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Shaping a Healthier Future for America’s Children
10 ways to work with schools to improve kids’ fitness.
by Natalie Digate Muth, MPH, RD
As a fitness professional, you ignite a passion for physical
activity in each person with whom you work. You empower clients to achieve
their fitness goals, and you inspire them to develop a lifelong commitment to maintaining their health and well-being. In
this sense, you are accomplishing your mission.
But there is an entire population
in dire need of your expertise, and the people in this group rarely walk
through the doors of a health club. According to a 2004 research review, 9
million American children are at increased risk of social marginalization as
well as type 2 diabetes, cardiovascular disease and myriad other morbidities
due to being overweight (Lobstein, Baur & Uauy 2004). The study also notes
that despite unrelenting publicity and substantial public health efforts to
combat childhood obesity, 0.5% of American kids are added to these sad
statistics every year. Contributing to the problem is the fact that while most
children spend at least 180 days in school each year, only 8% of elementary
schools, 6.4% of middle schools and 5.8% of high schools provide daily physical
education (Institute of Medicine 2004).
Rigorous academic standards and budget constraints limit the
amount of time schools can allocate to organized physical activity. However,
fitness professionals are well equipped to bring motivating, effective and safe
physical activities to America’s schools while working within current
limitations. Now is the time to move America’s children to a healthier future.
Here are 10 ideas to get you started.
1. Energize Physical Education Classes
Most kids hate physical education (PE)
classes. They change their clothes, wait in line while the teacher takes
attendance, try to participate, get ignored or ridiculed by the more athletic
students, and then tune out. For many kids, a 50-minute PE class does not even
begin to provide the 30 minutes of sustained daily physical activity
recommended by the Institute of Medicine (2004).
Paul Rosengard is executive director of Sports, Play & Active
Recreation for Kids (SPARK), a groundbreaking program that makes exercise fun
while engaging students in moderately vigorous physical activity. Rosengard
urges fitness professionals to improve school PE programs by volunteering,
either regularly or just occasionally. He suggests a variety of ways to provide
this critical service to kids and PE instructors:
• Teach your
area of expertise while the PE teacher observes and learns.
• Assist with a
class by working with a group of students who need more individual attention
than the structured PE class can provide.
• Attend SPARK
PE workshops to learn the program, and then assist teachers with
implementation.
Rosengard adds, “We want to see PE look a lot more like a health
club and a lot less like it does now. At the IDEA conference, for example [we
saw that] everyone is teaching lifetime fitness pursuits (e.g., yoga, Pilates,
step, [exercise with] the Bosu®
Balance Trainer, etc.), and this is what we should be doing much more of in
schools, especially at the middle-school and high-school levels. I believe
we’re very much missing the boat on having the fitness professional come into
schools and instruct these classes . . . so the teachers can also learn how to
teach them. . . . Health clubs will be looking to these kids to be their future
members.”
2. Offer Guest Presentations
Federal legislation, such as the No Child
Left Behind Act, leaves teachers strapped for time and unable to devote
significant portions of the day to nonacademic activities. Nonetheless, fitness
professionals can work with teachers to integrate physical activity and
nutrition information into existing curricula. For example, at an elementary
school in Redmond, Oregon, Judy Shasek, a fitness professional and former
teacher, has partnered with RedOctane, a manufacturer of dance mats, to pilot
the Dance Develops Readers program. Shasek trains 40 third and fourth graders
to teach their peers a fun and moderately vigorous routine on the dance mats.
At intervals throughout the school day, these “coaches” lead their peers
(approximately 120 of them!) in exercise directly outside the classroom, in
sight of the teacher. Shasek reports that the kids’ confidence and self-esteem have increased and their concentration and reading ability have
improved.
Another option would be to implement the VERB™ Play Without Borders kit from the
Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) (see “Resources”). In this
model, middle-school children play games from around the world—complementing
lessons on world cultures. Alternatively, when a teacher is presenting a unit
on plant biology, you could provide an introduction to the Food Guide Pyramid
and offer a smorgasbord of nutrient-dense fruits and vegetables for the kids to
sample.
