Active Living Perspective
Foundational Objectives
Students will:
- Exhibit a physically active lifestyle.
- Achieve and maintain a health-enhancing level of physical fitness.
Active living is a concept describing a way of life that values physical activity
as an essential part of daily living. Active living places physical activity
within a broader perspective of total fitness or well-being. The nature, form,
frequency and intensity of physical activity is relative to each person’s ability,
needs, aspirations and environment. The concept goes beyond the physiological
aspects of physical activity to encompass the mental, emotional, spiritual and
social dimensions that make up the entire physical activity experience. It is
an integrated way of living.
The Canadian Summit on Fitness in 1986 was a landmark event in the evolution
of the fitness movement in Canada. Participants adopted a broad interpretation
of fitness as "a state of total well-being of the individual—physical,
mental, emotional, spiritual, and social".
This new meaning for fitness reflected changes in thinking about physical activity.
Although people may have acknowledged the value of regular vigorous exercise
and may have experienced the benefits of "20 to 30 minutes, a minimum of
three times a week," demands on their daily lives make it difficult for
many to follow through on their good intentions. They want more options that
would link fitness to their daily living patterns with less emphasis on counting
repetitions and measuring heart rate.
Following the summit conference, a process began that involved the Canadian
fitness community in the development of a new vision and a concept to respond
to this changing perspective. Fitness Canada published the results of this process,
Active Living: A Conceptual Overview (Fitness Canada, 1991). The document
describes active living as a way of life in which physical activity is valued
and integrated into daily life.
The conceptual overview states that:
- Active living is anchored in physical activity
and embraces a full spectrum
of physical activities, such as walking or wheeling to work, gardening, work-related
activity, ethnic dancing, fitness classes, recreational games and high performance
sports. The nature, form, frequency and intensity of the activity are relative
to each person’s ability, needs, aspirations and environment.
- Active living encompasses the entire experience of physical activity.
It integrates the physical or bodily movement aspect of physical activity
with its mental, emotional, social and spiritual dimensions.
- Active living focuses on the relevance of physical activity in daily life.
How and why people are involved in daily physical activity is affected by
daily schedules, environment, interactions with others, economic and social
status, past experiences, changing life situations, existing social norms
and values, and opinions of what constitutes a good life.
- Active living is about individual well-being.
How we experience well-being
is uniquely personal; it varies over time and among individuals.
The implementation of active living is guided by the following ideas:
- Active living is individual.
This principle supports individual empowerment
and the right of individuals to make choices and participate in collective
decisions affecting how they may wish to live actively.
- Active living is social.
This idea recognizes that people live in complex
societies where social institutions and cultural traditions play a central
role in how physical activities are conducted and experienced. Systems, processes
and institutions are needed that are responsive to the changing needs, aspirations
and values of Canadians.
- Active living is inclusive.
Active living is the right of all Canadians,
regardless of ability, age, gender, race, ethnicity, religion, socioeconomic
status, education level or geographical environment. Active living is relevant
and useful to communities.
- Active living goes beyond a traditional focus on individual lifestyle choices
and emphasizes the physical and social environments that facilitate or hinder
people’s ability and motivation to be active. These environments are shaped
in the communities where people live, learn, work and play. Active living
comes to life in community settings of all kinds.
- Active living is accessible and visible.
You do not need sophisticated
facilities and large budgets to support people’s efforts to walk, garden or
commute by bicycle.
- Active living is holistic.
Because it encompasses the physical, mental,
social and spiritual dimensions of physical activity, it has applications
in health promotion, recreation, leisure, sport, education, social services
and personal development.
- Active living supports other policies and services
such as the Canadian
Active Living Challenge, Quality Daily Physical Education, Heart Health, Gender
Equity Schools Initiative, Healthy Communities, Community Recreation.
The Active Living perspective provides an avenue for children to participate
in "authentic" physical activities outside of school, that is physical
activities they care about, understand to be relevant and engage in actively.
Physical Fitness
The major components of physical fitness are muscular strength, muscular endurance,
flexibility and cardiovascular endurance. Opportunities for students to develop
each of these components are interwoven throughout the program. Some lessons
are devoted primarily to helping children understand and apply the important
fitness concepts. Experiences are provided that contribute not only to the development
of physical fitness, but also to students’ understanding and appreciation of
the importance of physical fitness. Activities are selected because they enhance
fitness and because they are fun. Even when students have greatly improved their
level of physical fitness, we cannot say we have achieved our fitness objectives
unless we have fostered a positive attitude toward physical activity and a long
term commitment to fitness. We measure success not by the scores students obtained
on tests of physical fitness but rather by assessing their understanding of,
attitudes toward and enjoyment of physical activity.
Part of the overall rationale for time allocation in the curriculum is related
to the physical fitness benefits to be gained in each activity area. For example,
if educational games are taught for at least 25 percent of the time, if participation
levels are high, and the activities vigorous in nature, there should be significant
gains in the area of cardiovascular fitness for children. Similarly, when students
engage in gymnastic activities on a frequent basis they will gain in strength,
particularly in upper body strength. Gymnastics also provides a fitness benefit
not readily found in other areas of the curriculum, that is, the development
of flexibility. A well-balanced physical education program goes a long way towards
ensuring that the goal of optimum physical fitness for each student is achieved.
A few caveats and practical suggestions to do with incorporating physical fitness
into the program are provided below.
- Use standardized fitness tests and norms with caution—students are motivated
by success rather than failure.
- Do not focus on one or two physical fitness components and neglect the others.
- Fitness activities should be enjoyable and developmentally appropriate.
- Recognize that it is easier and more common to develop strength in the lower
body than in the upper body.
- Have students set individual physical fitness goals that are reasonable
and in keeping with other health pursuits.
- Keep activity and participation levels high.
- Be aware of activities and exercises that are contraindicated (i.e. should
be avoided) and eliminate these from your program.
- Model a healthy lifestyle and a commitment to fitness for your students.
- Do not use exercise as punishment and do not deny children their participation
in physical education because of poor behaviour or lack of achievement in
other subjects. Do not use physical education as a punishment or a reward.
It is a legitimate subject on its own right that students are entitled to
on a daily basis.
- Select activities that have value other than strictly that of fitness development
so that students gain more from the activities (e.g., playing a tag game instead
of running laps around the gym, or dribbling a ball with the feet/hands/stick
while travelling in general space).
- Design, select and modify games and activities in order to increase the
fitness benefits.
- Teach students how to design, select, modify games and activities in order
to increase the fitness benefits and then encourage and provide opportunities
for them to do so.
Organizing Concepts
In grades 1-5, the content of the Active Living Perspective has been organized
around the following concepts.
- Regular participation in physical activity
- Positive attitude toward physical activity
- Benefits and effects of physical activity
- Personal growth and development
- Nutrition and physical activity
- Physical activity in a natural setting
- Safety while engaged in physical activity