Moms (and Dads) on a Mis­sion – Recess is Important

Denise Hills, a geol­o­gist, and her hus­band, a col­lege geol­ogy pro­fes­sor, live in Tuscaloosa, AL with their two chil­dren, a first grader and a three-year-old. Last year, when her son was in kinder­garten at the local pub­lic school, he didn’t get recess. Mid-year, Denise wrote a let­ter to the prin­ci­pal and local school board, express­ing her con­cerns, but she never heard back.

This year, things are better.

Recess is Impor­tant
by Denise Hills
Tuscaloosa, AL

I wrote a let­ter last year to my son’s prin­ci­pal and the school board about the lack of recess at my son’s school. I quoted research (infor­ma­tion that I received through this blog, mostly), and gave an impas­sioned plea to let my son run around for even just a few min­utes a day! I heard noth­ing back from the school board, and only had a cur­sory call from the prin­ci­pal. The end of the year was rapidly approach­ing, and I knew that noth­ing was going to change for that year.

This year, I was deter­mined to pur­sue things more rig­or­ously, for my son’s sake. He’s a VERY active boy, and ends up in trou­ble because he can’t sit still. Recess helps with that. So, at the start of the year, in a new school, I looked at his sched­ule. Sigh. No recess.

So, I dug out the let­ter I wrote last year and revised it, and got ready to send it to his prin­ci­pal. How­ever, I ran into my son’s teacher before I sent the let­ter, and am I glad I did! She told me that they do have recess, they just can’t call it recess. They are required to have a cer­tain num­ber of instruc­tional min­utes per day, and recess doesn’t count towards that. There’s no time in the sched­ule for recess, so they call it some­thing else (I’m not let­ting on as to what they call it, because I don’t want them to lose it!).

Yay! My son is get­ting recess! But I wanted to know if this is going to go away next year, so I still wanted to bring it up with the prin­ci­pal. Luck­ily, we have a fab­u­lous, approach­able prin­ci­pal at this school. When I voiced my con­cerns about recess with her, she imme­di­ately said that it is her com­mit­ment that EVERY child in her school, from grades 1 – 5, gets recess EVERY day. She is the one who has told the teach­ers how to imple­ment it and still main­tain the required “instruc­tional” min­utes. What a change from the pre­vi­ous prin­ci­pal, who essen­tially told me she couldn’t do anything!

I’ve spo­ken with the prin­ci­pal a bit about what we can do to help change things across the dis­trict, not just at our school, because while I’m thrilled that my son has recess, I want every child to have recess. We have a new school board now, so I’m hop­ing that will be a good start­ing point for my project to get recess insti­tuted at all our local schools, and maybe even even­tu­ally at all schools in the state! Wish me luck!

16 Comments on “Moms (and Dads) on a Mis­sion – Recess is Important”

  1. HomeworkBlues says:

    Denise, I com­mend you for an ele­gantly crafted let­ter. But every­one, stop and just read this phrase;

    “and gave an impas­sioned plea to let my son run around for even just a few min­utes a day! ”

    What has our world come to when we must lobby relent­lessly and give an impas­sioned plea just to let a six year old boy run around for even a few min­utes a day.

    I’m busy today but I am curi­ous. Any­one want to research how much phys­i­cal exer­cise inmates on death row receive? I’m will­ing to bet it’s more than a few min­utes a day.

    Oh, wait. Death row inmates don’t get to go home. This lit­tle boy does. I guess he can run around then, they pre­sume. If home­work doesn’t gob­ble up yet more hours of daylight.

    But Denise, again, well done! Hats off to you.

    December 1st, 2009 at 7:49 am
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  2. PsychMom says:

    Inter­est­ing that you should make the com­par­i­son to prison HWB, because last night on Stephen Col­bert, he had a guy on named Cevin Sol­ing who has made a movie called, “The War on Kids”. Last night he was speak­ing about how some new pris­ons are nicer than many high schools in Amer­ica today and are run more humanely. His approach is mil­i­tant and so I don’t think his film will get as much view as “Race to Nowhere”, but he has valid points.

