Author: Sue Tarr

Simple Recipes for Making (and using) PE Equipment for a Future of Distance Learning

Physical educators and adapted physical educators have stepped up these past few months to make sure their students had opportunities to continue, as best they could, with the physical education curriculum during the COVID-19 pandemic. For a majority of teachers, lessons were designed with the premise that students would not have much, if any, of the traditional equipment often used in physical education or adapted physical education settings.

(U.S. Air Force photo/Capt. Brittany Martin)
(U.S. Air Force photo/Capt. Brittany Martin)

The purpose of this article is three-fold:

  1. To encourage and support physical educators and adapted physical educators to use our recipes to make some homemade equipment with the intent to get this equipment in the hands of their students for their fall classes. We do realize that to complete some of our equipment recipes; there will be costs involved. Perhaps some of the physical education or adapted physical education equipment budget for 2020-2021 could be used to purchase the materials to make the equipment; or possibly, funds for materials could be obtained through Donor’s Choose or other similar programs that fund school projects.
  2. To encourage teachers to pass these recipes along to families or other community members who want to support the physical education and adapted physical education programs, by either making the equipment or donating the materials so the teachers could make the equipment in preparation for classes.
  3. To provide several activities that the physical educators and adapted physical educators could have the students do with their distance learning equipment. We would also encourage the teachers to keep abreast of the numerous resources that have been posted on social media (Twitter, Facebook, Instagram, etc.) that might also provide equipment ideas that would be simple, easy, and cost-effective to make this summer so that their students might be able to work toward mastery of additional physical education content in their fall classes.

In sum, the goal is to provide equipment recipes and corresponding activities to support physical educators and adapted physical educators to design distance learning activities for their students that will still meet the physical education national/state grade-level outcomes. Thus, providing our students with meaningful, yet fun opportunities to master grade-level outcomes –  even in the chaos of a pandemic.

Equipment Recipes

Start Your School Year with a Little SEL in Adapted PE

The intentional practice of teaching social emotional learning (SEL) in physical education is not a new concept. In the past five years, numerous articles have been published in the Journal of Physical Education, Recreation, and Dance (JOPERD) and Strategies on the topics of SEL, cooperative learning, and the affective domain. Each article provides basic information about the topics and offers strategies and activities physical educators could do with their students to ultimately focus on a positive school climate.

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Additionally, SHAPE America facilitated a two-day conference (Exploring the mind-body connection: Social and emotional learning in HPE) in July 2019. This conference was packed with 75 sessions addressing a variety of SEL topics, providing general physical educators (GPE), adapted physical educators (APE), and health educators (HE) with content and hands-on opportunities to engage with colleagues on a variety of SEL concepts (Table 1).  One of the goals of the conference was to help attendees intentionally include SEL concepts in classes for the upcoming school year.

Table 1: SHAPE America Two-Day Conference on Social and Emotional Learning in HPE