New concepts of PE and sports programs are making it more fun for everyone to play.
“You might as well give me an ‘F’ now —get it out of the way. Then I’ll just go sit in the corner.”
Doris Dorr could hear the despondent defiance in Tim’s voice on the first day of physical education. The 10th-grader was “chubby,” not into sports and resigned to the humiliation he was sure awaited him in the locker room and gym.
Dorr, a veteran physical education teacher at Toppenish High
School in Washington State, recognized his fears. But she asked
her new student for a deal: Dress for every class and trust her to be
a good teacher. “You can do this,” she told him. “Keep trying.”
Dorr taught Tim’s class five days a week, including 20 minutes in the classroom teaching about the connections between health, fitness and diet. Tim dressed every day and joined his classmates in compiling their personal fitness data. He took part in class: aerobic exercise, strength building, skill development and playing cooperative instead of competitive games.
Tim measured his progress using charts, graphs and a journal. He also noticed how supportive his teacher and classmates were of him and each other. Kids would finish their laps, then circle back and walk alongside him. They cheered when a classmate graduated from one push-up to five. “There’s only one way kids can get in serious trouble in my class,” Dorr says. “Only if they’re unkind.”
The sophomore shed 45 pounds during the semester.
“One day, I heard screaming from the other side of the gym,” Dorr recalls. “And there’s Tim with his arms above his head. He was shouting and the other kids were clapping and cheering. He had just taken his body weight and fat index and had reached his personal goal.”
But he wasn’t done yet.
Clichés of the Locker Room
Movies and TV shows often play up the harsh stereotypes
of gym classes and school sports [3] ruled by the law
of the jungle, often for laughs. These clichés, sometimes
deserved, portray a realm where jocks dominate
and the timid or hopeless or bespectacled [4] cower as far
from the action as possible. The PE teacher, often a bewhistled
person called “Coach,” tosses out balls of one
shape or another, then walks off to strategize for Friday
night’s game.
Even when real-world PE classes do not sink to that level, they can be intimidating places. As Doris Dorr’s discouraged student demonstrated, many students feel that flunking such a class carries less pain and shame than physical failure and taunting.
These unfortunate traditions may take a while to disappear from schools. But there is an up-and-coming generation of teachers and coaches like Dorr who are dedicated to inclusive practices. They are passionate about helping all kids discover the physical, social and emotional benefits— as well as pleasures—of physical activity.
The benefits are too great to forfeit, says Lynn Couturier. She is chair of the physical education department at the State University of New York, Cortland, and past president of the National Association of Sport and Physical Education (NASPE). “Physical education class might be the only activity some students get all day,” Couturier says. “It’s a huge loss if they do not develop the knowledge, skills and attitudes that can inspire them to be physically active throughout their lives.”

Benefits vs. Budgets
The losses go beyond matters of fairness
and personal development. They
have a direct bearing on the nation’s
physical and fiscal health. Diets featuring
fast food, sugary soft drinks
and declining physical activity have
contributed to a tripling of childhood
obesity rates in the United States in
the last 30 years, according to the U.S.
Centers for Disease Control. Today,
nearly a third of American kids qualify
as overweight or obese. Poor eating
habits and sedentary childhoods have
also contributed to more kids with
asthma, heart problems and a spike in
type 2 juvenile diabetes.
Some policymakers are looking to
schools in general, and physical education
in particular, to reverse this
national trend. First Lady Michelle
Obama has championed the “Let’s
Move” initiative to raise awareness
of childhood obesity while educating
kids and communities about the
advantages of healthier food and regular
exercise. “Let’s Move In School”
(which is unrelated to Let’s Move) is
sponsored by the American Alliance
for Health, Physical Education,
Recreation, and Dance (AAHPERD).
The program promotes physical activity
throughout the school day by
means of education, grants and professional
development.
Even more than emphasizing the negative consequences of obesity, advocates of PE and sports programs seek to play up positive links between regular physical activity and overall well-being. Couturier and others cite a growing library of research that seems to confirm the obvious: Kids who regularly run, play and sweat demonstrate fewer behavioral problems, greater concentration and improved performances on standardized tests.