3. Invigorate Before- and After-School Programs
Every morning before the sun rises, 25
Connecticut youngsters wake up eager to spend an hour playing whatever games
they want at Parker Memorial Elementary School. Jaci VanHeest, an associate
professor of kinesiology at the University of Connecticut (UConn) Neag School
of Education, has developed Paw PALS (named for UConn’s husky mascot and for
Physical Activity as a Lifetime Skill, the program’s main objective), a
before-school physical activity program for third and fourth graders. After a
warm-up and a brief educational session on topics such as heart rate monitoring
and using a pedometer, the kids—mostly overweight and longtime PE haters—use
the next 45 minutes just to play. And they love it! According to VanHeest,
“Unless the kids are so sick they can barely walk, they’re there.”
In Fairfax, Virginia, middle-school students look forward to the
end of the school day when they can get fit using the latest equipment,
including agility ladders, mini hurdles, medicine balls, The Body Bar™ and Bosu balls. Denise Moser, a health
and PE teacher at Lanier Middle School and a certified personal trainer, has
developed Bootcamp, a weekly after-school program, to teach kids functional
fitness. The voluntary, not-for-credit class has attracted more than 50
kids—including some who are overweight, sedentary or disabled as well as those
who are naturally athletic. “The best part of the class,” Moser says, “is
watching the kids improve and have fun.” Moser points out that exercises can be
easily modified to address the needs of children with disabilities.
The success of both VanHeest’s Paw PALS and Moser’s Bootcamp is
attributed to the fun factor. You are in an ideal position to provide an
exciting program that helps kids enjoy being healthy, whether through a unique
program or a tag-on to an existing program, such as the CDC’s
KidsWalk-to-School initiative (see “Resources”).
4. Advise a Student Group
Student council, National Honor Society
and math club aren’t the only extracurricular activities worthy of
middle-school and high-school students’ time. A lot of kids want to learn more
about nutrition and exercise and to share that information with their fellow
students. Peer influence, a potent motivator in the preteen and teen years, is
much more effective than advice from an adult. So start a students’ nutrition
and physical activity group by working with a school nurse or an interested
teacher.
Students could develop theme weeks, incorporating programs like 5
A Day (www.5aday.com) or 10,000 Steps (www.shapeup.org/10000steps.html); hang posters and banners throughout the school to disseminate
nutrition and fitness information; sell healthy foods at athletic events;
develop a newsletter featuring articles on good nutrition, physical activity
and healthy recipes; or organize games. Older students can work with and mentor
elementary-school students. This type of program encourages adolescents to develop
creative ways to reach their friends and classmates while you help turn their
ideas into reality.
5. Train Teachers and School Staff
While you may be able to spend a few
hours a week working with students as a volunteer, teachers have months to encourage
kids to value healthy behaviors. Teachers can not only model healthier
behaviors but also include nutrition and physical activities in their daily
lessons. But first you need to sell the teachers on the idea that the results
are worth the time and effort. Helping school staff develop healthier lifestyle
behaviors can shape a better future for their students. What’s more, by
developing collaborative relationships with teachers, you generate support and
gain permission to work directly with students.
Secure teacher and administrator “buy-in” by leading a weekly
fitness class for the school staff, presenting at school meetings, organizing
an informational campaign (using flyers or e-mails) or asking teachers what you
can do to advance healthy physical activity in their school.
6. Write a Column
The Institute of Medicine (2004)
encourages parents to promote healthful eating behaviors and regular physical
activity in their children. But how do parents recognize and teach healthy
nutrition choices or learn how to make exercise fun? You can inform them in
several ways:
• Publish a
parents’ column in the school newsletter and include information on nutrition
and fitness fundamentals.
• With the
school principal, coauthor a letter that instructs parents on things their kids
can do to stay healthy over summer vacation.
• Offer to
contribute information to a parent listserver.
• Volunteer to
write an article for the school webpage.
The key is to build a partnership with a local school so you can
determine the most effective strategies for reaching students, staff and
parents.
7. Coach a Team
The influence
of a youth athletics coach extends far beyond honing a skill, promoting fitness
and making exercise fun. A coach can shape a child’s attitudes, values and
self-esteem. A coach can ignite passion. You don’t have to be an exceptional
athlete. You don’t even have to play a sport. Girls on the Run®, a national program that
uses running to teach 9- to 11-year-old girls confidence and healthy behaviors,
consists of a 12-week standardized curriculum that can be implemented in
communities across the country (see “Resources” on the next page). Coaches are
selected based on their passion and commitment to the kids, not on how fast the
candidates run a mile.
