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    The Recess Regimen: District Schools Seek to Bring Order to Play

    Ohanian Note: When I posted the article below, I was busy and made no comment other than noting that your interpretation of the outrage depends on how you view children's play. Maybe we can be glad that these schools still have recess, but surely we must question how much value is erased by all the regimentation and adult direction. Anne Trudeau's great comment puts things in perspective.

    Anne Trudeau Comment:

    Not long after I became a parent twelve years ago, I began writing a book in my head called "The Commodification of Childhood". I noticed that the simplest interactions between humans, in particular parents and children, were being repackaged and sold to us. Lactation experts for breastfeeding. Music Together teachers for singing and clapping with toddlers. Preschool messy art programs. $30/hr for cooking classes for kids. The list continues into adulthood.

    My parents were down-to-earth, practical people, working class Detroiters who grew up in the Depression. My brothers and sisters and I learned sewing, knitting, embroidering, research skills, carpentry, birdwatching, gardening, cooking, home repair, and more from my parents and from each other. My mother took us on "field trips" everywhere from the local Ford plant to the nuclear power plant south of Detroit.

    We played pick-up games of baseball, football, and basketball in our yards and on the street for hours and hours until the streetlights flickered on. There were no adult coaches and umpires, no uniforms, no schedules, no practices. Just the kids in the neighborhood, teaching each other how to play, making up the rules and settling disputes. We quit when we got tired of the game.We did not know that we were learning team-building, getting exercise and fresh air. We didn't care.

    A lot of stuff we learned from benign neglect. We scrounged wood scraps and nails and made forts. This resulted in more than one trip to the doctor to get tetanus shot updates when we stepped on rusty nails. In one infamous incident my older brother got his finger stuck between two beaters when he was making a cake. That same brother went to Nepal for two years, and told my irreverent mother that what kept him calm when he was lost on a back road between India and Nepal was recollecting her voice. She would holler back from the driver's seat of the station wagon full of kids on some trip to a some place we had never been to before: "We're not lost. We're having an adventure!". I try to remember that voice now, in this world where unsupervised play and exploration is considered dangerous.

    So when I read about the paid recess consultant from the Washington Pos article you posted recently, I scoffed and shuddered and wondered when people are going to stop buying the snake oil, the myth that we do not have the common sense to care for our children, that unless something is sold to you it is worth nothing.


    The Recess Regimen: District Schools Seek to Bring Order to Play

    By Bill Turque


    Brearn Wright Jr. remembers recess during his
    first year as principal of Clark Elementary
    School in Petworth as "like a MASH unit."

    "Recess time was the time the school nurse
    dreaded, because she knew she'd have so many
    kids waiting in the lobby" to be treated for
    injuries from fighting or falling, Wright said.

    Traditionally the one period of the school day
    when children are free of adult-imposed
    structure, recess is increasingly regarded by
    educators as a trouble spot. They say that in
    the Xbox- and Internet-dominated world of many
    students, the culture of healthy group play has
    eroded, turning recess into a chaotic and
    sometimes violent period where strife from the
    schoolyard can spill over into afternoon
    classes.

    So last year Wright decided to outsource
    recess. He hired Sports4Kids, an Oakland,
    Calif.-based nonprofit organization that
    introduces students to a regimen of traditional
    playground games, along with a more closely
    supervised version of such team sports as
    basketball. The program also stresses conflict
    resolution, with disagreements mediated by, of
    all things, rock-paper-scissors.

    In the past two years, principals at 14
    elementary and middle schools in the District
    have signed up with the group, joining more
    than 160 schools in cities that include
    Baltimore, Boston and St. Louis. The group's
    reach will soon be expanding dramatically.
    Tomorrow, the Robert Wood Johnson Foundation is
    scheduled to announce a five-year, $18.7
    million grant that will bring Sports4Kids to as
    many as 650 schools in 27 cities, targeting
    about 1 million children from low-income
    families.

    Educators and health experts say recess is an
    important -- and underutilized -- opportunity
    to promote physical fitness and social
    development. A 2007 Johnson Foundation study
    found that, for children in first through sixth
    grades, recess represents more than 40 percent
    of the available time in a given school week
    for physical activity, more than PE classes or
    after-school programs.

