Friday, December 26, 2008
Engelstone S Article Health Journal
Movement is vital to learning! How often do we hear this, yet studies show our children continue to tip the scales and spend more time in front of the television and computer. There are many technology options for our students today, and though it is vital and necessary to use, it is also important for our students to get up and move to stimulate their brains. By simply giving your students a brief movement time in the classroom, it will help them tremendously when they do have to sit and listen. I believe classroom teachers will benefit from the "move more and sit less" expectation. Moving helps boost learning and helps keep our students healthy. In a book written recently by John J. Ratey called "Spark," he explains that the "brain works just as muscles do - growing with use, withering with inactivity - and shows why getting your heart and lungs pumping can mean the difference between a calm, focused mind and a harried, inattentive self." There is a connection between exercise and the brain, and as educators, we need to remember this when we are planning our lessons, and incorporate more movement into our classrooms.
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2 comments:
I think I would like to read the book you talked about. My kindergaten class only gets PE for 20 minutes once every other week. Also, in the winter, we have rainy day recess in the classroom more often than the kids get outside. To make up for this I have kids exercise videos and CDs. My students may occasionally get loud or worked up when we do these, but it's planned chaos, not a by- product of boredom.
I too like the idea you are tlking about. We need to get the kids up an moving more. My only question is where do I find the time? I gues it doesn't take too much though, a stretch here and a jumping jack there. Great ideas!
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