Copyright © National Academy of Sciences. All rights reserved.
Educating the Student Body: Taking Physical Activity and Physical Education to School
Approaches to Physical Education in Schools
247
FIGURE 5-3
Example of a schedule demonstrating time for 150 minutes per week of physi-
cal education.
NOTES: Sample is taken from a teacher schedule in a combination special education and
disabilities (SPED)/Spanish-language elementary class. PE = physical education; S.S. = social
studies.
SOURCE: Large Urban Public School District, Miami-Dade County Public Schools.
Figure 5-3.eps
Monday
Tuesda y
Wednesday
Thursday
Frida y
8:35-8:50
8:50-9:05
9:05-9:20
Reading/Language Arts
9:20-9:35
9:35-9:50
9:50-10:05
10:05-10:20
S.S./Writing
S.S./Writing
S.S./Writing
S.S./Writing
S.S./Writing
10:20-10:35
30 Min. (in Spanish)
30 Min. (in Spanish)
30 Min. (in Spanish)
30 Min. (in Spanish)
30 Min. (in Spanish)
10:35-10:50
SPANISH
ART
SPANISH
MUSIC
RECESS
10:50-11:05
11:05-11:20
11:20-11:35
11:35-11:50
Lunch
11:50-12:05
.
n
i
M
0
3
m
p
5
0
:
2
1
-
5
3
:
1
1
12:05-12:20
PE
PE
PE
PE
PE
12:20-12:35
30 Min.
30 Min.
30 Min.
30 Min.
30 Min.
12:35-12:50
12:50-1:05
MATHEMATICS
1:05-1:20
1:20-1:35
1:35-1:50
1:50-2:05
90 Min.
2:05-2:20
)
h
s
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a
p
S
(
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W
)
h
s
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(
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2:20-2:35
.
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.
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.
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2:35-2:50
e
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2:50-3:05
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.
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3
ANY Public Schools
Generic - Dual Language
Schedule
2012-2013
Teacher Schedule
Teacher: Jan Doe
(Mixed / SPED)
SCIENCE
LANGUAGE ARTS
LANGUAGE ARTS
LANGUAGE ARTS
LANGUAGE ARTS
EARLY DISMISSAL
RECESS
RECESS
E
C
N
E
I
C
S
E
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S
LANGUAGE ARTS
ing the correlation between physical education and academic achievement
(see Chapter 4). The report
Active Education: Physical Education, Physical
Activity and Academic Performance by Active Living Research (Trost,
2009) cites evidence that “children who are physically active and fit tend to
perform better in the classroom and that daily physical education does not
adversely affect academic performance. Schools can provide outstanding
learning environments while improving children’s health through physical
education.” The findings reported include the following (p. 6):
•
“In some cases, more time in physical education leads to improved
grades and standardized test scores.”
•
“Physically active and fit children tend
to have better academic
achievement.”
Copyright © National Academy of Sciences. All rights reserved.
Educating the Student Body: Taking Physical Activity and Physical Education to School
248
Educating the Student Body
•
“Evidence links higher levels of physical fitness with better school
attendance and fewer disciplinary problems.”
•
“There are several possible mechanisms by which physical education
and regular physical activity may improve academic achievement,
including enhanced concentration skills and classroom behavior.”
•
“Additional research is needed to determine the impact of physical
activity on academic performance among those children who are at
highest risk for obesity in the United States, including black, Latino,
American Indian and Alaska Native,
and Asian-American and
Pacific Islander children, as well as children living in lower-income
communities.”
SUMMARY
Physical education is a formal content area of study in schools, it is
standards based, and it encompasses assessment according to standards and
benchmarks. Select curriculum-based physical education programs have
been described in this chapter to show the potential of high-quality physical
education in developing children into active adults. Such models provide
the only opportunity for
all school-age children to access health-enhancing
physical activities. Curriculum models for
physical education programs
include movement education, which emphasizes the importance of funda-
mental motor skills competence as a prerequisite for engagement in physi-
cal activity throughout the life span; sport education, which emphasizes
helping students become skillful players in lifetime sports of their choosing;
and fitness education, which imparts physical fitness concepts to students,
including the benefits and scientific principles of exercise,
with the goal of
developing and maintaining individual fitness and positive lifestyle change.
The emergence of a technology-focused fitness education curriculum and
the new Presidential Youth Fitness Program offer further motivational
opportunities for students to engage in lifelong physical activities.
Because quality physical education programs are standards based and
assessed, they are characterized by (1) instruction by certified physical edu-
cation teachers, (2) a minimum of 150 minutes per week for elementary
schools and 225 minutes per week for middle and high schools, and (3)
tangible standards for student achievement and for high school graduation.
Quality professional development programs are an essential component for
both novice and veteran teachers to ensure the continued delivery of quality
physical education.
An analysis of datasets from NASPE, NASBE, and Bridging the Gap
reveals that the implementation of supportive
physical education policies
varies from state to state and from school to school. Since passage of the
No Child Left Behind Act in 2001, several studies and reports have identi-
Copyright © National Academy of Sciences. All rights reserved.
Educating the Student Body: Taking Physical Activity and Physical Education to School
Approaches to Physical Education in Schools
249
fied a decline in physical education resulting from the shifting of time to
academic subjects. Because physical education is not a high-stakes tested
content area, the implementation of supportive policies often is hindered
by other education priorities. Although the above analysis indicates that
30 states (74.5 percent) mandate physical education, most policies do not
require specific
amounts of instructional time, and more than half allow
for waivers or exemptions. In addition, an unintended consequence of the
No Child Left Behind Act has been disparities in access to physical educa-
tion and physical activity opportunities during the school day for Hispanic
students and those of lower socioeconomic status. In high school, relying
on students to elect physical education after meeting the minimum required
credit hours (one credit in all states but one) appears to be unfruitful.
Strengthening of school physical education has received support from
the public, health agencies, and parents. Parents
recently surveyed expressed
favorable views of physical education. Specifically:
•
A majority of parents (54-84 percent) believe that physical education
is at least as important as other academic subjects (CDC, 2010).
•
Ninety-one percent believe that there should be more physical edu-
cation in schools (Harvard School of Public Health, 2003).
•
Seventy-six percent think that more school physical education could
help control or prevent childhood obesity (NASPE, 2009a).
•
Ninety-five percent believe that regular daily physical activity helps
children do better academically and should be a part of the school
curriculum for all students in grades K-12 (NASPE, 2003).
Additionally, many public and private organizations have proposed
initiatives aimed at developing a comprehensive school-based strategy
centered on curriculum physical education. As the largest institution where
children spend more than half of their waking hours on school days,
schools can play a pivotal role in increasing students’
physical activity levels
by providing access for all to quality physical education, along with physi-
cal activities throughout the school environment, the subject of Chapter 7.
REFERENCES
AAHPERD (American Alliance for Health, Physical Education, Recreation and Dance).
2011.
2011 Comprehensive School Physical Activity Program (CSPAP) survey report.
Reston, VA: AAHPERD.
AAHPERD. 2012.
Let’s move in school. www.aahperd.org/letsmoveinschool (accessed
April 15, 2012).
Abels, K. W., and J. M. Bridges. 2010.
Teaching movement education: Foundations for
active lifestyles. Champaign, IL: Human Kinetics Publishers.
Copyright © National Academy of Sciences. All rights reserved.
Educating the Student Body: Taking Physical Activity and Physical Education to School
250
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