Category: Middle & High School

This category focuses on how to effectively teach middle school, junior high school, and high schoolers. Learn more about how best to connect with and instruct students who are transitioning from childhood to adulthood, and how to motivate them to be physically active and make healthy lifestyle choices.

A Dream for Physical Education

I write this preparing to fly to Singapore to attend the country’s biennial conference for physical education teachers. Smaller than most US states, Singapore’s education system is government coordinated and dedicated to sustaining the future needs of one of today’s most successful Asian nations. Supporting this mission, the country’s physical education leaders are focusing on creating effective school PE programs that will reverse the sedentary living trends threatening the nation’s health. It’s no easy task. Similar to the US, obesity is trending upwards in Singapore. And Singaporeans, like most nations worldwide, are seeking solutions.

 

For two reasons, as a physical educator I’m not inclined to take much responsibility for worsening obesity. Obesity’s tripling over the past 30 years has paralleled most of my professional career – a spectacularly unimpressive record that I’d prefer to ignore. But more importantly, physical educators simply don’t have much control over most of obesity’s causes. Reports of worsening obesity do however alarm me, because it is symptomatic of declining physical activity and physical activity is something that I do believe physical educators should be trying to promote.

Summer: The Ultimate Planning Period

As children excitingly await the end of the school year and the beginning of summer, sometimes they forget that teachers look forward to a break, too! In addition to relaxation and a chance to reconnect with family and friend, summer can be the ultimate planning period for professional development as it allows brainstorming typically not possible during the workday. Some of that brainstorming, we believe, should include designing creative program extensions which serve as a way to showcase our programs to parents and colleagues.

 

Both authors also believe, unfortunately, that physical education teachers traditionally do a poor job of this when compared to our specialist brethren, art and music teachers. Annual elementary school field days held in the spring are one of the few times that physical educators extend their program into the entire school community. Art and music teachers, on the other hand, tend to extend their programs throughout the school year.

Physical Education: Nothing Lasts Forever

Last month, I suggested that the newly created Let’s Move, Active Schools initiative offered physical educators a special, necessary, but time-limited chance to transform K-12 physical education. I’m optimistic that some teachers will respond to this challenge, but concerned that for far too many business will continue as usual. It worries me when colleagues assume that physical education’s future in public education is somehow guaranteed. It isn’t. Ask any of the dozens of teachers around the country whose programs and positions have been cut in the past few years.

Like most of us, those teachers assumed their jobs were secure until suddenly, and often with little warning, they found themselves victims of the current obsession to raise academic scores, or victims of budget cuts resulting from the economic recession. Too late and without much support they protested their relevance. Instead, they discovered that many education decision-makers neither appreciated nor valued physical education’s contribution to children’s education. Like switchboard operators, typists, milkmen, travel agents, elevator operators, and others in vanishing professions, these unfortunate physical educators learned that nothing lasts forever.

Physical educators are forever destined to be the victims of the decision-making whims of others unless we show more initiative in shaping our professional future. It was this desire that motivated the creators of NASPE’s PE2020 initiative that began in 2011 with a national forum at the San Diego national AAHPERD Convention. The resulting recommendations proposed a framework for futuristic thinking. Since then, some of the suggestions have contributed to a rethinking about where physical education should be headed.

Getting Ready for the New School Year

Between the BIG health issue of the times – obesity – and the tragic results of young people taking the lives of others, our mission in physical education gets more important every day. Why us, you ask?

Physical education is the truest social environment – other than lunch – in school. It is the one place where a course of action can improve both physical and emotional health. So, while you enjoy the freedom that summer brings, while you are doing something uplifting and renewing, please take the time to understand the impact you have on both these issues. Follow with me as I repeat some of the things I have written about in other articles that can be the start of a strategy to confront both of these difficult issues in a positive way.

Questions worth asking at the end of every school year: