1,000 Local Students Teach Memphis Basketball Star Rudy Gay the Advantages of Physical Education
MEMPHIS, TN (25 May, 2007) – As part of a five-city community education
and awareness tour in honor of May's National Physical Fitness and
Sports Month, Nike will host a special NikeGO PE event at 9am on Friday,
May 25, at the University of Memphis Memorial Field near the Elma Roane
Fieldhouse.
This field day event will feature approximately 1,000 fourth and fifth
grade students from 21 area schools as well as Memphis basketball star
Rudy Gay and Memphis City School District Superintendent Dr. Carol
Johnson. All will join together to participate in a NikeGO PE field day
and address the important topic of rising inactivity in school-age
Memphis youth.
This event will highlight NikeGO PE's custom physical education
curriculum that is now available in over 400 schools nationwide and is
based on the standards of “new PE,” an approach to physical education
that is more inclusive, active and fun than traditional PE classes and
aims to deliver 30 minutes of constant physical activity.
“NikeGO PE seeks to instill a lifelong love of physical activity in
young people and is designed to address rising inactivity rates in
youth, a problem that we need to address in Memphis,” said Dr. Carol
Johnson, Memphis City School District Superintendent. “NikeGO PE
provides elementary schools with tools to build a smart and effective
approach to physical education, including a unique curriculum, teacher
training and equipment.”
Though every Memphis City School elementary student is required to have a
minimum of 30 minutes of physical activity each week, statistics
regarding childhood obesity and inactivity in Tennessee remain high.
The state ranks third in the nation for childhood obesity, and it's
estimated that as many as 46 percent of children in Tennessee are
overweight or at risk of becoming overweight. Tennessee is also among
the top five states for Type 2 diabetes in children and ranks 48th in
the nation for its population's overall health (Sources: American Heart
Association, Centers for Disease Control).
Working together to create a new, innovative approach to physical
education, Nike and SPARK (Sports, Play and Active Recreation for Kids)
teamed up to create the NikeGO PE curriculum, as well as “hands-on”
teacher training and matched equipment sets. These tools help PE
specialists and regular classroom teachers work together to provide
supplemental “new PE” until more full time PE specialists are placed in
schools. Activities in the NikeGO PE “Playbook” are designed to develop
students' fitness, motor, and social skills, while providing strategies
that integrate literacy, math science, art, and nutrition into PE
lessons.
“It is extremely important for all children to grow up healthy and
strong,” said Willie Gregory, director of US Business/Community
Relations for Nike. “To reach this goal in Memphis, we are proud to have
incorporated NikeGO PE in 26 area schools.”
Schools participating in Friday's NikeGO Field Day include Alton,
Berclair, Bethel Grove, Caldwell, Cherokee, Crump, Cummings, Egypt,
Georgia Ave., Germanshire, Getwell, Gordon, Hamilton, Holmes Rd.,
LaRose, Levi, Lincoln, Manor Lake, Sea Isle, South Park, and Winchester.
The Problem of Inactivity in Youth
American school-aged youth are becoming the least physically fit
generation in history. In the past 30 years, overweight and obesity
levels in children have more than doubled. There is evidence that
today's youth may develop significant health complications such as heart
disease, Type II diabetes (adult onset diabetes) and premature death
unless they exercise more. Children spend a considerable amount of time
in school, and schools are a powerful motivator for helping them adopt
healthy lifestyles. Several studies demonstrate school-based PE programs
are one of the most effective ways to facilitate activity in youth.
Unfortunately, in many school districts across the country, the role of
the PE specialist has been eliminated or drastically reduced. With
recent national guidelines recommending that young people accumulate at
least 60 minutes of physical activity daily, having a quality physical
education program in every school should be a national priority. Through
NikeGO PE, Nike seeks to increase the quality and quantity of PE in
schools.
“The realities of the times we live in demand that we strengthen
physical education in our schools and ultimately bring daily physical
education, taught by qualified PE specialists, back to every school in
the United States,” said Paul Rosengard, executive director of the SPARK
Programs. “Because physical activity must be done regularly over time
to achieve health benefits, the goal of NikeGO PE is to encourage
classroom teachers to supplement the PE instruction already provided by
their school's PE specialist.”
Rosengard added, “NikeGO PE was created to bridge the gap until more
full-time PE specialists are placed in schools nationwide – a shared
goal of Nike and SPARK.”
About NikeGO PE:
NikeGO PE is an innovative physical education program designed to
increase the quality and quantity of physical activity in America's
schools with an end goal of improving children's activity levels. NikeGO
PE accomplishes this task by providing “the essential components”:
curriculum, teacher training, equipment, and follow up support to
elementary PE specialists and classroom teachers. NikeGO PE is part of
Nike's signature U.S. community affairs initiative – NikeGO. Since its
inception in 2003, the program has been implemented in more than 400
public schools, reaching more than 75,000 students. For more
information, visit www.nikego.com.
About SPARK (Sports, Play, and Active Recreation for Kids):
SPARK is a research-based organization (of San Diego State University
and Sportime, LLC, a member of the School Specialty Family of
companies), dedicated to creating, implementing, and evaluating programs
that promote lifelong wellness. SPARK strives to improve the health of
children and adolescents by disseminating evidence-based physical
activity and nutrition programs that provide curriculum, staff
development, follow-up support, and equipment to teachers of Pre-K
through 12th grade students. For more information, visit
www.sparkpe.org.