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OVERALL BENEFITS ASSOCIATED WITH COORDINATED
SCHOOL HEALTH
The purpose of this fact sheet is to
summarize the available evidence linking
Coordinated
School Health and academic achievement/outcomes.
Benefits to Students
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Improved student academic performance and test
scores
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Decreased risky behaviors
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Reduced drop out rates
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Less absenteeism
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Less fighting
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Less smoking
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Improved rates of physical activity
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Lower rates of teenage pregnancy
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Prepare students to be productive members of
their communities
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Increase interest in healthy diets
Benefits to Schools
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Reduced expenditures
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Reduced duplication
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Reduced absenteeism and classroom
behavior/disciplinary problems
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Improved staff morale
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Less smoking
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Support of teacher teamwork
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Increased awareness and involvement of families
and communit
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Physical Activity and its Relation to Learning
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The bottom line is that all things being equal,
a healthy, active student learns better.
(
Dr. Germund Hesslow – Swedish neuroscientist)
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It should be just as natural for a math teacher
to use movement in the classroom as for a physical educator to have students
skip count. (Eric Jensen – Jensen Learning)
Source - Action Based Learning -
http://www.actionbasedlearning.com/article01.shtml
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There is a perceived need to increase academic
time in order to raise test scores. Research does not support this approach
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Research shows the correlation between activity
and benefits to increased learning capacity
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Neurokinesiologist Jean Blaydes Madigan who
consults on how brain research links movement to learning states there is a
"lot of emphasis today on students sitting in class loading up on academics,"
when they should do quite the opposite. "Our kids need to be physically
active to help their brains function better," Madigan said. "When we interact
with information, we process more and better." By allowing students to
exercise for at least 30 minutes a day, we give students an advantage to learn.
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Children do not possess the capacity to sit and
truly concentrate for more than 19 minutes, adults no more than 30 minutes.
Classroom energizers break up long blocks of time. (Debra Kibbe, ILSI
Research Foundation)
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The opposite of exercise, sitting in a chair,
inhibits learning. When a human sits for longer than about 17 minutes, blood
begins to pool in the hamstrings and calf muscles pulling needed oxygen and
glucose from the brain. Melatonin kicks in because the brain thinks it’s at
rest because no navigation has occurred lately. The learner gets lethargic and
sleepy and struggles to focus. Learning declines. Movement is the body’s way
of balancing itself physically, chemically, electrically and emotionally.
Exercise brings the brain and body into biobalance, creating a better learning
state for the student.
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Exercise triggers the release of BDNF a
brain-derived neurotropic factor that enables one neuron to communicate with
another. (Kinoshita 1997) Students who sit for longer than twenty minutes
experience a decrease in the flow of BDNF. Recess and physical education is
one way students can trigger sharper learning skills.
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Adding to the growing body of research extolling
the cognitive benefits of physical exercise, a recent study concludes that
mental focus and concentration levels in young children improve significantly
after engaging in structured physical activity (Caterino and Polak 1999).
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Dustmans research (Michund and Wild 1991) tested
three groups of students. The group that engaged in vigorous aerobic exercise
improved short-term memory, creativity, and reaction time.
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The Presidents Council on Fitness and Sports
suggests 30 minutes of physical activity a day to stimulate the brain.
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In a Canadian study, academic scores went up
when physical education time was increased to one-third of the school day.
(Vanves and Blanchard).
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Movement prepares the brain for optimal
learning. Blood traveling to the bodybrain at greater rates feeds the brain
the needed nutrients of oxygen and gluclose. Gluclose is to the brain what
gasoline is to a car, brain fuel. Each time you think, you use up a little
gluclose. Brain activity is measured by gluclose utilization. A human
exchanges about 10% of his oxygen with each normal breath, meaning that about
90% of the oxygen in our bodybrain is stale until we deep breathe or exercise.
A lack of oxygen to the brain results in disorientation, confusion, fatigue,
sluggishness, concentration, and memory problems.
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Movement, physical activity, and exercise change
the learning state into one appropriate for retention and retrieval of memory,
the effects lasting as much as 30-60 minutes.
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Aerobic activity not only increases blood flow
to the brain, but also speeds recall and reasoning skills.
