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experiencelifemag.com
Print › | Back ›
Active at Heart
Kids and tweens today aren’t getting enough exercise. You may think of their
attachment to electronic gadgets as a big part of the problem, but two fitness
experts explain why one gadget in particular - a heart-rate monitor - may be an
important part of the solution.
By Sally Edwards and Bev Robinson |
September 2009 |
Making It Fun
Heart to Heart
What's Your Number?
Step It Up
Equipment Tips
Heart-Pumping Fun: 12 Games to Try at Home
A lot of parents think their kids
get enough exercise by just being
kids. But more than 50 percent of children are
not active enough for
optimal growth and development, according to the National
Center for
Health Statistics. This has contributed to an alarming rise in
childhood obesity. It has also caused more parents to examine just how
active
their kids really are, and what they can do to improve their
little ones’
fitness habits. The National Association for Sport and
Physical Education
recommends that children spend at least 60 minutes
per day (and ideally much
more) doing some form of physical activity.
You may think that the standard PE
class takes care of this, but thanks
to budget constraints and curriculum
pressures, many schools are
cutting back on physical education or eliminating it
altogether. So
that leaves you, the parent, to get your kids moving in the right
direction. While modeling an active lifestyle is the single most
powerful
tool parents can use to persuade their kids to adopt good
fitness habits, this
alone may not be enough. A growing number of
fitness experts and concerned
parents are experimenting with new
ways to ignite kids’ interest in physical
activity. New video-based
toys like the Wii are proving to be one popular
solution. They are
effective in engaging many kids who might otherwise refuse to
move.
Yet, they are expensive, and they keep kids tethered to indoor screens,
preventing them from acquiring important real-life athletic skills and
experiences. There is one electronic gadget, however, that we think has
lasting
promise as a fitness-building tool: a heart-rate monitor.
Some
forward-thinking schools have begun incorporating heart-rate
monitors into their
PE programs. (To learn about one such program being
sponsored by Polar, visit http://education.polarusa.com/education.)
But regardless of whether your
kids’ school has taken this step, we
encourage you to introduce your kids to
heart-rate monitoring at
home. We highly recommend heart-rate monitors for
kids and adults
alike (for whatever kinds of activities they choose to pursue),
because
monitors provide compelling, real-time information about exertion and
fitness progress. They educate while they motivate. They can be used
with
virtually any kind of indoor or outdoor activity and at any level
of fitness
experience. All of this is important, because kids today
are facing some
powerful obstacles to exercise — many of which will
follow them into adulthood.
Some of the most troublesome
barriers include:
Lack of Time. This is the No. 1 reason adults give for not being active. But
with an increased emphasis on academics, after-school activities and
even
part-time jobs, lack of time has become an obstacle for kids, too.
We like the
fact that heart-rate monitors can be employed during the
activities that kids
already do every day, from playing video games to
running for the school bus. By
starting to associate various levels of
activity (or nonactivity) with varying
heart rates, they get nonjudging
feedback about how much of their day is spent
in active or sedentary
pastimes. This can motivate them to move more. Screen
Syndrome.
Computers and television can suck hours from a kid’s day, making the
vast majority of his or her waking hours sedentary ones. It’s up to
parents to
establish limits that balance screen time with active time.
But such rules can
backfire if your kids begin to perceive exercise as
a punishment, a chore or
something inherently boring. By suggesting
that your child wear her heart-rate
monitor during screen-based
activities, you can help her observe how low her
rate is while seated
passively and how quickly it rises during even brief bursts
of
excitement or activity. By explaining that long stretches of low-rate
activities are unhealthy, you may be able to convince her to raise her
heart
rate more often, or at least help her understand why you insist
on setting
screen-time limits for her benefit.
Boredom. Adults are sometimes willing to stick to mundane exercise programs
because they are more interested in health benefits than in whether
they are
“having fun.” But if kids don’t see an activity as enjoyable,
they simply won’t
do it. The challenge with kids is to offer them
something that will keep them
engaged but not overwhelm them.
Heart-rate monitors are helpful in this regard,
because they provide
continuous feedback and give kids something interesting to
focus on.