    December 1st, 2009 at 8:07 am
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  3. HomeworkBlues says:

    Denise, I now fin­ished read­ing your entire let­ter. I caught that phrase and it stopped me dead in my tracks.

    Sounds like you got a won­der­ful teacher. And you must be so thrilled the old prin­ci­pal is gone and a new more enlight­ened one has taken his place.

    But when you con­sider that giv­ing kids recess is “enlight­ened,” I am reminded of Alfie Kohn’s line, “back to basics? When have we ever left?” Our dis­cus­sion yes­ter­day spoke of using 1950s method­ol­ogy in 21st cen­tury class­rooms. But at least in the 1950s, the mere thought of elim­i­nat­ing recess was anathema.

    Denise, it’s great your school found a way to sneak in that recess. Just the thought that it has to be sur­rep­ti­tious is chilling.

    December 1st, 2009 at 8:15 am
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  4. PsychMom says:

    I just wanted to com­ment to Denise as well. It’s good you were pay­ing atten­tion. I think pay­ing atten­tion is the start of a new approach to school. That’s what I’m telling all my friends who have babies and tod­dlers and preschool­ers right now. Peo­ple tend to glaze over when I get on my home­work soap­box, because some­times it’s like some­one has flipped a switch on my back when I get started. Peo­ple ask them­selves, I’m sure, where the off but­ton is. But now, I try to point out some books, some arti­cles (if they ask) and I just ask them to keep their eyes open (and their minds) and to not just blindly accept what­ever they get told at school. When­ever I can slip in that home­work in ele­men­tary school is use­less, I do that too.

    It’s not pos­si­ble any­more to set­tle them in on the first day, and then come for parent-teacher con­fer­ences 12 weeks later. We need to lis­ten to and observe our chil­dren. That’s how we become involved in their school lives. We, as par­ents, have to assess whether school is mix­ing well with our kid. Are her needs get­ting met? It’s a vastly dif­fer­ent ques­tion than, “Is my child mea­sur­ing up to the school’s standards?”

    December 1st, 2009 at 8:26 am
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  5. Denise says:

    Thanks for your kind com­ments! If it weren’t for this site, and peo­ple like you, I’m not sure I would have had the courage to do this.

    December 1st, 2009 at 1:28 pm
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  6. HomeworkBlues says:

    Psy­ch­Mom writes; “nter­est­ing that you should make the com pari­son to prison HWB, because last night on Stephen Col­bert, he had a guy on named Cevin Sol­ing who has made a movie called, “The War on Kids”.

    PM, here’s the trailer:

    http://​www​.youtube​.com/​w​a​t​c​h​?​v​=​N​l​n​w​m​1​1​d​6​I​I​&​a​m​p​;​f​e​a​t​u​r​e​=​p​l​a​y​e​r​_​e​m​b​e​d​ded

    And here’s com­men­tary from the​morechild​.com

    http://​the​morechild​.com/​2​0​0​9​/​1​2​/​0​1​/​a​t​-​t​h​e​-​e​n​d​-​o​f​-​t​h​e​-​d​a​y​-​i​t​s​-​a​n​-​i​n​s​t​i​t​u​t​i​o​n​/​#​c​o​m​m​e​n​t​-​2​482

    December 1st, 2009 at 10:58 pm
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  7. HomeworkBlues says:

    To add, PM, didn’t mean to chop the “i” off your intro­duc­tory word (inter­est­ing). And lately, have you all noticed that if you cut and paste parts of a pre­vi­ous com­ment as I did with Psy­ch­Mom, spaces pop up in the mid­dle of the words? Is it just Google Chrome or all browsers? I try to go back and take the spaces out, each word, but I miss one or two. So PM, that was, again, not your orig­i­nal error.

