Jumping jacks, team sports, and laps around the school yard are still
primarily how kids are getting physical exercise at school, but the use
of technology is seeping into P.E. class too. Beyond just bringing Dance Dance Revolution to P.E.,
some schools are integrating gym-style circuits, heart-rate monitors,
and pedometers to encourage students to develop a sense of being
physically fit.
Plugging kids into their own physiology, veteran P.E. teacher Betty
Ann Fish from Springside Chestnut Hill Academy in Philadelphia is using
heart rate monitors and software for circuit-training workouts. Fish
also uses the results from the monitor to explain to her students how
the circulatory system works.
The new devices are relatively new in Fish’s teaching repertoire.
“I’ve been teaching here for 25 years,” Fish says. “And if anyone said
I’d be using technology when I was an undergrad, I would have laughed.”
Now she uses an iPad to track student’s work during class, takes photos
and records videos of students performing exercises and uses apps to
teach students new fitness concepts and exercises. She also uses online
videos for demonstration. During the previous winter Olympics, she says,
she showed videos of the events to help students understand the
exercise, then try them out. It was especially helpful with some of the
lesser known sports, such as curling.
For assessment, Fish uses TeacherPal and a spreadsheet to track student performance. But there are other tech tools like DailyFitLog,
which is used by more than 10,000 students in more than 1,250 schools
to track physical fitness. Here’s how it works: Teachers enter
activities students have completed, such as
the number of minutes they’ve exercised or the number of steps they’ve
walked. Students can also manually enter data from their heart rate
monitors. Every month, students work with their teachers to go over
their data, assess themselves and set goals for the future. All student
data is pushed to the teachers so they can keep track in between
meetings, according to the company’s managing partner Timothy Palek.
Palek says the goal of the system is “to get kids more active and to
teach kids how to take care of themselves.” That matches Fish’s goals,
too. She sees her role as teaching her students to love physical
activity. “I have done my job well if they’re in their 30s and 40s and
they’re still active.”
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