Coaches with a background in fitness and the personal commitment
to make a difference are in high demand, so get involved—through a school, a
local youth sports league or a national program.
8. Volunteer on a School Health Advisory Committee
Health professionals, parents, teachers
and community members in districts across the country provide a voice for
health promo-tion in America’s schools as members of local school health advisory committees. These committees advise school administrators and school
boards on various health-related topics, including overall health, physical
activity, nutrition, tobacco-use prevention and sex education. Committee
members make recommendations regarding the number of hours in the school day
that should be devoted to health and PE and appropriate changes to improve the
nutritional quality of foods offered on campus. As an active committee member,
you would be well positioned to make change happen.
Although each state is different, committee members are typically
appointed by the school board or district superintendent. The best way to learn
about available positions, member requirements and time commitment is to
contact school principals or district superintendents. Also ask what other
opportunities exist for you to get involved and build students’ healthy minds
and bodies.
9. Mobilize Your Community
Everyone knows that childhood obesity is
a problem. But what are communities doing about it? Become the voice of change.
Here’s how:
• Attend school
board and Parent-Teacher Association meetings to advocate for more time and
resources for PE and healthier food choices in district schools. Provide
stakeholders (parents, teachers, health departments, school businesses, etc.)
with the latest research and data to support your position.
• Join
associations like Action for Healthy Kids™,
a national initiative to improve nutrition and PE in schools. This initiative
is supported by organizations such as the American Academy of Pediatrics, the
National School Boards Association, the U.S. Department of Health and Human
Services and the American Federation of Teachers.
• Sign up for
the National Coalition for Promoting Physical Activity’s listserver
(www.ncppa.org) to stay abreast of the latest state and federal policy
initiatives. Write your state and federal legislators to support bills that
improve school health education.
• Work with the
owner of your facility, if applicable, to develop a kids’ fitness initiative in
your community.
• Spread the
word about kids’ fitness—in your classes, at the grocery store, on the bus and
when chatting with friends.
10. Innovate
Create a way to
use your strengths to make being fit and healthy fun, rewarding and “cool.”
Taking advantage of its unique resources, the Ringling Bros. and Barnum &
Bailey®
Circus brings fun and fitness to Chicago’s Cicero Roosevelt Elementary School
with CircusFit, a program that uses performers, peacock feathers, balls, hoops
and scarves. Lori Lowell, owner of two Gold’s Gyms in the Washington, DC, area,
does her part by working with school guidance counselors to offer free 6-month
gym memberships to high-school seniors. The students attend two fitness classes
per week, write about their experiences and complete an interview at the end of
the program. The senior with the best results (determined by consistency,
willingness and his or her personal story) receives a $2,000 scholarship for
college.
If we all innovate and do our part, we will shape the path for
America’s children to move one step closer to a healthier future.
Natalie Digate Muth, MPH, RD, CSCS, is a personal trainer and a
group fitness instructor, an ACE master trainer, head coach for a Girls on the
Run team in the Raleigh-Durham-Chapel Hill area, and a medical student at the
University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill. She can be reached at
Natalie_Muth@med.unc.edu.
References
Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC). 2000.
Executive summary: Formative research for a campaign to promote healthy weight
using relevant physical activity and nutrition messages for youth.
www.cdc.gov/nccdphp/dnpa/nutrition.htm; retrieved December 30, 2004.
Datar, A., & Sturm, R. 2004. Physical education in
elementary school and body mass index: Evidence from the early childhood longitudinal study. American Journal of Public Health, 94 (9), 1501–6.
Institute of Medicine. 2004. Schools can play a role in
preventing childhood obesity; and Communities can play a role in preventing
childhood obesity. Fact sheets drawn from Preventing
Childhood Obesity: Health in the Balance. www.iom.edu; retrieved December 1, 2004.
Lobstein, T., Baur, L., & Uauy, R. 2004. Obesity in children and young
people: A crisis in public health. Obesity Reviews, 5 (1, Suppl.), 4–85.
Ringling Bros. and Barnum & Bailey. 2004. Kids get fit with CircusFit.
PR Newswire, November 8.
© 2005 by IDEA Health & Fitness Inc. All rights
reserved. Reproduction without permission is strictly prohibited.
Steps to Starting a Kids’ Fitness Program
Funding Kids’ Fitness Programs
Resources
Copyright © 2007 IDEA Health & Fitness Association