    December 1st, 2009 at 11:03 pm
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  8. Jerri Ann Reason says:

    My take:
    While I do believe chil­dren learn best through play, you won’t see me advo­cat­ing for recess any­time soon. My own mem­o­ries of recess bring noth­ing but hor­ror. When a group of peo­ple (and chil­dren included) con­gre­gate, they expect some­one to lead them. And, if chil­dren do not have a leader, they will do just as the rest of the world has done and they will elect one. The out­come of that is either a play­ground bully or your child being the play­ground bully. As I said, my mem­o­ries are hor­rific. They include bul­lies who worked by push­ing me down, say­ing deplorable things to me and I even earned my first kiss from a boy on the play­ground in about the fifth grade.

    And, let’s face it, none of us want our chil­dren to grow up feel­ing neg­a­tively about them­selves in any way, the play­ground is just a breed­ing ground for meanness.

    What do I propose?

    As an over-weight woman, mother and for­mer phys­i­cal edu­ca­tion teacher, I blame inad­e­quate phys­i­cal edu­ca­tion for my dis­dain of exer­cise. We were taught that if we mis­be­haved or oth­er­wise acted out, we would have to do more exer­cises. One exer­cise in par­tic­u­lar that stands out in my mind was the old “leg lifts”. This com­prised of lying on our backs while rais­ing our feet a few inches off the floor. Every time some­one talked, laughed or belly­ached, we were awarded more of the dreaded leg lifts. And, with that, I hate to exercise.

    So What Then?

    It is a proven fact that phys­i­cal edu­ca­tion teach­ers can accom­mo­date both the desire for chil­dren to par­tic­i­pate in activ­i­ties led by a leader (the teacher, not a class­mates) and the free­dom to learn through reflec­tive or free play if you will. I can sit and write your teacher’s les­son plans all day long, but a good phys­i­cal edu­ca­tion teacher knows how to incor­po­rate a student’s class­room stud­ies into the world of phys­i­cal edu­ca­tion. Com­pli­ment­ing the class­room teach­ers is really easy and makes the job of the phys­i­cal edu­ca­tion teacher much eas­ier. Eas­ier than just turn­ing the kids loose on the play­ground? I think so. In my expe­ri­ences as an adult on the play­ground, I’ve seen the same bul­ly­ing, the same cliques and the same elect­ing of a leader with­out a notion of good or bad.

    A good phys­i­cal edu­ca­tion teacher can and will find imag­i­na­tive ways to teach the chil­dren fun and games and leave them with the abil­ity to form imag­i­na­tive sto­ries all on their own. I guess this could eas­ier be explained with an exam­ple. Here are only a few, tell me, after read­ing a few of these ideas would you pre­fer your child be left to defend him­self or her­self from the play­ground bully or that encounter of whis­pers and even kisses on the playground.

    K — 2nd grade: The stu­dents can do their warm-up exer­cises by count­ing, say­ing their abc’s, their mul­ti­pli­ca­tion tables and more. They can be split (by the teacher, not by some awful play­ground method of pick­ing and choos­ing) and asked to run relays. Incor­po­rat­ing their class­mates to help them accom­plish a goal while leav­ing them to their own devices of what kind of ani­mal they might want to pre­tend to be. The relays aren’t stopped when one line is fin­ished first but instead after a length of time. There is no clear win­ner, no group that stands out, it’s all about the indi­vid­ual. My son’s school actu­ally has paper numer­i­cal key­boards cut out and pasted on the bleach­ers. The stu­dents run, skip, jump, crab walk, etc over to the paper key­board and put in their lunch code. The end result, cre­ativ­ity while learn­ing an essen­tial part of their day.

    3rd — 5th: A pic­ture of the world appro­pri­ately placed in the gym­na­sium can be accented by sep­a­rat­ing the gym into sec­tions (or Coun­tries) and then putting activ­i­ties at each sta­tion that com­pli­ment the study of a par­tic­u­lar Coun­try or Con­ti­nent even. The stu­dents move from Coun­try to Coun­try in a timed man­ner. While this accom­mo­dates all the chil­dren, it leaves them to brain­storm and exer­cise their imaginations.

    6th — 8th grade: This is prob­a­bly the trick­i­est and most dif­fi­cult age. Exer­cise starts to seem like work instead of fun and many many stu­dents will quit run­ning and play­ing on the play­ground but when given the oppor­tu­nity to learn through play, they still excel. For this age, you could eas­ily set up enough sta­tions to accom­mo­date many chil­dren in life­long activ­i­ties like bad­minton or table ten­nis. Set­ting up mul­ti­ple courts of bad­minton and then the stu­dents not only par­tic­i­pate in the activ­ity, they learn to keep score and the learn skills that can eas­ily con­vert to a camp­ground or even the front lawn.

    But, what about the real imag­i­na­tive play?

    I can’t say that I feel that reward­ing stu­dents for good behav­ior is the proper thing to do, it cer­tainly seems to be the norm. You aren’t nec­es­sar­ily rewarded for going to work every day, but more­over, you are prob­a­bly dis­ci­plined if you do not. While my son’s school par­takes in many activ­i­ties that I abhor, they do a great job in the gym­na­sium and on the play­ground. This is the result of a hard-nose teacher who had worked her way through the sys­tem and would not budge on what is appro­pri­ate and what is not in her phys­i­cal edu­ca­tion class. She actu­ally rewarded her stu­dents for per­form­ing well four days a week by allow­ing them the oppor­tu­nity to choose their activ­ity on Fri­day. I kind of look at that as a casual-dress on Fri­day kind of idea. If it works and it is fea­si­ble, then at least give it a try. The teacher still chooses the activ­i­ties avail­able for the stu­dents to par­tic­i­pate in (and can never bring out the well-known ball and bat syn­drome that many teach­ers exer­cise) and can actu­ally allow the chil­dren a gen­eral over­all sense of deci­sion mak­ing at the same time.

    For me?
    I”ll take the well known and finely researched tech­niques taught to me (and many oth­ers before me, or after if you will) in my study to obtain my degree as a phys­i­cal edu­ca­tion teacher. I don’t want to think I took Kine­si­ol­ogy and Eex­er­cise Phys­i­ol­ogy twice (cough cough) just to get a job and then sit down and roll out a ball all day ever day. Pos­si­bly this prac­tice is why our phys­i­cal edu­ca­tion teach­ers aren’t val­ued like they should be in the first place. So, don’t get me wrong,I believe that learn­ing through play is an essen­tial ingre­di­ent for suc­cess as we grow, I also know that there is no sub­sti­tute for proper phys­i­cal edu­ca­tion. And, no amount of time on the play­ground recess-style can meet the expec­ta­tions that a crowd of chil­dren come to expect.

    December 2nd, 2009 at 8:35 am
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  9. Matthew says:

    @Jerri Ann Rea­son: Adults do get rewarded for show­ing up at work every day. I get a biweekly pay­check and an annual-ish raise.

    I can only speak to my local schools, but they seem to have got­ten pretty good about mon­i­tor­ing recess for bul­ly­ing and inap­pro­pri­ate activ­ity. While there will always be some bad apples, I don’t agree with what I’m read­ing into what you said: that kids will turn any free play into a Lord of the Flies situation.

    I do agree with you on what you pro­posed for the 6th-8th grade group and wish that would be applied to more age groups. Too much PhysEd is dic­tat­ing what kids will play. Give them some choices and peo­ple will get – and con­tinue – more exer­cise if they can do activ­i­ties they like.

