View Full Version : Ohio in the news again
Hydrant
06-03-2010, 11:59 AM
Ohio schools may require body-mass-index screenings
Associated Press
Updated 10:22 AM Thursday, June 3, 2010
COLUMBUS — A bill to attack childhood obesity by requiring healthier options in school cafeterias has advanced in the Ohio Legislature.
By a 77-21 vote, the Ohio House on Wednesday approved legislation which also would have schools do body-mass-index screenings on students.
But, as the Ohio Senate did earlier, the House dropped a mandate that schools provide students at least 30 minutes of exercise per day. Groups representing teachers and school boards had complained that districts could not afford to implement that proposal.
The House bill allows districts that want to provide the exercise time to opt into a pilot program.
The legislation now returns to the state Senate for a final vote.
Kaneman
06-03-2010, 12:01 PM
Ohio schools may require body-mass-index screenings
Associated Press
Updated 10:22 AM Thursday, June 3, 2010
COLUMBUS — A bill to attack childhood obesity by requiring healthier options in school cafeterias has advanced in the Ohio Legislature.
By a 77-21 vote, the Ohio House on Wednesday approved legislation which also would have schools do body-mass-index screenings on students.
But, as the Ohio Senate did earlier, the House dropped a mandate that schools provide students at least 30 minutes of exercise per day. Groups representing teachers and school boards had complained that districts could not afford to implement that proposal.
The House bill allows districts that want to provide the exercise time to opt into a pilot program.
The legislation now returns to the state Senate for a final vote.
What a bunch of fucking retards.
Hydrant
06-03-2010, 12:08 PM
I'm with you Kaneman.
We do alot of work in schools in this area so I'm around various ages and districts and it drives me insane with all the crap they expect kids to do.
30 minutes of exercise a day wow. I remember our recess being like 45 - 50 minutes, then you had a gym class somewhere in the day too. Lack of excercise or movement for that matter tends to make kids hyper, but if a kid is hyper lets call them ADHD, drug them up and make them a zombie.
Its bad when the assisted living facility we do work for has more lively members than most elementary schools these days.
sherri_chickie
06-03-2010, 12:14 PM
Does recess count as that 30 minutes? Our kids get aq 15 minute recess in the a.m and another 30 min at lunch break. I feel sorry for them because they don't get the 15 minute one in the pm that we used to get.
Very few overweight kids in my school too BTW.
pauldun170
06-03-2010, 02:07 PM
I'm with you Kaneman.
We do alot of work in schools in this area so I'm around various ages and districts and it drives me insane with all the crap they expect kids to do.
30 minutes of exercise a day wow. I remember our recess being like 45 - 50 minutes, then you had a gym class somewhere in the day too. Lack of excercise or movement for that matter tends to make kids hyper, but if a kid is hyper lets call them ADHD, drug them up and make them a zombie.
Its bad when the assisted living facility we do work for has more lively members than most elementary schools these days.
Yup..
Rider
06-03-2010, 02:12 PM
Measuring BMI won't fix the obesity problem.
Particle Man
06-03-2010, 03:09 PM
Anyone remember the Presidential Physical Fitness program?
Rider
06-03-2010, 03:31 PM
Anyone remember the Presidential Physical Fitness program?
No, so obviously that didn't work. :lol
NONE_too_SOFT
06-03-2010, 03:37 PM
honestly...
good.
But realistically 30 mins of "exercise" for a kid might burn about 300 calories. How about you stop serving 1200 calorie meals?
Do you know how ridiculously easy it is just to NOT EAT UNTIL YOU EXPLODE.
Particle Man
06-03-2010, 03:58 PM
No, so obviously that didn't work. :lol
I remember we had to run a timed mile every year, do a certain amount of sit-ups and pull-ups, stretch, etc and if you did it you got the presidential physical fitness award.
Rider
06-03-2010, 04:10 PM
I remember we had to run a timed mile every year, do a certain amount of sit-ups and pull-ups, stretch, etc and if you did it you got the presidential physical fitness award.
In HS the football team was required by the head coach to run the mil in 5:15 for backs a receivers and 5:55 for linemen or you didn't play.
I don't believe that the rest of out school had a requirement other than they had to have an hour of PE every day of the week for all 4 years of HS. After 10 grade though you could opt for weightlifting instead of regular PE though.
I remember we had to run a timed mile every year, do a certain amount of sit-ups and pull-ups, stretch, etc and if you did it you got the presidential physical fitness award.
I remember I qualified for the red one (which was crappier iirc) I also remember that due to BS mismanagement I never got the fucking thing :lol:
101lifts2
06-03-2010, 08:36 PM
honestly...
good.
But realistically 30 mins of "exercise" for a kid might burn about 300 calories. How about you stop serving 1200 calorie meals?
Do you know how ridiculously easy it is just to NOT EAT UNTIL YOU EXPLODE.
I'm not sure it's the calorie intake amount, because when I was a kid I eat everything, but was a skinny as a rail. The problem is where these calories are coming from. As in the HFCS thread, there is alot of crap that we are dealing with today (HFCS, hormones in meat, pesiticides, carbs in everything) that the older generations did not have to deal with. This and the fact that kids sit behind a computer when they get home instead of playing outside.
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