However, in many districts such long-term benefits are being undercut by short-term budget realities at the federal, state and local levels. Data on the national picture is hard to come by. But anecdotes about the impact of cuts abound. A Florida law mandating one semester of middle school PE each year is at risk of defunding as Gov. Rick Scott seeks to cut $2 billion from the state’s education budget. And last year in Toledo, Ohio, a $39 million shortfall meant the dismantling of all middle school and ninthgrade sports, as well as wrestling, cross-country and other team sports in high schools.
The federal No Child Left Behind law has prompted statehouses and school boards to emphasize the testing of core academics. So lawmakers across the country see cuts to physical education, sports and arts programs as changes that will trigger the least fuss. However, while wealthier communities will almost certainly fill the resulting voids through private means, that is less likely in communities with fewer resources.
Couturier says this trend is sadly shortsighted. “I understand that schools have to prepare children to become useful citizens,” she says. “But in the long run, there are few things more important than preparing our children to lead healthy lifestyles.”
Upgrading PE Advocacy
NASPE and other advocacy groups
recognize their programs are under
the gun. In response, they are urging
members to advocate for their curriculum
by reaching out to every constituency—students, parents, fellow
teachers, principals, school board
members and lawmakers. NASPE has
assembled an “Advocacy Toolkit” on
their website with resources to help
members communicate the story of
why “quality physical education” matters.
They also encourage PE teachers
and coaches to apply for grants and forge community partnerships that
can raise the profile and viability of
their programs.
Doris Dorr sets out to prove the
worth of what she does, kid by kid.
Her classes are highly personalized,
with students setting personal goals
and assessing their own efforts and
progress using target heart-rate monitors
and other tools..jpg)
She also runs an after-school weight-loss program at Toppenish High, a school where 89 percent of students live below the poverty line. The young women, many who have endured neglect and abuse, often join weighing more than 300 pounds, Dorr says. But together with friends and classmates, they shed 70 pounds on average while gaining self-confidence. NASPE recently recognized her above-and-beyond efforts with its “Unsung Hero for Youth Award.”
“You make your program so good, and the kids love it so much, people will throw a fit if they try to eliminate it,” Dorr says, noting the support she gets from her colleagues, principal and district. “We have set up a curriculum that will benefit the kids, not just do what is easy.
“And we need to stop hiring coaches to teach physical education,” she insists. “We need teachers who look at their kids, and know they’re responsible for the well-being of all those kids.”
The Case for Inclusive PE
Couturier, a teacher of PE teachers,
agrees that contemporary PE curricula
need to emphasize health and fitness
over competitive sports. One of
the difficulties, she says, is that those
who pursue physical education as a
career often have a background of
success in athletics. They don’t necessarily
identify with challenges experienced
by less-skilled and less-fit kids.
An increasing number of degree
programs in physical education are
trying to disabuse new teacher candidates
of this old model. “We put them
into school early on to expose them
to the student population they will
be working with, a minority of whom
will have the same passion about
sports as the teacher,” Couturier says.
“We want [our teacher candidates]
to practice adapting curricula so it
includes and motivates as many kids
as possible.”
Proponents of inclusive PE [5], including Dorr and Couturier, remain big fans of sports and competition. Most recognize their importance as a means for young athletes to practice discipline, hone physical skills and teamwork and strive for excellence, among other positive outcomes. But they see the mission and goals of athletics as distinct from those of inclusive physical education, where knowledge, effort and development should take priority over performance.
PE programs that value inclusiveness [6] and refuse to give up on students also cannot help but improve a school’s climate. Exhibit A is Dorr’s reluctant sophomore, Tim. The semester after meeting his personal goals, Tim signed up for an elective PE class to continue exercising. One day, Dorr noticed he had wandered over from that other class and joined her students.
He was walking laps alongside the next “chubby kid.”
Illustration by Joe McKendry
Links:
[1] http://www.tolerance.org/magazine/number-40-fall-2011
[2] http://www.tolerance.org/author/sean-mccollum
[3] http://www.tolerance.org/supplement/banning-bullying
[4] http://www.tolerance.org/supplement/dealing-size-bias-and-students-special-needs
[5] http://www.tolerance.org/supplement/values-inclusive-pe
[6] http://www.tolerance.org/supplement/airing-out-last-closet