    December 2nd, 2009 at 12:53 pm
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  10. Jill H. says:

    Sorry Jerri Ann — I’m also an over­weight woman, and the approach you pro­pose taught me to hate exer­cise! My school also does not have a major bul­ly­ing prob­lem, thanks to con­cerned par­ents, a won­der­ful staff, and a edu­ca­tion that emphi­sises explo­ration and student-led learn­ing. Kids hav­ing free time in an envi­ro­ment the emphi­sises kind­ness, and com­mu­nity do not turn into a pack of wild ani­mals that need to be trained by an adult, as a cir­cus ani­mal is trained by a trainer, com­plete with cala­then­tics. They explore, make friends, learn social skills, find bugs, ride bikes or scoot­ers, play catch.…and are far bet­ter for it. My girls do par­tic­i­pate in activ­i­ties with a coach (gym­nas­tics) but there’s no way an hour of that class would equal 20 min­utes of just run­ning around being a kid expend­ing energy…too much time is wasted in just try­ing to con­trol a group of 6 kids, let alone 22!

    December 3rd, 2009 at 1:38 am
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  11. Amanda Cockshutt says:

    I spent a long time last night think­ing about Jerri Ann’s com­ments (I was sup­posed to be mark­ing a stack of lab reports on gene cloning, but that seemed more inter­est­ing). Like the pre­vi­ous poster, I have to come to the con­clu­sion that I don’t agree with all of what Jerri Ann states.

    As yet another woman of gen­er­ous pro­por­tions who absolutely detested phys ed, I am pretty con­vinced that it pushed me away from phys­i­cal activ­ity, it didn’t encour­age it.

    I also think that for per­sonal devel­op­ment rea­sons kids have to have some kid medi­ated time with­out adult ref­er­ees mak­ing all the calls. This envi­ron­ment has to be safe, and there has to be some way of ensur­ing that kids aren’t suf­fer­ing exces­sive bul­ly­ing. I fear, though, that many of today’s youth are los­ing the abil­ity to inter­act with their peers on an equal foot­ing. We have to learn these social skills, we can’t func­tion as a soci­ety with­out them.

    Finally, my heart goes out to the orig­i­nal poster. What a hor­ri­ble sys­tem! I often bemoan that I live in the edu­ca­tional back­wa­ter of Canada, rural New Brunswick, but my kids get a 20 minute and 40 minute recess every day and 4 — 5 phys ed peri­ods per week. At least we have that!

    December 3rd, 2009 at 8:39 am
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  12. PsychMom says:

    Wow, Amanda. Four to five Phys-ed peri­ods per week! Our kids, here in Hal­i­fax, get gym once a week, but they get recess every­day in the AM, almost an hour out­doors at lunch and at least 45 min­utes out­doors (if the weather is good) after school. While the kids com­plain about hav­ing to walk to another school to use their gym (our school doesn’t have one), I like that fea­ture. Oh, and we have a swim pro­gram on Fri­days. So I guess the kids get enough phys­i­cal activ­ity. I can’t imag­ine what my child would be like if she spend the whole week indoors. She’d lose her mind.

    In response to Jerri-Ann, I am frankly at a loss. There’s a whole lot of emo­tion tied into her rea­sons for advo­cat­ing so strongly for struc­tured activ­i­ties. But I think we have to allow chil­dren more free­dom than that. Teach­ers have a respon­si­bil­ity to mon­i­tor what goes on on the play­ground so that no one gets bul­lied, but tak­ing over children’s play time seems too intru­sive. I can’t help imag­in­ing that if we tell the kids what to do all their wak­ing hours, there will come a time when we’re not around, when they will be at a loss as to how to spend their own time.

    I too, am on the heavy side, always have been, and always hated gym. Love phys­i­cal activ­ity out­doors, but can’t stand most com­pet­i­tive sports. I still shud­der when I recall those out­fits we HAD to wear for gym and the gym­nas­tic units of every blasted year when we had to do floor routines!

