Physical fitness is an important issue for this nation to face, the obesity rate is going up and so is the rate of income inequality. Physical fitness education is also important, but something needs to be done about the way that the President's Council on Fitness, Sports and Nutrition conducts its mission. Awarding children based on their physical fitness is unfair, psychologically damaging and counterproductive. It needs to stop.
The chart below from the CDC shows the rates of obesity among children and adolescents
Physical fitness is an issue that is often out of the control of the child, since children cannot control what their parents can afford to feed them. It is no secret that the least expensive food is often devoid of any real nutritional value and the required exercise to burn off the empty calories is difficult to achieve. So when little Johnny gets skipped over for an award because his single mother can only afford to feed him mac and cheese, he feels like there is something wrong with him and his feelings are hurt. Any child who is left out for an award is hurt, especially when it isn't their fault.
Physical fitness test day is a dreaded time for students who aren't physically fit. Struggling with weight issues is so incredibly hard for a child, especially in a culture that places so much value on being thin. Self-esteem for these children is non existent on test day, when all the children line up to run a mile.
Little Johnny didn't get very much sleep last night because he overheard his single mother talking with the landlord about late rent payments. He didn't eat a very healthy dinner, some macaroni and cheese with hot dogs. So when he goes to school the next morning to take the physical fitness test he is dreading it the entire time. He lined up with the rest of the students for the mile run, when he tried to run he got winded so he decided the best thing to do would be to try his best to walk it out. His more physically fit friends lapped him and with each pass of another person he felt worse and worse.
It is a bit dramatized, but it is a reality that thousands of children living in poverty face every day. What is the point of inflicting this kind of emotional torture on children? What is the point of giving a child an award based on how many push ups they can do or how fast they can run? The government and school systems that implement this test must believe that competition and awards motivate children to do better. Actually it is quite the opposite.
The experts like Alfie Kohn agree that awards do not work, motivation for anything including physical fitness can not be forced- it must come intrinsically. From the flap of his book
Punished By Rewards
"Our basic strategy for raising children, teaching
students, and managing workers can be summarized in six words: Do this and
you'll get that. We dangle goodies (from candy bars to sales commissions) in
front of people in much the same way that we train the family pet.
In this groundbreaking book, Alfie Kohn shows that while
manipulating people with incentives seems to work in the short run, it is a
strategy that ultimately fails and even does lasting harm. Our workplaces
and classrooms will continue to decline, he argues, until we begin to question
our reliance on a theory of motivation derived from laboratory animals.
Drawing from hundreds of studies, Kohn demonstrates that
people actually do inferior work when they are enticed with money, grades, or
other incentives. Programs that use rewards to change people's behavior are
similarly ineffective over the long run. Promising goodies to children for good
behavior can never produce anything more than temporary obedience. In fact, the
more we use artificial inducements to motivate people, the more they lose
interest in what we're bribing them to do. Rewards turn play into work, and
work into drudgery"
Children are not lab rats, we cannot expect them to be
motivated by a certificate to live a healthy lifestyle, and children who have
hardly any control over their lifestyle only end up being singled out by this
process. Physical education should be just that, education about how to live a
healthy lifestyle and a time for fun exercising built in to the school week.
Just as general education shouldn't be a competition, neither should physical
education. The Presidential Fitness Test should no longer exist.