- Snowshoeing burns 378 calories per
hour and also strengthens the
quadriceps and hip flexor muscles.
- Cross country skiing burns 377 calories
per hour while providing a
full body workout.
- Snowboarding burns 283 calories
per hour while strengthening the
quadriceps and calf muscles.
- Alpine skiing burns 283 calories
per hour and strengthens the
quadriceps and hamstring muscles.
Introducing any of these winter sports
to children promotes increased flexibility,
balance, muscular strength and endurance,
and
cardiovascular endurance. Children are
also simultaneously expending over 250
calories per hour which helps them to
maintain a developmentally appropriate
body composition.
Children who play in the snow finish
their play hungry and tired from the
vast amount of calories burned by the
body to remain warm. What's more, children's
play involving winter season physical
activities are performed with others
such as with family and friends, thus
providing increased use of socialization
skills which are important to relating
with others. Winter season activities
to promote health, fitness, and socialization
can begin in the elementary school physical
education program as early as the kindergarten
grade.
Celebrating Winter Season in
School...
…Through
Games. The elementary school
physical education program can provide
opportunities for children to experience
fun and enjoyment of playing seasonal
games to celebrate wintertime, indoors.
Resources, such as the books Holiday
Games and Activities
and Celebration
games: Physical activities for every
month by Barbara Wnek, provide
teachers with various physical fitness
activities, skills, games, and rhythm
and dance activities for grades K-6
that are centered around holidays and
seasonal themes during a school year.
Winter season games and activities can
get children excited about physical
education, and motivate them to want
to participate in enjoyable learning
experiences. Incorporating manipulatives
that encourage children's imagination,
such as fleece balls as snowballs or
pillow polo sticks as ski poles, adds
to the seasonal celebration of such
games. The nature of many of these games
promotes the enhancement of health-related
physical fitness while also learning
to get along with others.
Through Sport-Related Movement:
Indoors. For students in the
middle to upper elementary grades indoor
winter season sports can be promoted
through floor hockey fundamentals and
developmentally appropriate modified
game play. Creating a culture of students
adopting a professional men and/or women's
ice hockey team may spark greater interest
and enthusiasm to designing your indoor
winter sports season. Quite often during
the winter season, elementary schools
will conduct roller skating programs,
such as the Skate-In-School program
to simulate an indoor and outdoor ice
skating opportunity. Extended tasks
may involve students researching, for
a small extra credit project, a recognized
winter sport athlete.
Through Special Program Initiatives:
Taken together, offering physical
activities that correspond with the
winter season, regardless if they are
indoor games and sport or outdoor winter
sport, are opportunities which can be
built into the curriculum. These opportunities
are not limited to the curriculum itself.
Creative initiatives developed by teachers
to promote health and fitness through
winter season activities may extend
to extra-curricular events. This may
include teachers who organize, for their
school, annual special events such as
a Winter Festival Day, Winter
Arts Festival, Fun Fridays
of Sledding, to name a few. Typically
these events create an atmosphere of
winter celebration based upon various
themes engaged in by teachers and students
school-wide.
These events may involve parents/guardians
of the school community fulfilling a
role as helpers and/or participants.
They may involve using students from
the district high school to participate
as assistants to the younger children.
They may involve guest speakers with
expertise in a winter sport to help
facilitate excitement about getting
involved in their sport. Through these
types of events, physical educators
have used these opportunities to educate
others about the health, fitness and
social benefits of winter time play.
Hopefully, this education will transition
to a student's family becoming more
active and developing a healthy lifestyle
together. What is important to know
is that the elementary physical education
program can be an important catalyst
to educating children upon the value
and benefits of learning and regularly
participating in an outdoor winter sport
as it relates to acquiring the feeling
of enjoying a physical active lifestyle.
Through Outdoor Snow Sports:
Elementary schools situated in the northern
hemisphere of the United States can
take advantage of their environment
and build snow sports units into their
curriculum. This, of course, depends
on necessary lesson length, available
open areas on the school grounds, and
equipment acquisition and management.
With a national initiative to attract
children to snow sports, resources are
available for teachers to assist them
in designing high quality physical education
lessons. A great place to start is with
a program called Winter
Feels Good (www.winterfeelsgood.com).
This is a well designed, developmentally
appropriate snow sports resource developed
for teachers, recreation directors,
and other professionals who are involved
in encouraging elementary-age children
to become active. The program introduces
them to snow sports and teaches "best
practices."