    December 3rd, 2009 at 9:39 am
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  13. Better Learning says:

    Your son sounds like mine — he also has trou­ble sit­ting still and he’s quite a hand­ful. Thank good­ness for recess :)

    Our dis­trict has a daily activ­ity man­date which is ful­filled by recess and lunch, phys ed, and once a day upbeat music is pumped through the PA and the kids all get up and walk/dance around the class (I think for the dura­tion of one song). In spite of all of that, my son still has trou­ble sit­ting qui­etly. Poor kid!! I can’t imag­ine how his day would be with­out all the activ­ity breaks…

    December 4th, 2009 at 1:02 am
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  14. brogan fox says:

    will should stop home work cause its upset­ting ppli no yh im a stu­dent a wood rush and i think homw work is welll hard i mean cum on we get bout 6 pices a day an i HATE it i wish home wok was banned for ever i mean like thats harz and when u havent done it the teach­ers go mad at you cause u havent done it and that yuo get 2 much any way stop homw work ppl out there please stop it i wud like it 32 be stopped buy the end of the week thanks please xxx

    December 6th, 2009 at 8:57 am
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  15. brogan fox says:

    we need it to be stopped my daugh­ter cums hoome wor­ry­ing cause of it !!

    December 6th, 2009 at 8:58 am
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  16. Jerri Ann Reason says:

    “I also think that for per­sonal devel­op­ment rea­sons kids have to have some kid medi­ated time with­out adult ref­er­ees mak­ing all the calls.”

    The key here is the chil­dren are sim­ply not mature enough to medi­ate their own time. My dis­dain for activ­ity is because our phys­i­cal edu­ca­tion time was either an all out brawl play­ing games where peo­ple (not just me) were bul­lied or it was a time for pun­ish­ing us with exer­cise. When peo­ple are pun­ished with exer­cise they learn to dis­like it. When they are taught how to con­trol their own des­tiny with exer­cise by giv­ing them viable options, then you have accom­plished the goal of phys­i­cal education.

    Please remem­ber, I spent years in col­lege learn­ing the proper tech­niques of teach­ing phys­i­cal edu­ca­tion and at no time was pun­ish­ing chil­dren by forc­ing them to do situps, pullups, pushups, etc part of that.

    I men­tioned that I ride my school sys­tem hard because of the home­work issue and in many cases, we sim­ply don’t do it and I sent a note say­ing as much. The key here is, he gets 30 min­utes of phys­i­cal edu­ca­tion, 20 min­utes to eat lunch which doesn’t involve in move­ment except walk­ing to and from the lunch­room which is across the hall and then he gets another 10 minute break which involves more eating.

    So, if they are going to do their job dur­ing the hours he is at school, I can allow him the free time at home to play, to empower his imag­i­na­tion and to learn to “medi­ate” with his free time after school. But, when they send home enough home­work that he doesn’t get to do that, then some­thing gets seri­ously distorted.

    I’d much rather my son spend his time at school learn­ing, get­ting phys­i­cal edu­ca­tion every day and then com­ing home and leav­ing all that school work behind.

    As an adult„ you say you go to work so you can get paid. What hap­pens if you don’t go to work? That’s a dou­ble edged sword. You can’t say you go to work for the pay­check any­more than you can say that you don’t go because you like being hun­gry and homeless.

    And as adults, most of us carry out 2 jobs, we go to a work envi­ron­ment all day where we earn money, then we come home and start our sec­ond job of house­keep­ing, laun­dry, rais­ing our chil­dren by help­ing with home­work, etc. I get frus­trated with my 2 jobs and I don’t think that a 6 year old has any rea­son to take part in two jobs. Go to school all day, and then come home and do their sec­ond job of home­work all evening.

    So, if we are going to insist that the school day take over the job that they are trained to do, then we have to assume that they are doing this in every class, includ­ing phys­i­cal edu­ca­tion. How many of you would be happy if you found out your child was being taught chem­istry by some­one who was trained to teach Ele­men­tary Eng­lish or Social Stud­ies. So, what makes you think that your class­room teach­ers are trained to teach phys­i­cal education.