This allows them to experiment with self-observation, benchmarking and
goal setting — fitness skills they can continue to develop and enjoy
for a
lifetime. Heart-rate monitors can deliver as much or as little
information as
required to hold your child’s interest (although it may
take some experimenting
to discover his or her particular appetite for
data).
Making It Fun
Showing kids how to measure their heart
rates with a monitor helps them
understand their own physiology and
encourages them to get their hearts pumping.
It also helps overcome the
three big obstacles described at left.
You’ll be surprised at
how fascinated kids are by their heart rates,
particularly once they
learn a few basic principles and skills. It goes without
saying,
though, that simply strapping a heart-rate monitor on your child’s body
is unlikely to instill an abiding love of activity. Your best bet is to
leverage
your child’s natural interest and inclinations. Most
kids respond well
to the structure of games: They like
easy-to-understand rules and some
direction, but they don’t want to be
bossed around. (For ideas, see
“Heart-Pumping Fun: 12 Games to Try at
Home,” below.) To get started,
provide your child with a
heart-rate monitor (see “Equipment Tips,” below) and
show him or her
how to operate it. Don’t worry about any advanced functions for
now,
but do study the basic instructions before you attempt to use the monitor
for the first time, or your child may lose interest while you read and
fiddle.
You might strap the monitor on yourself first and let your
kid see you using
it. Once he expresses interest, offer to let him try
it. Do you have a fiercely
independent or technically inclined kid? You
might even ask for help figuring
out how to make the monitor
work. Next, encourage (or challenge) your child
to monitor his or
her heart rate while doing all sorts of everyday activities:
sitting,
running, bike riding, shopping, and playing games like basketball or
tag. (For tips on tracking heart rate, see “What’s Your Number?” below.) Ask your child various questions about his or her findings.
Here are
some examples: - What’s your heart rate when
you’re walking as fast
as you can? How do you feel at this level of
intensity? (Responses might
include, “This is easy,”
“I feel warm,”
or “I’m breathing harder
now.”) - What do you feel like
when you’re doing other activities?
Which heart rates are comfortable,
and which are challenging?
- At
what heart rate do you
start to feel out of breath?
- What is your
average heart
rate after two, five or 10 minutes of doing various
activities?
- What is the highest heart-rate number that
you can
reach in various activities?
- How much does your
heart rate drop
in one minute when you stop an activity? (The fitter
the heart, the faster the
heart rate drops.)
- How does
your heart rate vary throughout the
day and the week? How does your
heart rate compare with that of other family
members?
- What happens to your heart rate when you watch
a scary
scene on TV? What about when you think about taking a big test?
What about happy
or relaxing stuff? (Emotion often has a strong effect
on heart rate, which may
surprise kids and help them understand how
their body and mind are
connected.)
Heart to Heart
In addition to
discussing your children’s
answers to those questions, you might have
them write their responses in a
special journal. They may have a lot of
questions. Don’t feel you have to become
an expert on heart-rate
training to answer all these inquiries, but do
strategize with your
children about how they might go about finding additional
information
(a trip to your local library, gym, bookstore, or a quick Web
search,
for example). After determining what their heart rates are after
riding a bike for 10 minutes, ask them to guess what it would be after
15
minutes or 20 minutes, and then have them discover the answers
themselves.
Playing “what if” with the heart-rate results also creates
a context for
challenging kids to understand ➺ the patterns by which
their heart rates
fluctuate and to experiment with ways to improve
their previous marks. As
your children’s interest in and mastery of
heart-rate monitoring progresses, you
might find yourself doing some
research with them or seeking out a PE teacher or
professional trainer
to help answer their questions. This quest into physical
self-discovery, combined with confidence in using technology and
getting more
informed about fitness topics, can start your kids on a
healthy and exciting
journey — with luck, one that will last a
lifetime. Heart Zones (www.heartzones.com) founder Sally
Edwards,
MA, MBA, is a professional triathlete and the author of 20
books on fitness and
sports. Bev Robinson, BPE, BEd, MA, is a
professional educator with the
Calgary Board of Education. She is a
multiple Canadian and World Cup cycling
champion and a member of the
Canadian National Cycling Team.
What's Your Number?
