Posts Tagged ‘exercise’

Physical Education Power to the Grid

Tuesday, June 22nd, 2010

An innovative school is having their students exercise on spinning bikes that add electricity to the power grid.

Not only can the students convert their energy into electricity, Nemec said, but this effort also reinforces first lady Michelle Obama’s Let’s Move campaign to combat obesity.

Read the article here.

The students study energy sources, like wind power and clean versus dirty power, and the muscles used to exercise. They use math to graph their miles and the watts they’re generating.

The above quote from the article is very interesting.  If the students are using math to graph their miles and watts, it seems that this is also an excellent opportunity to teach the principle of progressive overload.  Since physical education is often taught outdoors, it is difficult to measure exercise intensity.  Since these bikes measure the students’ power output, teaching students how to provide a stimulus through progressive overload is key.  The mathematics, while stressed in this article, is really only the vehicle to allow students to access this important concept.

Exercise and Feeling Gloomy

Sunday, January 3rd, 2010

By John Kruse

Here’s an article a friend recommended on exercise and feeling gloomy.  Seems like good reading for the middle of winter.

Read this book review by Jen Mettler for more on exercise and the brain.

Three uses of Pedometers in Physical Education–An Introduction

Sunday, July 12th, 2009

By Matthew Bassett

Part 1 of a 4 part series on pedometers in physical education.

Pedometers have become an easy tool to use in physical education.  A simple pedometer will track the number of steps a person takes.  A more advanced pedometer can also measure activity time (time the pedometer is moving), distance traveled and even calories burned.  Before using a pedometer, a teacher must decide the purpose for its use in class in class.

First, pedometers can be used to track data.  A student who wears a pedometer can record the number of steps, activity time, calories burned or distance traveled.  A teacher can use stations and ask the students to use the pedometers to track a whole class period, sections of a class period or to compare different tasks over time.

Second, pedometers can be used as a simple technology integration. Technology integration can help motivate students.  This motivation can increase movement quality or quantity since students can see physical data about their exercise.

Third, pedometers can now be used to track moderate to vigorous physical activity (MVPA).  Some of the newest pedometers actually have an MVPA function but these are more costly models.  Using a simple guide of 100 steps per minute can help move a student into moderate physical activity. We can now start using this guide as a way to track MVPA with out students without having to use expensive heart rate monitors or having to trust that students are taking their pulses correctly.

No matter which reason, or reasons, for using pedometers, a teacher interested in using pedometers must first experiment with how to use them.

Next week: Part 2–Eight Helpful Hints for Using Pedometers

Four Benefits to Splitting Activities while Increasing MVPA

Friday, May 15th, 2009

By Matthew Basset

As physical education teachers, it is often our goal to maximize movement time for students. Ideally, we would like to have one piece of equipment for every student. Sometimes, this is difficult and thinking outside the box can help with this dilemma. Using additional equipment can help maximize students’ movement times.

Recently, I completed a scooter board lesson with my elementary students. I had one scooter board for every two students. The students who were not on the scooter boards were standing around and started to become off task. I pulled out some jump ropes during the class to help with my classroom management. While half of the students were off on scooter boards, their partners were jumping rope. This cut down on students being off task and they were not bored waiting their turns.

There are four benefits for splitting activities with your classes.

1. Maximize participation. The split allows you to deal with limited equipment or limited space. As group A is working, group B is working in a different area with different equipment. Since most people don’t have enough equipment for everyone to be working at the same time we have to modify our activities. Having students wait their turn can be unproductive. Adding a secondary task helps them become more active during class time.

2. Keep idle hands busy. I have found that students who are required to be patient soon find opportunities to keep themselves occupied in less than desirable ways. Giving a secondary task allows those students to focus their attention on the activity instead of doing something that makes me want to take early retirement. Those hands are no longer idle and they stay on task more often.

3. Focus on Moderate to Vigorous Physical Activity (MVPA). This is an easy way to incorporate another standard into your lesson. For me, having the kids jump rope while they were not on the scooter board helped them keep their heart rates up. The students didn’t have time to relax and cool down. I even had students comment on the fact that sweating was such a bad thing. This “teachable moment” allowed me to explain the sweating mechanism. Spending lesson time on MVPA activities is sometimes difficult. By adding a secondary activity, like jump rope, it allows me to help focus my students on their heart rates and keeping their heart rates up during class.

