Haven
Super_Ideal_Rock
- Joined
- Feb 15, 2007
- Messages
- 13,166
Physical education requirements are mandated on a state-by-state basis. My state (Illinois) is one of a handful that requires phys ed for K-12.Date: 9/29/2009 8:23:52 PM
Author: LtlFirecracker
Lots of good points here, wish I could quote them all.
My concern is that our kids are not active enough and the food that schools offer is not very nutritious. What would keeping them in school longer do to the problem we have of too many kids being overweight? A lot of other countries actually have the same hours of school that our kids have (according to the article I read) when you average it out over the year. Don''t Europeans take lots of vacation compared to us? If art, music, and physical education became a required part of our education, I think the students could handle a longer day. A whole day of math, history, english ect + homework is just too much.
And there is more to education than what is in the classroom. If you always have the child in the classroom, how are they supposed to get that?
I think for the lower income areas, or for working families, an optional after school program that offers tutoring in areas children struggle, physical education, or art might be a nice option.
I agree about a lot of school lunches, but communities have control over that. If community members really care about what their schools are offering for lunch, there are ways to persuade BOEs to contract with a healthy lunch program, I''ve seen it happen. I suppose what I''m saying is that schools are only as strong/healthy/focused/dedicated as their communities. In recent years I''ve seen several Wisconsin communities raise grassroots efforts to campaign for healthier lunches, and lo and behold! Their children now have access to healthy school lunches. I worked in a community that didn''t really care much about the quality of their schools, and it shows. I live in a community that cares very much about the quality of our schools, and that shows, too.
I agree that an entire day of core subjects is far too much. And you''re right--the classroom is only the very beginning.