Sports Videogame Student Enticements Banned 61
Thanks to the Miami Herald for their article discussing the banning a Florida school's plans to use sports-based videogames as a motivator for students taking physical education. According to the piece: "Fort Walton Beach High School wanted to use a PlayStation as part of a team sports course in the next school year as a way of motivating more students to take physical education", but "Superintendent Don Gaetz halted registration for the course Tuesday, calling it 'an idea whose time will never come.'" In a situation which sees "obesity rising among teens and that more than half of the state's high school students not participating in any physical activity at school last year", could attracting students with videogames actually be a valid approach?
Dance Dance Revolution (Score:5, Insightful)
Combined with a weightlifting or co-ed aerobics class, this is a luring way to weight loss. I don't see why some school somewhere hasn't picked up on this "aerobic entertainment" yet. I think it would be a good way to get all those kids who beg their Dr. for a note to stay out of PE back in the active world.
Re:Dance Dance Revolution (Score:5, Informative)
a bit of a google search turns up this [adn.com].
Re:Dance Dance Revolution (Score:3, Insightful)
Another weird thing is that they put the mat straight on a gym floor. Maybe these kids who are much lighter than me won't have a problem, but I'm sure that mat would take a long walk under me if it wasn't on someth
Re:Dance Dance Revolution (Score:1)
With an XBox you wouldn't have as many different DDR games (and I've heard that the particular version on XBox is a bit harder than most), but you could've had 4 people at a time.
Re:Dance Dance Revolution (Score:1, Insightful)
At the very least it's better than what my high school had us doing for PE about 10 years ago - square dancing *shudder* - even sex ed was less humiliating than that!
Re:Dance Dance Revolution (Score:1, Interesting)
Re:Dance Dance Revolution (Score:2)
It wouldn't get those kids back. They'd still get beat up by the jocks for playing that game. In fact, you'd probably get beat up more if you were any good at it and could impress girls. Competitio
I question the necessity of PE altogether (Score:3, Funny)
While exercise is an important activity, should the schools be in the business of providing instruction in exercise? Even if so, should it be a requirement and should it be graded? A student with palsy will always fail through no fault of his own.
In the end, PE provides no preparation for life which other classes at least provide a semblence of. There is nothing that PE provides that cannot be acquired via after-school activities. There is no "how many situps can you do in one minute" tests for any job that one would reasonably encounter in the private sector.
PE has outlived its purpose and should be done away with. If the result is a generation of obese kids, then so be it.
Re:I question the necessity of PE altogether (Score:5, Insightful)
You are not being graded at all based upon if you can do something or not. You're PE grade has nothing to do with if you did a certain number of situps by a certain ammount of time. Your grade has everything to do with if you bothered to try at all -- If you participated and made the effort.
There's plenty of students who wish to use whatever condition they have, real or imagined as an excuse to not even attempt. There are, of course, certain situations where this is entirely valid... However, I think it's an alarming trend in society, especially to be embraced by students where the problem isn't an obstacle so much as it is a crutch to wave in people's faces.
A good PE instructor isn't out to make anyone feel left out or inferior. It's to make everyone try and work together and improve what they can and find out what strengths they may have. And this is coming from a mediocre PE student at best. I couldn't run, I couldn't do a billion situps, I was generally weak and couldn't shoot a basket to save my life... but I sure kicked my class's ass at dodgeball.
On another note -- While I find DDR's idea of electronic music to be kinda fruity and I think a lot of it is silly, I do see merit in people using it as a good excuse for exercise. I've known several people who shed a lot of weight over one summer when they took up DDR and cut down on the soda. I almost envy them.
I think perhaps Konami could find a market in producing an 'Educational' version of DDR for use in American schools. I'd actually support such an idea if executed properly.
Re:I question the necessity of PE altogether (Score:1)
While I agree that this should be the case, there are still many schools, at least in my area, that still grade PE based on ability and not on effort. (All the schools I know of that do this are public schools.) For ex
Re:I question the necessity of PE altogether (Score:1)
That's terrible. I've never been able to run a full lap, even at my best physical shape. (I have asthma, and it was really severe when I was a child, so I've never really learned to run).
