fit body fit mind physical fitness & wellness department lansing community college amy stoakes,...

35
Fit Body Fit Mind Physical Fitness & Wellness Department Lansing Community College Amy Stoakes, MS, CES Program Director

Upload: evelyn-clark

Post on 29-Dec-2015

218 views

Category:

Documents


1 download

TRANSCRIPT

Page 1: Fit Body Fit Mind Physical Fitness & Wellness Department Lansing Community College Amy Stoakes, MS, CES Program Director

Fit BodyFit Mind

Physical Fitness & Wellness Department

Lansing Community College

Amy Stoakes, MS, CESProgram Director

Page 2: Fit Body Fit Mind Physical Fitness & Wellness Department Lansing Community College Amy Stoakes, MS, CES Program Director

Fit Body – Fit Mind

Fit Body – Fit Mind

• Old and new research is coming together regarding physical activity and learning and the bottom line is….

• Physical activity is related to brain health

• Brain Rule # 1

Page 3: Fit Body Fit Mind Physical Fitness & Wellness Department Lansing Community College Amy Stoakes, MS, CES Program Director

SPARK

“Both the body, and the brain, work together. We have to see it as part of the

curriculum.”

The Revolutionary New Science of Exercise and the Brain

John Ratey, MD (2008)

Page 4: Fit Body Fit Mind Physical Fitness & Wellness Department Lansing Community College Amy Stoakes, MS, CES Program Director

Key ingredient

Exercise fires the same

neural connections

that the brain uses to read,

write & compute

Page 5: Fit Body Fit Mind Physical Fitness & Wellness Department Lansing Community College Amy Stoakes, MS, CES Program Director

Exercise benefits (CDC, 2010)

Exercise increases biochemical changes:

• cerebral capillary growth

• blood flow to the brain

• Neurotrophin production

• Growth of nerve cells in the hippocampus

• neurotransmitter levels

• nerve connections

• density of neural networks

• brain tissue volume

Page 6: Fit Body Fit Mind Physical Fitness & Wellness Department Lansing Community College Amy Stoakes, MS, CES Program Director

Research (Ratey, 2008)

Exercise improves learning:

Optimizes mind-set

Improved neural connections

Angiogenesis

Page 7: Fit Body Fit Mind Physical Fitness & Wellness Department Lansing Community College Amy Stoakes, MS, CES Program Director

Executive Function

Exercise feeds the brain:

glucose + oxygen=

builds greater connections

between neurons

Page 8: Fit Body Fit Mind Physical Fitness & Wellness Department Lansing Community College Amy Stoakes, MS, CES Program Director

BDNF – “Miracle Grow” for the brain

Exercise activates, BDNF, a neuron growth factor:

• Enhance knowledge• Improve memory• Increase critical

thinking skills• keeps us alert• reduces stress

= ready to learn

Page 9: Fit Body Fit Mind Physical Fitness & Wellness Department Lansing Community College Amy Stoakes, MS, CES Program Director

Memory & Learning

Exercise has the most

effect on the hippocampus

…Where memory

and learning take place

Page 10: Fit Body Fit Mind Physical Fitness & Wellness Department Lansing Community College Amy Stoakes, MS, CES Program Director

10

Students should have a kinesthetic brain break every 25-30 minutes.

Page 11: Fit Body Fit Mind Physical Fitness & Wellness Department Lansing Community College Amy Stoakes, MS, CES Program Director

Exercise Intensity

There is a linear relationship

between heart rate &

academic performance

Page 12: Fit Body Fit Mind Physical Fitness & Wellness Department Lansing Community College Amy Stoakes, MS, CES Program Director

Academic Performance (CDC, 2010)

Exercise impacts:

• standardized test scores

• Grade point average (GPA)

• Attention

• Behavior

Page 13: Fit Body Fit Mind Physical Fitness & Wellness Department Lansing Community College Amy Stoakes, MS, CES Program Director

Mind and Body

• Exercise can not only keep you fit, but can make you smarter.

