1 / 21

Pedometers in the School Setting

Pedometers in the School Setting. Chuck Morgan Arizona State University. Why Physical Activity?. Surgeon General’s Report, Health People 2010 Health Benefits from minimal PA Definitions of physical activity and fitness

octavia
Download Presentation

Pedometers in the School Setting

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Pedometers in the School Setting Chuck Morgan Arizona State University chuck.morgan@asu.edu

  2. Why Physical Activity? • Surgeon General’s Report, Health People 2010 • Health Benefits from minimal PA • Definitions of physical activity and fitness • Focus on the process (Physical Activity) rather than the product (Fitness) • History of Physical Activity paradigm chuck.morgan@asu.edu

  3. Blair and Connelly (1996) chuck.morgan@asu.edu

  4. Focusing on the Product • Fitness Testing/Skill Assessment • Genetics and trainability • Age • Have we turned people off from physical activity by focusing on fitness? chuck.morgan@asu.edu

  5. Focusing on the Process:Physical Activity… • Provides success for all students • Helps the unskilled and obese children • Has long and short term health benefits • Increases likelihood of becoming an active adult • Reaches beyond P.E. class chuck.morgan@asu.edu

  6. Assessing Physical Activity • How do you measure physical activity? • Parent ask you “How active is my child?” • Instruments must be… • Valid • Reliable • Cost-effective • Unobtrusive • Easy to use • Pedometers chuck.morgan@asu.edu

  7. Basic Uses for Pedometers in Schools • Promoting physical activity outside of PE • Teaching students about physical activity • Enhancing public relations • Improving instruction • Providing accountability • Integrating other subjects • How many steps are they getting? chuck.morgan@asu.edu

  8. Promoting physical activity outside of PE • Promote walking, biking, skating, etc. to school 1 mile or less (Health People 2010 objective) • Provide a safe area to store bicycles, skateboards, roller blades, etc. • Provide supervised access to facilities before/after school, during recess/lunch • Provide physical activity equipment that can be checked out before/after school, during recess/lunch chuck.morgan@asu.edu

  9. Promoting physical activity outside of PE • Organize intramurals before/after school, during recess/lunch that are gender equitable • Promote physical activity outside of school with various organizations (youth sports, scouts, clubs, etc.) • Organize a “pedometer walking club” before/after school, during recess/lunch chuck.morgan@asu.edu

  10. Promoting physical activity outside of PE • Promote family physical activity (PE nights at school) • Games and activities to teach the family • Pass the pedometer • Pedometer chore time • Errands with a pedometer • Testing different activities • Family dance night • More • Allow students to earn the “Presidential Active Lifetime Award” chuck.morgan@asu.edu

  11. Presidential Active Lifestyle Award (PALA) • Alternative to Fitness Awards • How many earn the PPFA? • Parallels national health objectives • Who can earn it? • Anyone, regardless of fitness or motor skill ability • How do you earn it? • 11K girls, 13K (6 weeks of 5 days per week) or • 60 minutes of daily activity (self-report) • Log activity on-line or on log sheet www.indiana/~preschal chuck.morgan@asu.edu

  12. PALA • Award includes an emblem, certificate, & stickers • Other awards– I am the proud parent of PALA winner • Active Lifestyle Model School www.indiana/~preschal • Cautions • Low active children –3-5K (goal setting 10%) • 1st-3rd grade • Extrinsic award – but hopefully manifests into Intrinsic motivation – “Love to be active” • Benefits outweigh the risks chuck.morgan@asu.edu

  13. Teaching Students About Physical Activity • How active are you? • Get students thinking about different types of physical activity (pyramid) • Let all children experience success while being physically active • Allow youngsters to find out how active they are with immediate feedback chuck.morgan@asu.edu

  14. Determining Baseline Step Counts • 4-5 days of data for elementary students • 8 or more for adolescents • Physical education, during school, or all day • Students or adults record • Set goals using this data chuck.morgan@asu.edu

  15. Teaching Goal Setting • Set goals for a lesson, a day, or a week • Goals should be a percentage of the baseline data (5-10%) • 10,000 steps ????? • Individual Goals • Based on percent increase • Cooperative Goals • Group total or group average chuck.morgan@asu.edu

  16. Enhancing Public Relations • Parental involvement • Letters home about pedometers • Allow students to check pedometers out • Family activity nights using pedometers • Invite parents to a physical education lesson • Let parents wear pedometers during open houses chuck.morgan@asu.edu

  17. Improving Instruction • How active are your students during a lesson? • What can impact activity level? • Management time • Instructional time • Teacher role-modeling • Environment • Lesson type/Activities selected • Diagnosing students with low activity levels chuck.morgan@asu.edu

  18. Providing Accountability • How can you demonstrate you are teaching? Are your students learning? • Skill Assessment • Fitness Testing • Assessing Physical Activity Using Pedometers • During physical education • During school • Outside of school chuck.morgan@asu.edu

  19. Integrating Other Subjects • Math • History • Health • Computers (log activity on-line) • English/Writing • Science chuck.morgan@asu.edu

  20. Issues for Schools • Funding and Purchasing • Loss • Rules and Routines • “You shake it, we take it” • Checking Out • Recording Data • Introducing pedometers to the school chuck.morgan@asu.edu

  21. How many steps are they getting? Figure 1. Boys’ percentage of daily step counts (expected average step counts), by context Figure 2. Girls’ percentage of daily step counts (expected average step counts), by context chuck.morgan@asu.edu

More Related