I guess I was lucky that my teachers gave us "A"s as long as
Re:I question the necessity of PE altogether (Score:2)
I think you're forgetting about the vast majority of the cases. These are people who while they might want to make an effort, decide
Re:I question the necessity of PE altogether (Score:2)
In theory, yes this is true. But in reality, when you go to a public school gym class you got a bare minimum
PE = Poor Grades for geeks! (Score:1)
I received C's in PE because the grade was composed of two parts:
50 % Written Tests
50 % Absolute Physical Performance
For running a mile, it went something like
A = 5 minutes
B = 6 minutes
C = 7 minutes
D = 8 minutes
F = 9 minutes
Simliar scales existed for pullups, push-ups, etc.
As you might guess, I got A's in the written tests and F's in the other...
Only C's ever in my life too....
In case you are wondering, I am not the stereoty
Re:PE = Poor Grades for geeks! (Score:1)
I realize that you are probably making those numbers up, but i was on the varsity track team at my high school (though not as a runner) and I would have been hard pressed to get a C in your gym class. I always loved the hammer throw. It was like artillery, but you didn't have to mess with gunpowder.
Re:PE = Poor Grades for geeks! (Score:1)
That's what I got for going to a private school....
No, I am not making those numbers up! PE coaches there were not the 'academic' kind at all.
I improved from running a mile in 10+ minus to 8:30, still didn't get me more than an F! (I think 8 min was the max for an D)
I did have one friend that ran it in 4:30. Needless to say, he lapped me before I got half way around... Spooky!
Re:I question the necessity of PE altogether (Score:2, Insightful)
Re:I question the necessity of PE altogether (Score:1)
If PE is supposed to teach you that, why are there so many group projects in every other class? I hated nothing more than being graded on a group effort in classes in which I normally could do well on my own, because it meant balancing the effort between people without suffering by a reduced grade. Still, I did it, over and over and over again, and now you t
Re:I question the necessity of PE altogether (Score:5, Insightful)
While thinking is an important activity, should the schools be in the business of providing instruction in algebra? Even if so, should it be a requirement and should it be graded? A student with mental retardation will always fail through no fault of his own.
In the end, algebra provides no preparation for life which other classes at least provide a semblence of. There is nothing that algebra provides that cannot be acquired via after-school activities. There is no "how fast can you factor this quadratic equation" test for any job that one would reasonably encounter in the private sector.
Algebra has outlived its purpose and should be done away with. If the result is a generation of stupid kids, then so be it.
Parent should be modded "Insightful" (Score:4, Insightful)
Remember, schools are supposed to be in the occupation of education. That includes education of the body as much as it does the mind.
Rob
Re:Parent should be modded "Insightful" (Score:1, Interesting)
When making this point, though, remember one thing about school starting from high school onwards (in most areas): algebra and basic mathematics are not taught in the same classroom.
My PE classes in high school consisted of roughly 50-100 students, with no division based on ability. The kid with a bad limp from a car accident was in the same class as the s
Re:Parent should be modded "Insightful" (Score:2)
Neither are general PE and varsity sports.
Rob
Re:I question the necessity of PE altogether (Score:1)
Re:I question the necessity of PE altogether (Score:2)
Besides, it's not necessarily the skill used to "factor this quadratic equation," it's the abstract level of thinking required to perform the calculation.
Hmmm...wait a second...your email address includes mathlete and perhaps I am preachin
Re:I question the necessity of PE altogether (Score:2)
Re:I question the necessity of PE altogether (Score:1, Insightful)
Exercising and staying healthy is an extremely important part of life. It's not one you have to participate in if you don't want to - just as you don't have to learn basic math, if you're dead set on being ignorant.
A good PE class gives instruction on how to do these things, and introduces students to a wide variety of activities. Sure, they could figure these things out after class, but you could say that about Calculus as well.
It's just like
Why was this modded down? (Score:2)
Yes, sometimes the truth hurts, but that doesn't make it "overrated."
Rob
Re:I question the necessity of PE altogether (Score:1)
How would it be harmful? (Score:1)
bmtss bmtss bmtss (Score:5, Funny)
Sure, if they're teaching Dance Dance Revolution.
*pictures my 300-pound high school gym coach playing DDR, in slow motion
On second thought, I don't think it'll work.