    "Recess is one of the best opportunities not
    only to help kids become more active, but to
    teach the life skills that will help them live
    healthier lives," said Robert Wood Johnson
    president Risa Lavizzo-Mourey.

    It also means that this is not the free-for-all
    that recess used to be. At the Brookland at
    Bunker Hill Education Campus in Northeast
    Washington one afternoon last week, the first
    of two recess periods began with 100 or so
    fifth- to seventh-graders forming a half-dozen
    straight lines in front of Brad Riley, the
    young "site manager" who led them in jumping
    jacks.

    When they dispersed, it was to designated
    areas, marked by Riley with small orange pylons
    or chalk lines on the asphalt. There was
    "snowball alley" (a dialed-back version of
    dodge ball), jump rope, three-on-three
    basketball and foursquare. Disputes are
    resolved by rock-paper-scissors.

    "Booyah!" Riley chanted, using an "attention
    getter" that the kids repeat as he organizes a
    game.

    Sports4Kids is the creation of Jill Vialet, a
    former Harvard University basketball player who
    began the venture 12 years ago at two Berkeley,
    Calif., schools. She was operating a children's
    museum in Oakland when she encountered four
    children sitting outside a school principal's
    office, ejected for fighting at recess. As she
    started to observe schoolyards, it struck her
    that games fell apart quickly and that slights
    easily escalated into serious conflicts.

    "Knowing how to play in a healthy way is not an
    innate skill. It's learned," she said.

    Schools pay about $25,000 a year for Vialet's
    program; she raises the rest, about $45,000 per
    school, from private donors. For their money,
    schools get someone such as Riley, who walks
    students through the forgotten nuances of
    double Dutch and kickball. Teachers also
    receive training, so they can assist the site
    managers.

    Riley, who runs both of the school's recess
    periods (the other is for first through fifth
    grades), leads snowball alley with a light but
    steady hand.

    "Let me see everybody in rolling position," he
    says to a row of kids poised to roll their
    large rubber balls across the grass to another
    line of students. Those running between the
    lines have to maneuver around the balls.

    Riley warns against throwing the balls, but one
    boy lofts his into the air, hitting a girl
    running the gantlet squarely, although not
    seriously, in the neck.

    Riley quietly takes the snowball alley scofflaw
    aside. "You know you're not supposed to do
    that," he said, before letting him back into
    the game.

    On the other side of the schoolyard, Vialet,
    visiting for the day, is observing three-on-
    three basketball. "Watch the hand checks!" she
    says.

    At least half of the students at Brookland at
    Bunker Hill and the 13 other D.C. schools that
    have hired Sport4Kids are from low-income
    families. Vialet said that's where her donors
    are interested in spending money. Educators say
    that although Sports4Kids would work anywhere,
    kids from neighborhoods with a dearth of
    organized sports programs and crime that keeps
    many of them indoors face special deficits in
    learning how to play.

    "A lot of our students don't have models for
    what meaningful play looks like," said Stephen
    Zrike Jr., principal of William Ohrenberger
    Elementary in the West Roxbury section of
    Boston, where a study by the Harvard Graduate
    School of Education reported a reduction in
    fights and disciplinary problems after the
    introduction of Sports4Kids.

    What the kids themselves think is difficult to
    know for sure, because interviews for this
    report were conducted in the company of an
    assistant principal at Brookland at Bunker
    Hill. Fifth-grader Bryant Jones, 10, said that
    before Sports4Kids, recess was "a little
    boring," Jaden Wilson, also 10, said he liked
    the organization.

    "I like the lines for the games," he said, "so
    that people don't say, 'Hey, you pushed me.' "

    As for Wright, after Clark Elementary closed in
    June, he took Sports4Kids with him to his new
    assignment at Truesdell Educational Center, a
    school for grades pre-K through 8 in Petworth.

    "Our school system has failed historically to
    teach our kids how to resolve conflicts,"
    Wright said. "In the neighborhood, the one way
    to resolve conflict is to put your hands or a
    weapon on someone." Sports4Kids won't solve all
    of that, he said, but it's a start.

    "So they can move beyond rock-paper-scissors."







    — Bill Turque with comment by Anne Trudeau
    Washington Post
    2008-09-17


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