Using a chart or other interactive tool is
a great way
to make your child’s
heart-rate-monitoring activities more
interesting
and
motivating. You can work
with your child to
re-create the
chart below using construction paper and
markers
(you can also print out a
letter-size, PDF version of it here). The beats-per-minute
(bpm) numbers
written into the chart are for example only. Your child’s
actual
heart
rate may vary considerably. Once you
have the
chart, have your
children do each activity for
three to 10 minutes
while wearing a
heart-rate
monitor. Then record their bpm. For
example, their heart
rate at a fast jog
might be 175 bpm. You
can also use
other methods to
record their heart rates,
such
as a
spreadsheet, a big wall chart or a
special notebook. You might
even
consider investing in a downloadable
heart-rate
monitor
that allows them to
store data in a computer,
produce graphs
and track fitness progress.
Step It Up
Not ready to take the heart-rate-monitor plunge? Pick up a
pedometer and
have your children track how many steps
they take
during the day. This can
encourage them to
continually increase their
daily step count. How many steps do
they take on a normal school day?
How does this compare with a
regular weekend
day? The research is
inconclusive as to the
number of steps per day that
children should
achieve, but the
President’s Council on Physical Fitness and
Sports
recommends
the average should be 11,000 for girls ages 6 to 17, and
13,000 for boys ages 6 to 17.
Equipment Tips
When shopping for a heart-rate monitor that will motivate
your munchkin, keep
these tips in mind:
Get the right fit. Be sure
to select a smaller heart-rate
monitor for your child. Polar recently
introduced an “E Series” line of monitors
small and simple enough for
children to use. They were designed to be used as
part of Polar’s “New
PE” in-school program, which focuses on getting kids to
work out at
their individual heart-rate and fitness levels. If you buy a larger
model, you can easily alter elastic straps to fit smaller kids — just
make a few
stitches in the elastic or use a large safety pin to take up
the slack.
Keep it simple. Select a monitor with a good display
(ideally one that lets you see
the heart rate big and bold, front and
center) and no more than three buttons.
Avoid complex functions like
time and distance and downloadable workout
histories unless you’re
certain that your techno whiz kid will be transfixed by
these more
advanced features. Too many details can present barriers to entry.
Avoid calorie-counting mechanisms, too, or at least don’t emphasize
them: The
focus should be firmly on fitness and fun, not on fat burning
or weight loss.
Make it durable. Kids play hard, so sturdy is good.
Is the receiver’s face
recessed so it is less prone to being scratched?
Are the latching mechanisms and
hinges on the receiver and
transmitter all solid? Is the wristwatch element
water resistant? Are
batteries changeable by you or a jewelry shop, or must you
return them
to the manufacturer for service? Look for a good warranty, too: A
reputable manufacturer will offer a two-year replace-or-repair
program.
Heart-Pumping Fun: 12 Games to Try at Home
Here are a dozen active games that will get kids’ hearts pumping — whether they
are tracked by a heart-rate monitor or not. These games take the “work” out of
the “workout,” so your kids will actually want to do them. All have simple
rules, most can be played by just one to three kids, and most require little or
no equipment or supervision. If you do have the time to join in the fun,
however, your participation will probably be welcomed (if only to referee) — and
you’ll get some heart-healthy exercise of your own.
Skip It. Rope skipping
is terrific cardiovascular exercise. There are many advanced jump-rope skills,
but have kids start with basic skipping and jumping. Two or more kids can see
who can skip or jump longest without tripping on the rope — or bungling the
lyrics of a rhyming song.
Octopus Tag. From the middle of a field, the
“octopus” yells “Octopus!” and “swimmers” on either sideline must dash to the
opposite “shore” (sideline) without getting tagged. The swimmer tagged first
becomes the new octopus. 52-Card Pickup. A deck of cards is scattered in the
middle of a grass field. At “Go,” kids race from the sideline to collect them,
but they can retrieve only one at a time before returning to the sideline. The
game ends when all cards have been retrieved, then scores are added based on the
cards’ numbers (face cards are worth 10 points). This can be a team game, with
teams using opposite sidelines.