• A school in Illinois has developed a program that gets students moving and learning.

• Mind and Body

Page 14: Fit Body Fit Mind Physical Fitness & Wellness Department Lansing Community College Amy Stoakes, MS, CES Program Director

Naperville High School, 1990’s

How Exercise for Learning Readiness started…

Zero Hour PE

•Freshmen needing to increase Literacy

•Expanded to include Algebra

Page 15: Fit Body Fit Mind Physical Fitness & Wellness Department Lansing Community College Amy Stoakes, MS, CES Program Director

Naperville Zero Hour PE class

Year's growth0

0.2

0.4

0.6

0.8

1

1.2

1.4

1.6

PE + Literacy groupLiteracy only

Page 16: Fit Body Fit Mind Physical Fitness & Wellness Department Lansing Community College Amy Stoakes, MS, CES Program Director

Naperville Zero Hour PE class

% improvement standardized test scores0

5

10

15

20

25

PE + AlgebraAlgebra only

Page 17: Fit Body Fit Mind Physical Fitness & Wellness Department Lansing Community College Amy Stoakes, MS, CES Program Director

Zero Hour PE class delay

% Improvement - Algebra

% Improvement - Literacy

0

5

10

15

20

25

LRPE several hour delay

LRPE Immediate prior

Grade Level Increase0

0.20.40.60.8

11.21.41.6

LRPE several hour delay

LRPE Immediate before

Page 18: Fit Body Fit Mind Physical Fitness & Wellness Department Lansing Community College Amy Stoakes, MS, CES Program Director

Titusville Pennsylvania, 2000

• Low income district

• Below state average in reading & math tests

• Restructured school day: shaving time from academic classes to make time for daily gym.

• Increased standardized test scores•17% above state avg – Reading•18% above state avg - Math

• Decreased aggressive behavior!

Page 19: Fit Body Fit Mind Physical Fitness & Wellness Department Lansing Community College Amy Stoakes, MS, CES Program Director

California Department of Education, 2001

• Longitudinal study (since 2001)

• > 1 million students 3-9th grades

• Students with higher fitness scores have higher standardized test scores

•Fit kids scored twice as well on academic tests as unfit peers

•Lower SES status kids scored higher than unfit peers

• Lead to requirements for students to participate in physical education in school

Page 20: Fit Body Fit Mind Physical Fitness & Wellness Department Lansing Community College Amy Stoakes, MS, CES Program Director

Texas 2007-2008

2.4 million Texan students grades 3-12

• Students who are physically fit are more likely to:•Perform well on the state standardized tests

•Have better school attendance

•Less likely to have discipline issues

Page 21: Fit Body Fit Mind Physical Fitness & Wellness Department Lansing Community College Amy Stoakes, MS, CES Program Director

University of Illinois Study, 2009

Expanded version of CDE study

During cognitive testing used EEG measured- attention, working memory & processing speed

Increased fitness correlated with increased test scores

Decrease in the number of mistakes kids made during tests

Lead to a formal recommendation from a panel of researchers!

Page 22: Fit Body Fit Mind Physical Fitness & Wellness Department Lansing Community College Amy Stoakes, MS, CES Program Director

22University of Illinois Study, 2009

Page 23: Fit Body Fit Mind Physical Fitness & Wellness Department Lansing Community College Amy Stoakes, MS, CES Program Director

Saginaw Valley State University, 2010

• 266 undergraduate students

• Students who regularly exercise vigorously = higher G.P.A.’s

• Does exercise really boost grades, or are academic achievers more likely to be higher achievers in exercise as well?

•YES! It does boost grades. •Controlled for confounding factors

Page 24: Fit Body Fit Mind Physical Fitness & Wellness Department Lansing Community College Amy Stoakes, MS, CES Program Director

2424

The Association Between School-Based Physical Activity,

Including Physical Education, and Academic Performance

U.S. Department of Health and Human Services Centers for Disease Control and Prevention National Center for Chronic Disease Prevention and Health Promotion Division of Adolescent and School Health www.cdc.gov/HealthyYouthApril 2010

Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. The association between school- based physical activity, including physical education, and academic performance. Atlanta, GA: U.S. Department of Health and Human Services; 2010.