    When I grad­u­ated from col­lege with a B.S. in edu­ca­tion, I had amassed a set of classes that no other teacher’s in a reg­u­lar school sys­tem were part of. Your chem­istry teach­ers took the chem­istry that I took, your anatomy and phys­i­ol­ogy teach­ers took the anatomy and phys. classes but no one took kine­si­ol­ogy or exer­cise phys­i­ol­ogy. And cer­tain not with the chem­istry, the anatomy and physiology.

    The biggest point that peo­ple seem to be con­fused on is that edu­cated Phys­i­cal Edu­ca­tion teach­ers can and will accom­mo­date the child’s need for struc­ture and their need for imag­i­na­tive play. Have you ever been in your child’s phys­i­cal edu­ca­tion class and watched them move from sta­tion to sta­tion (or coun­try to coun­try) and par­tak­ing in activ­i­ties that one might find in those coun­tries? If you have, then you wouldn’t be advo­cat­ing for your child to jut be turned loose on a playground.

    I went to school on Thurs­day and my son was in phys­i­cal edu­ca­tion, And, as I said, I ride them hard about the amount of crappy home­work that comes home. But, phys­i­cal edu­ca­tion is dif­fer­ent. The chil­dren have the options of toss­ing rub­ber balls into bas­kets in 2 sta­tions, they could do rope climb­ing on the wall where the rope is anchored, they has these really ginor­mous balls they could play with, they had jump ropes and they had bas­ket­balls that would fit ito the goals which were low­ered to fit their ability.

    Now, there is plenty of room for imag­i­na­tive play, they had plenty of time to han­dle their own “prob­lems” but if they can’t, there is a qual­i­fied per­son there to help guide them. There were oppor­tu­ni­ties in that one 30 minute class then you will ever see a class get in one of those “run wild and free recess style” sessions.

    Some­one men­tioned the my thoughts were laced with emo­tions, that’s not nec­es­sar­ily the truth, my thoughts are laced with what I was taught in col­lege and I have no more desire to go teach Eng­lish than most Eng­lish teacher’s want to go mon­i­tor some form of recess.

    And, finally, I was going to avoid this part but let me give you an exam­ple of what hap­pens when teach­ers take their classes out­side for recess as opposed to trained pro­fes­sion­als. Gen­er­ally sev­eral classes will go at once. So let’s take my son’s class for instance. A ratio of 1 teacher for every 20 stu­dents in 3 classes of first grade. All 60 chil­dren are taken to a play­ground which is tech­ni­cally made to house about 30 chil­dren at once. And, the, the teacher either sit in a chair and par­take in mind­less con­ver­sa­tion or they take turns, one or two at a time going inside to do class­room work, make copies, etc. That leaves one teacher for 60 kids. (Which is against the law, 60 chil­dren requires at least 2 Trained Phys­i­cal Edu­ca­tion Teacher so to leave that many on a play­ground wit h one class­room teacher is insane. What makes any­one think that this is accept­able. Those same 60 chil­dren have 2 phys­i­cal edu­ca­tion teach­ers and in many cases they also have an aid.

    The bot­tom line is this, if your child is the bully, you are going to find that after recess is when you find your­self being called to the school. If your child is the vic­tim of the bully, you are going to find your­self mad and try­ing to fig­ure out the best way to han­dle the whole situation.

    I will tell you what I am going to do here, I“m going to pull my research on this and see if that helps explain my con­cepts. It will take ma a cou­ple of days as I have sev­eral large projects going on. I will tell you though, I was just inter­viewed by Par­ent­ing Mag­a­zine on this issue so you should see my opin­ion with some deep rooted research in their magazine.

    I’ll send my info to Sara and hope­fully we can make another post out of it and make the infor­ma­tion more contained.

    December 6th, 2009 at 9:10 am
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