SCHOOL ACTIVITY ENVIRONMENT

ENACT STRATEGY: Playgrounds
Provide equipment and safe playground facilities for active play

A safe and inviting environment that encourages children to get active can help them burn calories and excess energy while they play on school grounds.  Play structures to climb and swing on, and accessible sports equipment such as balls, jump ropes, and hula hoops offer opportunities for group or individual active play.  It is important that schools design playgrounds that are safe and developmentally appropriate, so that students are able to focus on having fun and challenging themselves to develop new physical skills.    

 

Quick Facts

Playground Related Statistics  
Playground Related Statistics from the U.S. Consumer Product Safety Commission.

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Policies

Physical Activity for Youth Policy Initiative (PDF)
“Physical Activity for Youth Policy Initiative” presented by The National Coalition for Promoting Physical Activity “seeks to provide a means for advocates and policymakers to address the issue of physical inactivity.”  The article contains policy options and policies in action in the areas of after school programs, community programs and community design. 

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Tools

National Program for Playground Safety  
“The National Program for Playground Safety was created in October 1995 to help communities across the nation examine the critical issues surrounding playground safety. This National Action Plan is one of the first steps toward helping prevent many needless injuries to our children on the nation's playgrounds.”

How to Organize a Playday
The America Association for the Child’s Right to Play has information on how to plan, organize and implement a playday.  “A PlayDay is fun! It is a day designed to draw attention to a range and diversity of play activities. A PlayDay will encompass everything from massive park events for thousands of children and adults to small picnics for little ones. It is an opportunity for children, schools, day cares, individuals, families, or communities to share in physical and mental challenges without the pressure of winning or losing ‘the game.’” 

Sports4Kids   
“We are pleased to be able to offer the Sports4Kids Curriculum free of charge.  The curriculum units each give an overview of why the subject matter is relevant, a vocabulary list to help focus planning and discussion and a set of games or activities to teach the subject. Additionally, the curriculum offers suggestions and sample documents that will help with the program's successful implementation.”

Peaceful Playgrounds 
“Designing a Playground that Works! The purpose of the Peaceful Playground Program is to introduce children and school staff to the many choices of activities available on playgrounds and field areas. Each Blueprint is designed to assist with measurements, layout, spacing and game placement, as well as provide an overall picture of the final design outcome of a Peaceful Playground.”

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Organizations and Coalitions

National Program for Playground Safety
“America's youth have long enjoyed the benefits of public playgrounds. The challenges found on a playground are a great asset for the physical, emotional, social and intellectual development of the children at play. Many of today's adults remember hours of fun and adventure spent on the playgrounds of their childhood. But, all too often, these memories are mixed with pain.”

American Association for the Child’s Right to Play
“The American Association for the Child’s Right to Play is the national affiliate of IPA, an international non-governmental organization, founded in Denmark in 1961. It is interdisciplinary and embraces in membership persons of all professions working for or with children. The purpose of IPA/USA is to protect, preserve, and promote play as a fundamental right for all humans.”

Peaceful Playground Grant Opportunities
“The U.S. Department of Education will award grants under this competition to local educational agencies and community-based organizations to initiate, expand, or improve physical education programs, including after-school programs, for students in one or more grades from kindergarten through 12th grade in order to help students make progress toward meeting state standards for physical education.”

 

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