Page 25: Fit Body Fit Mind Physical Fitness & Wellness Department Lansing Community College Amy Stoakes, MS, CES Program Director

2525

Implications for Policy• Substantial evidence physical activity improves academic achievement

• Physical activity impacts cognitive skills, attitudes, & academic behavior = academic performance

• Schools should continue to offer and/or increase opportunities for physical activity

•Increasing/maintaining time dedicated to PE may help & DOES NOT adversely impact academic performance

Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. The association between school- based physical activity, including physical education, and academic performance. Atlanta, GA: U.S. Department of Health and Human Services; 2010.

Page 26: Fit Body Fit Mind Physical Fitness & Wellness Department Lansing Community College Amy Stoakes, MS, CES Program Director

College student barriers

College students:

• Physical activity levels decrease after high school•Participate in fewer organized sports•No physical education curriculum•Significant change of life events

•School•Work•Family •Balancing new demands•Not enough time

Page 27: Fit Body Fit Mind Physical Fitness & Wellness Department Lansing Community College Amy Stoakes, MS, CES Program Director

LCC physical activity survey, 2010

Physical Activity Survey

• Fall 2010 Semester

• Survey results (n= 612)

Page 28: Fit Body Fit Mind Physical Fitness & Wellness Department Lansing Community College Amy Stoakes, MS, CES Program Director

Knowledge of physical activity benefits

Control weight

Lower risk of

disease

Improve attention

Improve memory

Improve grades

0

10

20

30

40

50

60

70

80

90% students perceived activity benefits

% students perceived activity benefits

Page 29: Fit Body Fit Mind Physical Fitness & Wellness Department Lansing Community College Amy Stoakes, MS, CES Program Director

Does knowledge = participation?

Students who knew about the cognitive benefits of physical activity, had a higher probability of participation in walking or

moderate physical activity:

ADHDImprove GPA/test scores/class gradesImprove learning

Page 30: Fit Body Fit Mind Physical Fitness & Wellness Department Lansing Community College Amy Stoakes, MS, CES Program Director

LCC’s “Zero Hour PE” class

Exercise & Learning Readiness

PFFT 110

Tues/Thurs 8:30-9:30 AM

• Started in Fall 2009

Page 31: Fit Body Fit Mind Physical Fitness & Wellness Department Lansing Community College Amy Stoakes, MS, CES Program Director

Physical Activity Classes

Any physical activity class:

Provides aerobic exerciseIncreases heart ratesProvides academic encouragement

Will provide cognitive benefitsMore is better!

Page 32: Fit Body Fit Mind Physical Fitness & Wellness Department Lansing Community College Amy Stoakes, MS, CES Program Director

Physical Fitness & Wellness Department

Brain Break activities

Activity Breaks

PFW Department website link:

http://www.lcc.edu

Page 33: Fit Body Fit Mind Physical Fitness & Wellness Department Lansing Community College Amy Stoakes, MS, CES Program Director

Knowledge CAN = Participation

• There is a positive relationship between physical activity & academic achievement

• Unfortunately, not enough students know about it…

Page 34: Fit Body Fit Mind Physical Fitness & Wellness Department Lansing Community College Amy Stoakes, MS, CES Program Director

Improve student success

Inform students about the relationship between physical activity and academic performance

Perform Brain & Activity breaks in your classes

Include this information in your class if possible

Encourage your students to exercise

Page 35: Fit Body Fit Mind Physical Fitness & Wellness Department Lansing Community College Amy Stoakes, MS, CES Program Director

Questions ???

Questions ??

You may also contact me at:

[email protected]

Desk: 267-5907

PFW office: 483-1227