Speed. Remember “Around the World,” that
basketball game where you advance around the key to the next spot each time you
make a shot? “Speed” is a more exciting, faster-paced version because there’s no
waiting turns, and hustle is as important as shooting accuracy. Several spots
are marked with chalk, then two kids compete by simultaneously starting at the
spots farthest apart and shooting nonstop until the winner makes all the shots
on the circuit.
Refrigerator Tag. Two or more players stand at bases (a
baseball diamond is best), with “It” in the middle. When It yells out a food,
beverage or almost anything else, the players dash to the base that best
describes their opinion of it: “Like It” (first base), “Love It” (second base),
“Hate It” (third base) or “Never Tried It” (home plate). If It tags a player
before he or she reaches base, that player is the new It.
Scrabble Scramble.
Index cards with letters of the alphabet are scattered face-down on a field. At
“Go,” one child from each team of two or three players races to the letters,
grabs one and runs it back, then a teammate does the same, and so on. Teammates
on the sideline try to form a word while awaiting their next turn to run, and
each game ends when a team succeeds. Points are given for the number of letters
used; play continues until a team reaches 25 points.
All-In Tag. This is
traditional tag, except whomever is tagged also becomes “It” until all players
are It. The fun lies in players forgetting who is and isn’t It.
Pedal for Prizes. Install a bike computer ($30 and up) on your child’s bike and promise
prizes for mileage accumulated.
Scavenger Photo Hike. Make hiking more fun
for kids by having them take and share pictures of three items in each of
several categories. Categories might include different species of trees,
flowering plants, birds, mammals, reptiles and insects.
Soccer or Basketball. Your child doesn’t have to join a team to enjoy these sports. In
fact, he or she may enjoy them more without the trappings of organized sports:
the uniforms, coaches, referees, timed periods and copious rules. The minimal
requirements: a backyard lawn for soccer (yard barrels can serve as goals) or a
driveway hoop for basketball.
Active Video Games. If the weather is lousy or
it’s dark out, your child can get a decent workout playing a Wii-type game.
They’ve been shown to raise the heart rate appreciatively. Among the most
popular: Dance Dance Revolution, Wii Tennis, Wii Boxing, XerBike Pro and
LaserSquash.
Exercise Vids. A low-cost, indoor alternative to Wii-type games
are exercise DVDs. Many are made just for kids, although teens may prefer any of
the thousands geared to adults. Workout, dance and martial arts DVDs are sold at www.collagevideo.com or www.exercisetv.tv, or can be rented from www.netflix.com. — Bob Cooper For a list
of resources and additional game ideas, see the Web Extras! at the top right of this page..
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Active at Heart
Kids and tweens today aren’t getting enough exercise. You may think of their
attachment to electronic gadgets as a big part of the problem, but two fitness
experts explain why one gadget in particular - a heart-rate monitor - may be an
important part of the solution.
By Sally Edwards and Bev Robinson | Features, September 2009 |
Making It Fun
Heart to Heart
What's Your Number?
Step It Up
Equipment Tips
Heart-Pumping Fun: 12 Games to Try at Home
A lot of parents think their kids
get enough exercise by just being
kids. But more than 50 percent of children are
not active enough for
optimal growth and development, according to the National
Center for
Health Statistics. This has contributed to an alarming rise in
childhood obesity. It has also caused more parents to examine just how
active
their kids really are, and what they can do to improve their
little ones’
fitness habits. The National Association for Sport and
Physical Education
recommends that children spend at least 60 minutes
per day (and ideally much
more) doing some form of physical activity.
You may think that the standard PE
class takes care of this, but thanks
to budget constraints and curriculum
pressures, many schools are
cutting back on physical education or eliminating it
altogether. So
that leaves you, the parent, to get your kids moving in the right
direction. While modeling an active lifestyle is the single most
powerful
tool parents can use to persuade their kids to adopt good
fitness habits, this
alone may not be enough. A growing number of
fitness experts and concerned
parents are experimenting with new
ways to ignite kids’ interest in physical
activity. New video-based
toys like the Wii are proving to be one popular
solution. They are
effective in engaging many kids who might otherwise refuse to
move.
