Healthy, stealthy and wise
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Michael Miller
Eastbluff Elementary School, the smallest campus in the Corona del
Mar zone, doesn’t have much of an athletic field. When students take
a 15-minute walk every day, they go in circles around the
hexagon-shaped buildings that house the school’s classrooms.
Those minutes of exercise add up.
On Friday, the President’s Council on Physical Fitness and Sports
presented the school with a Bronze Award for walking 4,000 minutes
over the last year -- an undertaking Principal Charlene Metoyer
dubbed the “Walk to Washington.” At an assembly, the school passed
out bronze medals to every student who had participated in the
program.
“‘Walk to Washington’ has been a phenomenal experience for every
student in our school,” Metoyer said. “I’m excited to think that all
this good health will spread to other schools.”
One year ago, Eastbluff -- led by parent volunteer Janice Morrow
-- started a physical fitness unit at the end of each day. For 15
minutes after class, students loosened up by strolling around the
blacktop, while also learning about geography. As the year
progressed, teachers held lessons on the Grand Canyon, the Rocky
Mountains and other national landmarks between Newport Beach and the
nation’s capitol.
In the end, the students’ combined walking time of 4,000 minutes
was enough to net 20,000 points from the President’s Council, a
Washington, D.C.-based group chaired by former NFL star Lynn Swann.
Next year, Morrow said, the school will increase its physical
activity to shoot for a Silver or Gold Award.
Medal or not, students found the daily walk at Eastbluff to be
welcome exercise.
“It’s kind of fun, because you get to talk to your friends and not
do much classwork,” said sixth-grader Taryn Greenberg, 11, although
she added, “I don’t like it on a hot day.”
Lauren Young, the president of Eastbluff’s PTA, said that her son,
Adam, a fourth-grader, cited the walk as one of his favorite parts of
the day.
“One of the things he talks about when he comes home is ‘Walk to
Washington,’” Young said. “He likes to walk with the special-ed
kids.”
On the same day as the Eastbluff assembly, Harbor View Elementary
announced that it would start a walking program of its own next fall
for the President’s Council. Principal Mellissia Christensen said she
hoped the program would reach out to students who didn’t exercise
much.
“Our kids are very active in recess and after-school sports, but
not all kids, so we’re going to try to target every child in the fall
-- not to mention a lot of staff members, including myself,”
Christensen said.
* IN THE CLASSROOM is a weekly feature in which Daily Pilot
education writer Michael Miller visits a campus in the Newport-Mesa
area and writes about his experience. He can be reached by e-mail at
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