Enlighten me? (Score:3, Insightful)
Now...I suppose that having students play videogames in class WOULD raise some eyebrows-incredulity in parents and administrators, interest in students-but wouldn't it be somewhat counter-intuitive? If PE is supposed to promote physical activity and fitness...sports or no sports, it's still a videogame, and still exercises only the hands and mind. (then again, exercising the mind isn't a bad ides)
Were they to use DDR as some others have mentioned, it would at least make more sense. Hell...I'd have enjoyed gym class far more than only in my final year of high school if I could've danced (badly, mind you...apparently we Irish have no coordination, Michael Flatley notwithstanding
Oh, yeah, the Irish bit was a joke-no offense intended (I'm insulting myself as much as anyone else anyway)
Re:Enlighten me? (Score:1)
I'd love to play quidditch for real, but none of my brooms gets airborn... your insensitive clod!
Re:Enlighten me? (Score:3, Interesting)
VR with movement | Arcades (Score:1)
If you're running around you get a longer lasting pick-me-up but I find that with games you just get addicted so while it's good for the first 10 hours you then get a bit depressed and withdrawn.
I'd really like to be able to combine the two like:
- DDR
- the arcade games where you do something physical; the rowing games, paddle games, mountain biking, surf, skate, racing games that move you, VR games that get you to move... etc
The prob
Playstation? (Score:3, Informative)
Get a couple PCs on a LAN on the gym floor with wolfenstein enemy territory or something. Nothing like having your secret admirer take a bullet for you. The losers have to do 200 pushups... there you go.
Hey! I've been there (Score:3, Interesting)
In that county school system (my old one, I was at Niceville High), Fort Walton Beach high school would get the "less desirable" kids.. I guess they were just tryin' to help some of 'em get through school, w/out failing in PE, as they have enough problems already
And yes, in Okaloosa County, we had to take 2 years of PE classes, and they were in fact graded, A-F.. one semister was a dual health education/PE class, but the others generally used "improvement" methods.. so however well you did at the beginning of the semister in running a mile, push-ups, sit ups, long jumps.. You damn well do better by the end of the semister, or you would in fact get a crappy grade, or worse.. and I knew people who failed PE, which then in fact seriously affected their lives (one of whom dropped out)
Re:Hey! I've been there (Score:1)
My high school had something like that. At some point a couple students wised up and "sand-bagged" their performance during the initial evaluation so that at the end of the semester they'd
Heh. (Score:5, Insightful)
A good start to help control obesity among teens would be to stop putting candy and soda machines in their schools. Having them sit on their ass for an hour every day playing Mario Kart would *not* help.
Re:Heh. (Score:1)
But, some people can eat extremely high calorie diets and not gain weight if they are active enough. I can personally vouch for that from my first season of varsity track in college. Because of the 3 hours a da of running and lifting I was lo
Re:Heh. (Score:1)
It's probably not true for everyone, but I find that increasing exercise and holding food intake constant is a lot easier than just dieting.
Re:Heh. (Score:3, Informative)
Removing the candy and pop isn't the cure. Educating people how not to get fat is the cure.
All we need... (Score:2)
Re:All we need... (Score:1)
Maybe just DDR is a better workout than you think!
My school actually does let you play DDR (Score:4, Funny)
With the bringing of so much expensive equipment (namely the Playstation) there were some concerns about theft, but it's a small school, and there haven't been any problems yet, except people try to bribe others into using their Playstations
It seems to work well and encourage those who don't like "conventional" work-outs. But the sports video games... eh, I don't think playing Madden will encourage anyone to acutally play football.
the boringness of gym class (Score:1)
Re:the boringness of gym class (Score:2)
It actually helps. You've never going to be entertained if you don't want to be, and all it takes is some kind of goal if you do.
After all, winning a race is exactly as good as getting a good score in a game, really.
Re:the boringness of gym class (Score:1)
it does make sense (Score:1)
At the same time, you could say that some kids (esp. obese ones) seek videogames because they can master them and win, whereas they always get their ass kicked in PE. Thus, bringing videogames in PE class would help them get back a bit by actually winning for once in a while (or at least leveling the chances). So even obese kid
Perhaps (Score:2)
whether public schools are a valid approach.
Forget phy ed, what about physics? I'd rather
send my child into rotating knives than a
public school.
Re:Perhaps (Score:2, Interesting)
Re:Perhaps (Score:1)
this is a great idea... (Score:1)
It is hard to get an understanding of the deeper tactical levels involved in a sport when all you know is the basic rules that apply to you as an individual player. Sports games often give you a chance to experience the perspective of the coach, and therefore understand your own role in the team much better.