So the "change" in our curriculum would begin from the ground up. I went about establishing the curriculum by using the theory of essential questioning as in the UbD approach. What would the students need to know in regard to learning how to formulate a personal fitness plan for life?
My new curriculum plan, which I will indeed present to the building principal and Central Office, will steer P.E. away from the predominance of team sports and games to one that stresses more vigorous individual activities.
In researching this assignment, I have found model programs that exist in the United States that have integrated technology into the gymnasium. These programs have taken advantage of grant money that exist for P.E. programs. We should look into this.
Three years ago,the State of New Jersey built a new Harrison High School, with computers in every classroom, sixty-inch flat screen televisions in every classroom (except the Health class-- we just got a smaller television installed this year.) In the P.E. wing they gave us an unfurnished weight room that cannot accommodate the average sized P.E. class. Doesn't anybody realize that our students are at risk. They are heavier and less active than ever before. Just as they employ all the tactics and techniques to enable our students to pass the HSPA, why can't we have the necessary tools and equipment to enable our students in P.E. to pass fitness assessments?
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Our readings in class sound the alarm for educators to adapt or we will perish in the global economy. If our children do not get more fit, the economic price tag will be staggering from the health problems that obesity causes.

Excellent. I'm sorry to hear about your situation, but I am in exactly the same quandary. Please, any resources you could point me to: examples of the curriculum you (have?) established would be awesome.
ReplyDeleteLarry- I'm glad you are taking the steps to make this a leap from an assignment to a reality to make a positive change for your district.
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