Winter
Feels Good is a cooperative public
awareness campaign developed by Snow-Sports
Industries America (SIA), along with
many national industry partners, to
combat childhood obesity by promoting
the health, fitness and social benefits
of snow sports. Professional instructors
of skiing, snowshoeing and snowboarding
worked closely with SIA to offer children,
in a fun way, basic skill development
and supportive information about topics
such as dressing, safety, equipment
type and sizing for children, and more.
This is a free resource that comes in
two versions, CD-ROM and on-line. The
program is MAC and PC compatible and
requires your web browser (Internet
Explorer, Firefox, Safari, Netscape,
etc.), Adobe Reader, and Quicktime which
call all be downloaded for free. The
snow sport activity versions covered
are alpine skiing, snowboarding, cross
country skiing, snowshoeing, and extras
(quizzes and 2 Quicktime movies are
included).
Each version includes a series of
interactive learning modules organized
into developmentally appropriate units
containing 4-5 day lessons. The many
elements available for planning and
instructional purposes include:
- Interactive learning tools featuring
animated characters that show how
to dress, gear up, and physically
prepare for snow sports.
- Lesson plans for alpine skiing
and snowboarding to be used in conjunction
with interactive tools.
- Extensive lesson plans for snowshoeing
and cross country skiing (XC skiing).
- Informative flyers that can be
sent home to parents.
- Videos of children talking about
snow sports that encourage excitement
about snow sports.
- Posters to promote skiing or snowboarding
field trips.
Teachers can use all or part of these
resources depending upon the teaching
situation. All materials are based on
standards set by the Professional Ski
Instructors Association (PSIA) and the
National Association for Sport and Physical
Education (NASPE). In schools where
winter sports are already in place as
part of the physical education curriculum
or as an extended physical activity
program in conjunction with local resorts
that effectively run school-based learning
programs, these resources may help bridge
school curriculum to community resort
snow sport education.
Each snow sport unit is organized
into a series of 4-5 day developmentally
appropriate 30-60 minute lesson plans
organized for grades K-5, with snowshoeing
plans clustered for grades K-3 and grades
4-5. Each lesson includes the following
documentation:
 |
NASPE
National Content Standards for Physical
Education |
 |
Unit
goals which are aligned with specific
NASPE standards |
 |
Equipment
needs, parts identification, and
how to dress |
 |
A
lesson introduction |
 |
Cognitive
content for learners to acquire
from the lesson |
 |
Safety,
warm-up, and core activities |
 |
Sequentially
organized scope and sequence of
skills |
 |
An
interactive exercise tool |
 |
Assessment
examples applicable to each lesson |
 |
References, terminology, and a
list of resources |
Within each lesson students can be
informed about various health-related
physical fitness principles, muscles
involved, and a rationale for the activity
choice. Teachers have information on
how to guide students to set goals for
technique, timing, distance, and a grade
for learning and participating in and
out of school. In addition, a folder
called Extras contains two
Quicktime moves on safety and gear,
as well as a series of animated interactive
quizzes for each snow sport taught in
the curriculum.
What is important for physical education
teachers to realize is if one is in
a situation where he/she has a desire
to either introduce a snow sport into
the elementary physical education curriculum
or enhance one that is already in place,
the Winter
Feels Good program, which directly
documents the NASPE standard, is a free
quality resource that can be used as
a good starting point.
Another developmentally appropriate
resource for teachers interested in
initiating or expanding their winter
snow activity experiences, originating
in the state of Maine is WinterKids,
a nonprofit organization committed to
helping children develop lifelong habits
of health, education, and physical fitness
through outdoor winter activity. To
help accomplish this goal WinterKids
offers 7 programs, some of which include:
 |
WinterKids
Welcome to Winter: Targets
schools and communities with large
numbers of immigrant and refugee
populations to help them embrace
winter and develop healthy living
habits. |
 |
WinterKids
Snow School: Takes the
classroom to the mountain to provide
opportunities for students to learn
an academic lesson while having
fun and enjoying a healthy lifestyle.
|
 |
WinterKids Outdoor Learning
Curriculum: Engages children
with active and scholastically challenging
outdoor winter lessons. |
While aligned with the Maine Learning
Results and National Education Standards,
this curriculum can also be aligned
with other state academic learning standards.
This curriculum offers over 130 pages
of lesson plans, assessments, games,
safety information, and more. Interdisciplinary
lessons vary in subjects for students
in grades K-12, including an adapted
component for students with special
needs. While specific to the state of
Maine, interested elementary physical
education teachers may explore the WinterKids
resources at www.winterkids.org,
then select what may be applicable to
their program and adjust it accordingly.
