Rounding the schoolyard |
You will see them again during lunch recess, racking up
hundreds of miles within the friendly confines of their schoolyard.
This is Operation Fit, a six-week, city-wide fitness program
for elementary students funded through a Battle Creek Community Foundation
grant. Ann Gallagher, St. Joseph preschool aide, heads up St. Joe’s effort.
“Our goal as a school and a community is to get kids moving,”
Ms. Gallagher said.
Ms. Gallagher tailored St. Joseph’s Mileage Club to fit the
grant criteria. Students walk the schoolyard along a specific route. After each
circuit, they swipe a personal bar code into an iPad app, which tracks their progress.
Tracking their progress |
Eight laps equal a mile and every mile gets students closer
to prizes like mileage tokens, wristbands,
T-shirts, water bottles, lunch with the principal, even Full Blast day passes.
Participation is voluntary; so is walking.
“They can run, they can skip – I don’t care how they do it
as long as they are moving,” Ms. Gallagher said.
On May 3rd, St. Joseph hosted an Operation Fit Family
Fun Night with Bronson Battle Creek. Healthy recipe demonstrations and
taste-testing were followed by more time
on the blacktop.
“We ate first and they were able to walk for an hour,” Ms.
Gallagher said. “Some kids did 30 laps that evening.”
Ms. Gallagher tracks miles before school and during lunch
recess – times that are open to all elementary students. At the end of the six
weeks, the top boy and top girl will receive a Razor scooter.
[l to r] Kolten Etheridge, Ann Gallagher, and Ryan Casterline |
Second-grader Kolten Etheridge and fifth-grader Ryan
Casterline are neck-and-neck for the top boy spot going into the final week.
“As soon as I come out the side doors, they are running,”
Ms. Gallagher said. “It’s really awesome to see them compete.”
Although they enjoy the competition, both boys enjoy moving.
“I think it’s a good way to get out and run and be more
athletic,” Ryan said.
“I love running and you can just run as much as you want,”
Kolten said. “And once you get up into those high levels, it feels good to be
up there.
As for the top two girls?
“I don’t know how competitive they are with each other,” Ms.
Gallagher said with a smile. “They are running together.”
The elementary school has totaled 1804.78 miles as of Monday
night. The real victory for Ms. Gallagher, however, is getting more kids to enjoy
exercise.
“If I could get a least one kid who didn’t exercise moving,
then I’ve done my job.”
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