Health topic: Physical Activity Health Promotion

Move more, sit less

What’s it about?

This strategy limits periods of sedentary time at school (like sitting down or waiting in line) and replaces it with opportunities that get students moving, including:

  • Light physical activity, like standing, walking, or stretching
  • Moderate-to-vigorous physical activity, like aerobic dance, running games, and jumping rope
  • Trading indoor time for outdoor time (where students tend to get active naturally)

Moving more and sitting less is a natural extension to physical education, but it's much more than that. It prioritizes everyday school experiences that are physically active, and taps into what many educators know to be true: movement-based teaching and learning is purposeful, engaging, and fun. 

 

What’s involved?

Go cross-curricular

Combine physical activity with academic content across subject areas to create active learning opportunities. Embed movement that’s relevant to the learning task at hand, or simply get students moving during curriculum-based instruction. Here are some examples:

  • Have students move around the classroom as they discuss, share, or reflect on a problem.
  • Use rhythm or dance to help students learn patterns or practice vocabulary or spelling.
  • Have students jump, lunge, or stretch to indicate if an answer is true or false.
  • Try Move & play through traditional games activities to explore Indigenous cultures or civilizations of the world.
  • Get students moving as they explore scientific concepts like speed, friction, and aerodynamics.
  • Take learning outdoors—to natural areas, local parks, community gardens, trails and the like. Active experiences in the natural environment go hand-in-hand with science and social studies.

 

Create physical activity bursts 

Plan short bouts or bursts of physical activity for when students’ energy or attention levels drop. They help to break up sedentary time, and may help students focus when seated instruction continues.

Physical activity bursts should be simple, quick, and doable in the space available, like beside a desk or table. They’re sometimes referred to as movement breaks, energizers, or body breaks, and may involve:

  • Fitness movements, like jumps, lunges, squats, or running on the spot
  • Activities from the Let’s warm-up! poster like stretches or yoga poses
  • Music-based activities, like dancing and rhythm 
  • Quick games, like Simon Says or Follow the Leader

With a little creativity and practice, physical activity bursts can be a routine part of life at school—try them as part of announcements, assemblies, or special events. They’re also a natural fit for transitions, like moving between classrooms.

This list of 20+ energizers from APPLE Schools is a great way to get started.

Get active by design

Simple tweaks to the design of your classroom or school environment may entice students to sweat, step, or stand more—sometimes without even realizing it!

  • Changing the physical space can limit opportunities to sit, and prompt natural movement during instructional time.
  • Changing the social space creates a culture where physical activity is the norm during both instructional and non-instructional time, like during recess, lunch, and before and after school.

Here are some design solutions:

Physical Space Social Space
  • Decals in the hallways or on the walls, like ones to jump over or reach for
  • Furniture or equipment that allows for students to stand, swivel, or change positions easily
  • Artwork and signage that encourages activity, movement, and getting outside
  • Open space in shared multi-purpose areas, like cafeterias and learning commons
  • Open space in outdoor areas, like fields, tracks, pathways, and gardens
  • Structured or semi-structured physical activity programs, like morning fitness groups, intramurals, AMA Youth Run Club, and athletic teams
  • Staff encouragement for students to try activities that suit their interests and passions, regardless of athletic ability
  • Student engagement around the sport and recreation equipment they’d like to have at school 
  • Policies and/or staff encouragement to limit sedentary screen time on school property during non-instructional hours

 

 

How it connects

Research suggests that when students move more and sit less at school, their overall levels of physical activity improve. They may also have better behaviour, attention, and focus in the classroom.

Get inspired with Culture in the halls! Find out how hallway decals based on the traditional teachings of the medicine wheel prompt physical activity in the Peace Wapiti Public School Division.

You might also like these related topics:

 

Resources

A Blackfoot movement story: An introduction to the Blackfoot creation story
Be Fit for Life and Partners

Alphabet animoves: Indigenous edition
Be Fit for Life and Partners

Energizers
APPLE Schools

How to sit less at school: A guide
Physical and Health Education (PHE) Canada

 

 

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