has become the newest
twist in program restructuring. And candidly, it is probably a pretty
good idea. Let’s be honest, it is increasingly hard to sell the
public on the value in playing competitive team sports (such as
football, basketball, & soccer) in secondary programs when we
know a majority of those youngsters we are teaching are probably
not going to participate in these team sports as part of their healthy
lifestyle plan once they leave school. That is not to suggest that
team sports should be abandoned, but rather reexamined to focus
on active participation rather than athletic prowess. Over twenty
years ago when I was an undergraduate college student, a major focus
of physical education teacher education programs were to prepare
us to become both coaches and teachers of future athletes. The logic
was pretty sound at the time, because we didn’t have the proliferation
of specialized youth sport training of current times. Moving forward
to today, a harsh reality is that varsity athletes are rarely “found”
in PE classes…rather, youngsters who aspire to athletic success
typically have been involved in specialized youth sport programs
for many years before they even enter high school. If you had a
chance to read the special four-part series in Sports Illustrated
“Inside the Changing World of Our Young Athletes” (Nov. 18 -Dec.
9th, 2003), you know exactly what I’m talking about.
So what does that mean for PE class?
In many settings, the move toward the “health club model” is started
in response to the need to improve the health of students and also
because so many teachers find the dominance of team sports by the
highest skilled youngsters detrimental to the health outcomes of
the lowest skilled youngsters who typically need the physical activity
the most. Simply watch a typically full-sized (i.e., 11v. 11 football,
5v5 basketball, etc.) game in PE class and notice how rarely the
lower skilled (and often least fit) youngsters actually participate
meaningfully. Instead, programs are placing youngsters on exercise
bikes, weight training machines, aerobic programs, kickboxing classes,
and climbing walls. In fact, did you ever notice that whenever someone
mentions “New PE” you tend to see climbing walls and in-line skating?
I believe for me the “big picture” is that the sports and physical
activities we teach are more and more simply the “means to the end.”The
“end” in this case meaning physically active and healthy adolescents
and young adults who are excited about a lifetime of movement. The
old notion that the sports and physical activities were the “end”
themselves, that is, the development of athletic expertise in order
to compete on school teams appears no longer relevant. So whether
we like it or not…”physical education” (the academic content teaching
healthy lifestyles with participation for all youngsters) and “sports”
(the nonacademic entertainment venue with participation only for
the gifted few) continue to drift apart.
Jon Poole
Secondary Section Editor

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Promoting our "Physical Best" |
The American Fitness Alliance (a collaborative effort between AAHPERD,
the Cooper Institute for Aerobics Research, and Human Kinetics)
publisher of the Physical Best materials including the Physical
Education for Lifelong Fitness: The Physical Best Teacher’s Guide
and the Physical Best Activity Guide: Secondary Level, provides
secondary teachers some pretty strong resources to get the year
started on a healthy note.
What are the Physical Best principles for effective health-related
physical education?
All Physical Best materials, resources, and workshops:
- emphasize enjoyable participation in developmentally appropriate
physical activities,
- offer a diverse range of noncompetitive and competitive activities
appropriate for different ages and abilities, allowing students
to successfully participate,
- emphasize the personal nature of participation in lifelong physical
activity,
- provide appropriate and authentic assessment that is part of
the learning process and is designed so students take on increasing
responsibility for their own assessment,
- follow proven educational sequences and progressions that lead
to students taking on increasing responsibility for their own
health-related fitness, and
- meet the NASPE National Physical Education Standards for health-related
fitness.
Check it out through the American Fitness
Alliance.
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Physical Education for Lifelong Fitness:
The Physical Best Teacher’s Guide |
As a physical educator, you have an awesome opportunity to have
a powerful and positive impact on hundreds of young people each
year. By teaching them the skills and knowledge, and giving them
the appreciation and confidence they need to live physically active
lives, you are preparing them to avoid many major diseases and
live healthier, less stressful, and more productive lives than
those who live sedentary lives. And what greater preparation can
a teacher give than readiness for a healthy life? In 300 BC Herophiles
(considered the “father of anatomy”) stated: “When health is absent,
wisdom cannot reveal itself, art cannot become manifest, strength
cannot be exerted, wealth is useless, and reason in powerless.”
