There is currently a trend by school districts to
improve fitness centers and steer students away from
competitive team sports and more on helping youngsters
develop the competence that leads to confidence and
enjoyment of a lifetime of physical activity.
In a mirror-lined dance studio, teenagers sashay through
a number from the musical "Hairspray." Next door in
the weight room, teacher Shawn Scattergood demonstrates
proper form on the leg press. At Northport High School
on Long Island, physical education also includes yoga,
step aerobics and fitness walking, as well as team sports
like volleyball and basketball. There are archery targets,
soccer fields and a rock-climbing wall where students
inscribe their names to show how high they get.
For anyone who grew up when P.E. meant being picked
last for softball, it's a dizzying array of choices.
"What we try and do is give them a real broad offering
so that they can choose things they want to do," said
Robert Christenson, the director of physical education.
He said the current curriculum has been developed over
the last five years.
While the offerings at Northport, where the median
household income is $86,456, may exceed those at many
public high schools, the school is representative of
a national phys ed trend that promotes fitness and downplays
competitive sports that leave the uncoordinated feeling
left out.
"There's been a major trend by school districts to
improve their fitness centers," said Tom Caione, director
of physical education for the suburban Bedford Central
School District north of New York City. "It's really
not 'roll out the old ball,' as it was."
George Graham, a professor of kinesiology at Penn State
University and past president of the National Association
for Sport and Physical Education, said there has been
a revolution in the way physical education is taught
in America.
"Historically, there were two emphases competitive
team sports and physical fitness testing," he said.
"The emphasis today is more on helping youngsters develop
the competence that leads to confidence and enjoyment
of a lifetime of physical activity."
"We have schools teaching yoga, rock-climbing, martial
arts, fly-fishing," Graham said. "If a kid is in a program
that hasn't changed from when the parents were in school,
it's just not OK."
The changes are occurring amid growing concern that
sedentary lifestyles are fueling an epidemic of childhood
obesity, with experts estimating that 30 percent of
American schoolchildren are overweight or obese. According
to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, only
about 6 percent to 8 percent of schools provide the
daily physical education classes that advocates recommend.
In Florida, high school students need only one year
of P.E. to graduate, said Jane Greenberg, who heads
the Division of Life Skills and Special Projects for
Miami-Dade County public schools.
But more Miami-Dade students are choosing to take phys
ed since the district started providing elliptical trainers
and heart-rate monitors and adding classes like kayaking
and snorkeling, Greenberg said.
"By offering these more innovative lifetime activities
we're getting them back," she said. "On the average
the kids that are overweight are losing 8 to 10 pounds
a semester."
At Northport High, the gleaming weight machines and
well-maintained tennis courts rival an expensive health
club. There is also a sprawling "adventure" area where
students can perform team wall-climbing exercises or
reach for a trapeze from the top of an 18-foot pole.
Fourteen-year-old Stephen Jackman said he enjoys team
sports like flag football and ultimate Frisbee but was
looking forward to the weightlifting unit, because "you're
just competing against yourself."
As remarkable as the up-to-date equipment, the school
district's mission statement is striking, too: "Classes
are undertaken in an active, caring, supportive and
non-threatening atmosphere in which every student is
challenged to grow. ... Every student, regardless of
ability or ability level, is provided with a learning
environment that is modified, when necessary, to allow
for maximum participation."
At the recent dance class, led by full-time dance teacher
Kaylie Howard, pupils were at all ability levels and
one was in special education.
"There's no reason to feel bad," said Michael Carbuccia,
16. "Maybe it's just Ms. Howard. If you have trouble
with something she'll help you personally. We're all
doing our best and we're happy with it.
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Reference Source 102
November
28, 2005