Coupled with knowing your school district's
policy for going outdoors during the
winter months, designing a developmentally
appropriate quality learning experience
involving a snow sport may expand a
child's horizons to all of the possible
opportunities to be physically active
outdoors, year round.
An emerging trend to supplement, not
replace, physical education is the notion
of schools examining how they may extend
physical activity opportunities to connect
to outside resources. As previously
mentioned, many school districts across
the United States partner with local
recreational organizations and resorts
to establish school-base learning programs.
Many states have programs that involve
participating ski resorts offering ski
and snowboard school programs for middle
elementary grade levels and up (e.g.
grades 3 -12) or targeted to a specific
elementary grade level (e.g. grade 4).
These programs offer field trips, after
school programs, learn to (ski) programs
for one or more days, depending upon
the program. Children having the opportunity
to participate in such programs may
become more proficient at a snow sport.
Findings from a study, entitled Growing
the Snow Sports Industry, indicated
that the more proficient children and
adults become at snow sports, the more
frequently they participate (SIG, 2000).
As a result, children can have a better
disposition about the importance of
regular physical activity in remaining
healthy and happy, while having fun.
Resorts that offer school-based winter
programs (including ice skating) quite
often promote group participation. Knowing
that an important feature of educating
the "whole child" includes
their ability to learn to relate to
others in a socially appropriate manner,
as well as learn the rules for responsibility
and respect. Grouping for snow sport
experiences can provide opportunities
for social development, involving peers
and family members alike. As well, with
any winter sport activity, safety in
numbers is important. In addition to
safety in numbers, personal safety begins
with dressing appropriately for cold
temperatures to remain warm and dry
while outdoors, with or without snow.
Dressing for Winter Activity.
Education on appropriate dress for cold
weather is important for a school-based
or community-based program where children
will be outdoors for physical activity.
When planning for winter activity events,
teachers can prepare a letter to go
home to the parent/guardian accompanied
with a handout identifying and explaining
what is known as the 1-2-3-
Layer System.
- The first
layer is worn next to the skin, typically
long underwear of a polyester or other
synthetic fabric that "wicks"
away moisture from perspiration from
the skin.
- The second
layer is the insulating layer, including
turtlenecks, polar fleece or wool
sweaters or vests. These trap body
heat in generated by physical activity.
- The third layer is known as the
shell. This layer consists of an outer
jacket and pants that should block
the wind and repel snow and sleet
and optimally would be breathable
and waterproof. Fabric of this nature
keeps outside moisture out and allows
moisture from the inside, your sweat,
to escape. This is wicked away from
the skin and released, while permitting
cooler air to flow through in order
to maintain an even body temperature.
As equally important are a hat, gloves
or mittens, wool socks, sunglasses and
a sunscreen with a minimum of SPF 30.
If skiing or snowboarding, a helmet
of proper fit is important. Wearing
more than one pair of socks may reduce
circulation to the feet causing them
to feel colder. Cotton clothing, including
jeans, should be avoided for winter
activity wear because when damp you
will end up feeling cold and wet.
A growing body of research reports
that by the time children reach the
third grade they have already made a
decision and formed an opinion about
their desire to engage in regular physical
activity. Children, as young as kindergarten,
can learn and experience the fundamentals
of various winter sports, such as alpine
skiing, when provided developmentally
appropriate instruction. In a school
setting, the management and organization
of having a kindergarten class prepare
to go outside on a winter's day is not
likely; however, physical education
teachers can plant the seed of thought
about being active outdoors in the winter
by talking about it in class with the
children and providing parents useful
information about community resources.
With a goal of physical education to
provide developmentally appropriate
movement experiences that will excite
children to become and remain active
and healthy for a lifetime, the catalyst
may be for school-based programs to
link with community resources in order
to increase opportunities for physical
activity beyond the school day. In turn,
extending physical activity opportunities
for children and their family's results
in active parents modeling to their
children a practice of healthful living,
including snow sports and winter leisure
play.
We as a society can move beyond a
dormant existence during the winter
months. Becoming informed about the
outdoor winter season essentials, starting
with appropriate dress, proper nutrition,
and safe activities for learning and
play, may be a gateway to combating
the growing obesity epidemic and its
associated threats to health.
Get healthy, get fit, and get outdoors!
references:
Wnek, B. (2006). Celebration games:
Physical activities for every month,
Champaign, IL, Human Kinetics
Wnek, B. (1992). Holiday games and activities,
Champaign, IL, Human Kinetics
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