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Crossing the midline integrates brain
hemispheres to enable the brain to organize itself. When students perform
cross lateral activities, (i.e. touching elbow to raised opposite knee) blood
flow is increased in all parts of the brain making it more alert and energized
for stronger, more cohesive learning. Movements that cross the midline unify
the cognitive and motor regions of the brain: the cerebellum, basal ganglia,
and corpus callosum while stimulating the productions of neurotrophins that
increase the number of synaptic connections. (Dennison, Hannaford)
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Exercise engages the emotions. Emotion drives
attention which drives learning (Sylwester). Motion and emotion are connected
physiologically. Movement can foster self-discipline, improve self-esteem,
increase creativity, and enhance emotional expression through social games
(Jensen, 2001).
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Students who exercise in active physical
education classes can reduce stress and anxiety naturally.
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Physical Education curriculum games and
activities that stimulate inner ear motion like rolling, jumping and spinning
are necessary to lay the foundation for learning.
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Eighty five percent of school age children are
natural kinesthetic learners (Hannaford). Sensory motor learning is innate in
humans. Teachers who incorporate kinesthetic teaching strategies reach a
greater percentage of the learners. Eric Jensen says that implicit learning
(learning through your body) is more powerful than explicit learning (text,
facts, and basic recall). If it is not in your body, you haven’t really
learned it. He suggests movement, physical activity and rhythms as a way
teachers can help students bind learning through perceptual motor skills,
procedural encoding, and sensory integration.
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Recess is being sacrificed for more academic
time in the classroom, limiting needed bright daylight exposure that effects
the children’s optimum learning because of lack of rest. Free play at recess
augments social and cognitive development that ultimately translates into
classroom performance. Children who learn to operate among their peers
participate in such interactive games as tag and chase and function in their
own mini-societies on the playground will do better academically. (Mike
Daniel, Dallas Morning News, 11/24/2000)
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Many brain research experts are advocating for
daily physical education in educational circles citing strong evidence that
supports the link of movement to learning. Here is what some of the leading
experts in brain compatible learning say:
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Dr. Howard Gardner, author of Frames of Mind,
declared one of his eight multiple intelligence as the bodily kinesthetic
multiple intelligence. If physical education is cut from our schools, one
eighth of human intelligence is eliminated. Physical education is one of the
few disciplines that incorporate most of the eight identified intelligences
simultaneously in our lessons.
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Dr. Marion Diamond, author of Magic Trees of the
Mind, whose research on enriched environments supports the importance of play
in early brain development. This critical motor development sets the stage for
brain processes used later for decoding and problem solving, a strong argument
for daily elementary physical education starting in kindergarten.
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Dr. Candance Pert, author of Molecules of
Emotion, lauds the importance of proper diet and exercise to balance emotions
naturally. Learning happens throughout the body not just in the synaptic
connections of the brain. Healthy active students make better learners.
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Dr. Robert Sylwester, author of A Celebration of
Neurons and A Biological Brain in a Cultural Classroom, states that movement
facilitates cognition. He says that the reason humans have the brain we do is
to move. He also points out that a central mission of the brain to
intelligently navigate its environment. Therefore, learning must include
movement concepts and skills.
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Susan Kovalik, leading authority on brain
compatible learning whose ITI model serves 250,000 students, includes movement
to enhance learning as one of the brain compatible components based on brain
biology findings. She believes that students retain information better when
movement with intention is used to teach academic concepts kinesthetically.
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Eric Jensen at the Fragile Brain Conference
outlined the causes and brain changes in several learning differences. He
concludes that movement, rhythms, physical activity, and exercise help control
many of the conditions such as ADD, Dyslexia, Learned Helplessness,
Hyperactivity, Delayed Sleep Disorder, Oppositional Disorder, Learning Delays,
Reactive Attachment Disorder, Brain Injury and Insults, and Conduct Disorder.
Physical education curriculum provides not only activity and exercise, but
also builds relationships, provides team membership and celebrations, promotes
rhythm and cross lateral movement, and encourages manipulatives for control.
Many students with learning disabilities find success in the gymnasium because
our curriculum meets their needs in a way that the traditional classroom may
not.
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