In response to this article titled: Yay for Recess: Pediatricians Say It’s as Important as Math or Reading
Love
that the medical profession is starting to raise a voice to this issue. The
only problem is the understated demeaning of recess – otherwise known as freedom
of movement without the restriction of direct adult influence.
Sure
the headline says the pediatricians believe recess is as important as math and
science. Then the quotes and statements in the article support the headline. But
then the doctors don’t treat recess as an equal.
In
the article, Murray says, “Children need to have downtime between
complex cognitive challenges. They tend to be less able to process information
the longer they are held to a task. It’s not enough to just switch from math to
English. You actually have to take a break.”
The statement appears innocuous on is surface.
But it’s wrong to infer that recess fails to involve complex cognitive
challenges.
Moving muscles stimulate axonal growth. Axons
carry messages between neurons. We have more than a 100 billion neurons at
birth, and every movement we make helps fire those neurons, creating more
thought pathways – helping us learn more. In one particular 1997 study,
completed by Paris’ Pasteur Institute and the Developmental Biology Institute
in Marseilles (Changeux and Henderson), it was found that the number of axons
is directly related to intelligence. Folks, who move more, benefit from that
development.
That study was buttressed by a 2002 study involving
500 school children that was completed at UC Irvine. That study (Quartz and
Sejnowski) found that children who spent an hour each day in physical education
class scored better on intelligence test than those who were inactive. These
studies have been replicated numerous times.
The movements during recess aren’t mental downtime.
That movement is learning. Running, jumping, kicking, hitting, throwing,
catching, squatting, bending, extending, twisting, dribbling and tumbling are all
complex cognitive challenge. The difference is the movements during recess are
perceived as fun activities for the children. Fun is an emotional construct. At
that age, we only have the ability to truly enjoy was we perceive as
pleasurable to us.
Mother Nature didn’t screw up anything. Our
brains were made to enjoy movement so we would want to move a lot. Sitting
around reading and looking at numbers and letters isn’t fun. But for those who
move more, sitting around is easier to tolerate.
This may seem like huffiness and puffiness from
a movement maven. But we must understand the power our pediatricians possess.
Recess IS NOT a break from learning, but they’re inferring that it is.
How did we get into this educational mess
anyway? We got here because somebody incorrectly deemed physical education and
recess as less important aspects of the academic structure.
--MFB
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