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General Parenting
Rather irked at the state's requirements.
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<blockquote data-quote="InsaneCdn" data-source="post: 606455" data-attributes="member: 11791"><p>HOURS of physical activity... might make sense. If a kid is active in three sports outside of class, those hours count. If a kid is in scouts and doing wood-splitting at camp, that counts. But so does walking the dog around the block three times, or scrubbing the kitchen floor, mowing the lawn (except riding mower), etc. ACTIVITY can be almost anything that gets your heart rate up in a healthy way (getting mad doesn't count).</p><p> </p><p>If the standard is 10 hours of physical activity per week... it's a challenge for most families to figure out how to get there but it might make the parents healthier too. Five hours in school, and five hours at home... not bad. Then, give the kids the option to do alternative ACTIVITIES for PE... like, shovel the sidewalk for the janitor, or move a couple of pallets of printer paper into storage. Get creative!</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="InsaneCdn, post: 606455, member: 11791"] HOURS of physical activity... might make sense. If a kid is active in three sports outside of class, those hours count. If a kid is in scouts and doing wood-splitting at camp, that counts. But so does walking the dog around the block three times, or scrubbing the kitchen floor, mowing the lawn (except riding mower), etc. ACTIVITY can be almost anything that gets your heart rate up in a healthy way (getting mad doesn't count). If the standard is 10 hours of physical activity per week... it's a challenge for most families to figure out how to get there but it might make the parents healthier too. Five hours in school, and five hours at home... not bad. Then, give the kids the option to do alternative ACTIVITIES for PE... like, shovel the sidewalk for the janitor, or move a couple of pallets of printer paper into storage. Get creative! [/QUOTE]
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Rather irked at the state's requirements.
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