Putting the fun back in the physical
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Christine Carrillo
Get the baseball mitts ready and the yoga tapes queued up, because
Back Bay High School in Costa Mesa plans to take on the challenge of
teaching physical education to students who have proven to be quite
indifferent to the concept as a whole.
While many students attending Back Bay High, a continuation school
in the Newport-Mesa Unified School District, have had bad experiences
with physical education, Principal Debbie Davis hopes this new
program will assuage their fears.
The program will include lesson plans on everything from diet and
nutrition to rules and regulations in professional sports. It will
focus on providing each student with a more well-rounded physical
education.
“We’re looking at it to be real motivational ... and real
high-interest,” Davis said. “Their experience with [physical
education] has been so negative. ... Sometimes you need to approach
it in a different way.”
That’s precisely what George Greenwalt, the instructor of the
course, wants to do.
“These kids are not always going to participate, so we’re trying
to find ways to get them the credits they need and get them
interested,” said Greenwalt, who has been teaching for about four
years. “It’s kind of a challenge, and an interesting one, but there
are a lot of things they can learn.”
Before this program, students would have to fulfill the state’s
physical education requirement by taking an aerobics class or some
sort of physical training or activity outside the school, which would
require students to find transportation off-campus.
While this program will give students a more convenient way to
fulfill that requirement, it will also try to teach students
everything they’ll ever need to know in the world of sports,
nutrition and exercise.
“It’s good to have an understanding of sports, because it has
become a huge part of our culture,” Greenwalt said. “You want to try
and find a way to reach these kids a little bit and motivate them.”
By teaching the students about health and fitness, Greenwalt and
Davis hope that their students will benefit in the long run.
“The move should be more toward ‘fitness for life’ education ...
so that when they become adults, they’ll know how to stay healthy,”
said Jaime Castellanos, the assistant superintendent of secondary
education for the district, adding that he supports their ideas for
the new program.
Although the school does not yet have any sporting equipment for
the program, which will start Feb. 24, Davis and the district will
work together to make sure the school gets everything they’ll ever
need.
“If it was an English class, we’d buy the books for them,”
Castellanos said. “If it’s a [physical education] class, we should be
buying the equipment for them.”
* CHRISTINE CARRILLO covers education and may be reached at (949)
574-4268 or by e-mail at [email protected].
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