For all the technological advances that have taken place since
300 BC, this one constant remains – without one’s health, all
else is useless.
Scott Wikgren, Director
Health, Physical Education, Recreation, and Dance Division
Human Kinetics
(cited from the preface to Physical Education for Lifelong
Fitness: The Physical Best Teacher’s Guide)
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American Academy of Pediatrics |
Because financial support for fitness programs is the schools
is unlikely to increase in the foreseeable future, and television
is unlikely to become less attractive, we must anticipate the
probability that our children’s degree of fitness will decline.
Pediatricians must acquaint themselves with this problem and appeal
to their local school boards to maintain, if not increase, the
schools’ physical education program of physical fitness. School
programs should emphasize the so-called lifetime athletic activities
such as cycling, swimming, and tennis. Schools should decrease
time spent teaching the skills used in team sports such as football,
basketball, and baseball. Physical fitness activities at school
should promote a lifelong habit of aerobic exercise.
American Academy of Pediatrics
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If you have ideas, comments, letters
to share, or questions about particular topics, please email
one of the following Secondary Section Editors: |
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While I know many secondary school youngsters ride a bus, are
driven by family or friends, or drive themselves… the continued
interest in federal and state legislation to build pedestrian and
bicycle access to schools is a worthy cause to lend your support.
Those of you especially living in suburbs will recognize that it
seems increasingly new neighborhoods and schools are built to NOT
encourage walking and biking. Rather, we almost are forced to drive
everywhere. Granted, several forward thinking developers across
the county are building “planned active communities” with wide sidewalks,
dedicated bicycle paths, small neighborhood-looking stores for easy
access, dedicated green space for parks, and road schemes that discourage
speeding and vehicle use, those developments seem to be the exception
rather than the rule. Simply type “safe routes to school” in any
search engine and you will see a myriad of resources available a
click away.
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The President’s Challenge: Physical Activity and Fitness Awards |
Presidential
Active Lifestyle Award
This new award was developed to recognize those children and
youth who begin and continue regular physical activity as a part
of their lives in school and at home. Although daily physical
activity will help improve the components of physical fitness
(which are the basis for other awards in The President's Challenge),
establishing an active lifestyle receives direct recognition through
this award.
The Presidential Active Lifestyle Award (PALA) rewards an active
lifestyle. The PALA is an embroidered blue presidential emblem
and certificate signed by the President of the United States.
Students who are active for 60 minutes per day, five days a week,
for six weeks are eligible for this award. They are encouraged
to repeat their participation throughout the year, earning a series
of stickers placed on the certificate indicating the number of
times the award has been won.
The success of the physical activity, physical fitness, and health
fitness elements of The President's Challenge depends on the enthusiasm,
knowledge, and role modeling by physical educators and other youth
leaders. This is a unique opportunity for you to help all the
children and youth in your program earn activity and / or fitness
awards to enhance their health and fitness.
Source: www.indiana.edu/
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Web-Based Resource = Cooper Institute’s
Fitnessgram |
FITNESSGRAM® /
ACTIVITYGRAM®
Overview
FITNESSGRAM is a timely break-through in the youth fitness
field. It is the fitness assessment of choice for thousands of
schools and is used for millions of children and youth annually.
The program is much more that an assessment of physical fitness.
Youth who participate in the health-related assessment receive
personalized reports on their performance. Here are the FITNESSGRAM's
advantages:
- Each of the test items was selected to assess important aspects
of a student's health related fitness, not skill or agility.
- Students are compared not to each other, but to health fitness
standards, carefully established for each age and gender, that
indicate good health.
- Participants receive objective, personalized feedback and
positive reinforcement which are vital to changing behavior
and serve as a communications link between teachers and parents.
FITNESSGRAM was developed in 1982 by The Cooper Institute in
Dallas, Texas. Dr. Charles Sterling, the former Executive Director
of the Institute and a former public school physical education
administrator, wanted to develop an easy way for physical education
teachers to report the results of physical fitness assessments.
The objective was to increase parental awareness of children's
fitness levels.
(Source: www.cooperinst.org)
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