4. Review. Secondary activities can also be used to review an activity that was previously taught. For me, jump rope was an activity that I’ve already taught. I was able to review my expectations for the students and they already understood what they needed to accomplish. I was able to give minimal instructions before allowing the students to start the activities.

With a little work and extra preparation you can easily add more movement time into your classes. Use your equipment and space to maximize your student movement. Try to find ways to add in extra movement to get students MVPA.

Its Elementary—Push-up Variations

Friday, March 27th, 2009

By John Kruse

Its not unusual for the conversation to turn to the topic of push-ups when a group of physical educators get together.  This is probably because teaching students to do correct push-ups seems to be a really difficult task.  I know that in middle school, I see some very interesting takes on what my students think a push-up is.  Many of them seem to lack the kinesthetic awareness needed or core strength.  Consequently, its difficult to make them understand what a good push-up feels like.

Matthew Bassett, a contributor here at FitMet, stumbled upon this push-up variation video on TeacherTube.  It left me wondering if I might have more success teaching middle school students correct push-up form if more students were exposed to this teacher’s approach in elementary school.

Spark & Physical Education

Monday, February 9th, 2009

By Jennifer Mettler

Spark: The Revolutionary New Science of Exercise and the Brain by John J. Ratey, MD will make you rethink your importance as a physical education teacher. This book contains the justification for why all students need a quality physical education program that gives them the knowledge and skills to be active through childhood and into adulthood. Dr. Ratey explains how through exercise people can improve learning, decrease stress, anxiety, and depression, help treat attention deficit and addiction, and combat hormonal changes and aging. Spark goes beyond the simple feel good explanations and makes the reader delve into the science, brain chemistry, research, and compelling case studies behind the powerful effects of exercise and it’s relationship with the brain. Dr. Ratey takes complex psychology disorders and describes them in a reader friendly manner that gives insight into why students with certain disorders behave the way they do. Once you read this book, you will never view your job as an educator the same.

Following is a short recap of two topics Dr Ratey describes in detail in Spark.

Learning: The brain is made up of one hundred billion neurons. An electrical signal shoots down an axon to the synapse where a neurotransmitter transfers the message across the gap to the receiving dendrite. Brain-derived neurotrophic factor (BDNF) build and maintain this circuitry. BDNF is considered like “Miracle-Gro” because if it is sprinkled onto neurons in a petri dish, the neurons automatically sprout new branches, producing the same growth required for learning. Studies have shown that BDNF increases with exercise, especially in the hippocampus, which is responsible for working memory. In 1997, German researchers found that humans learn vocabulary words 20% faster following exercise than they did before, which correlated directly with the levels of BDNF. Exercise also affects neurotransmitters such as norepinephrine, serotonin, and dopamine that have an impact on learning by improving alertness, attention, and motivation. Glutamate, another neurotransmitter influenced by exercise, prepares nerve cells to bind to one another, which is the basis for logging in new information.

Attention Deficit (ADHD): ADHD is caused by a malfunction of the brain’s attention system that connects areas that control arousal, motivation, reward, executive function, and movement. The reward center, controlled by dopamine neurons, is responsible for giving pleasure signals to the prefrontal cortex of the brain, which gives one the motivation to focus. Unless the reward center is sufficiently activated, it will not tell the prefrontal cortex to pay attention to something. With a malfunction of this system, it explains why a person with ADHD can spend hours sitting still playing a video game but is unable to pay attention in class. Dr. Ratey states, “I tell my patients a more helpful way to think of ADHD is an attention variability disorder; the deficit is one of consistency.” Dopamine and norepinephrine are the lead regulators of the attention system, which explains why exercise helps people with ADHD have calm and clarity for around 60 to 90 minutes after exercise.

After reading Spark you will be compelled to lace up your running shoes if you have a big test to study for, need to think creatively for planning a lesson, are worried about your job, are stressed from the demands of balancing family and work, want to keep your mind sharp and dementia at bay, are trying to kick a caffeine habit, or possibly have menopause knocking at your door. This book will change the way you think about exercise.

Dr. Ratey has a blog at www.johnratey.com. He will also be speaking at the CAHPERD conference in Santa Clara on Saturday, March 21st, at 3 pm.