Yet, they are expensive, and they keep kids tethered to indoor screens,
preventing them from acquiring important real-life athletic skills and
experiences. There is one electronic gadget, however, that we think has
lasting
promise as a fitness-building tool: a heart-rate monitor.
Some
forward-thinking schools have begun incorporating heart-rate
monitors into their
PE programs. (To learn about one such program being
sponsored by Polar, visit http://education.polarusa.com/education.)
But regardless of whether your
kids’ school has taken this step, we
encourage you to introduce your kids to
heart-rate monitoring at
home. We highly recommend heart-rate monitors for
kids and adults
alike (for whatever kinds of activities they choose to pursue),
because
monitors provide compelling, real-time information about exertion and
fitness progress. They educate while they motivate. They can be used
with
virtually any kind of indoor or outdoor activity and at any level
of fitness
experience. All of this is important, because kids today
are facing some
powerful obstacles to exercise — many of which will
follow them into adulthood.
Some of the most troublesome
barriers include:
Lack of Time. This is the No. 1 reason adults give for not being active. But
with an increased emphasis on academics, after-school activities and
even
part-time jobs, lack of time has become an obstacle for kids, too.
We like the
fact that heart-rate monitors can be employed during the
activities that kids
already do every day, from playing video games to
running for the school bus. By
starting to associate various levels of
activity (or nonactivity) with varying
heart rates, they get nonjudging
feedback about how much of their day is spent
in active or sedentary
pastimes. This can motivate them to move more. Screen
Syndrome.
Computers and television can suck hours from a kid’s day, making the
vast majority of his or her waking hours sedentary ones. It’s up to
parents to
establish limits that balance screen time with active time.
But such rules can
backfire if your kids begin to perceive exercise as
a punishment, a chore or
something inherently boring. By suggesting
that your child wear her heart-rate
monitor during screen-based
activities, you can help her observe how low her
rate is while seated
passively and how quickly it rises during even brief bursts
of
excitement or activity. By explaining that long stretches of low-rate
activities are unhealthy, you may be able to convince her to raise her
heart
rate more often, or at least help her understand why you insist
on setting
screen-time limits for her benefit.
Boredom. Adults are sometimes willing to stick to mundane exercise programs
because they are more interested in health benefits than in whether
they are
“having fun.” But if kids don’t see an activity as enjoyable,
they simply won’t
do it. The challenge with kids is to offer them
something that will keep them
engaged but not overwhelm them.
Heart-rate monitors are helpful in this regard,
because they provide
continuous feedback and give kids something interesting to
focus on.
This allows them to experiment with self-observation, benchmarking and
goal setting — fitness skills they can continue to develop and enjoy
for a
lifetime. Heart-rate monitors can deliver as much or as little
information as
required to hold your child’s interest (although it may
take some experimenting
to discover his or her particular appetite for
data).
Making It Fun
Showing kids how to measure their heart
rates with a monitor helps them
understand their own physiology and
encourages them to get their hearts pumping.
It also helps overcome the
three big obstacles described at left.
You’ll be surprised at
how fascinated kids are by their heart rates,
particularly once they
learn a few basic principles and skills. It goes without
saying,
though, that simply strapping a heart-rate monitor on your child’s body
is unlikely to instill an abiding love of activity. Your best bet is to
leverage
your child’s natural interest and inclinations. Most
kids respond well
to the structure of games: They like
easy-to-understand rules and some
direction, but they don’t want to be
bossed around. (For ideas, see
“Heart-Pumping Fun: 12 Games to Try at
Home,” below.) To get started,
provide your child with a
heart-rate monitor (see “Equipment Tips,” below) and
show him or her
how to operate it. Don’t worry about any advanced functions for
now,
but do study the basic instructions before you attempt to use the monitor
for the first time, or your child may lose interest while you read and
fiddle.
You might strap the monitor on yourself first and let your
kid see you using
it. Once he expresses interest, offer to let him try
it. Do you have a fiercely
independent or technically inclined kid? You
might even ask for help figuring
out how to make the monitor
work. Next, encourage (or challenge) your child
to monitor his or
her heart rate while doing all sorts of everyday activities:
sitting,
running, bike riding, shopping, and playing games like basketball or
tag. (For tips on tracking heart rate, see “What’s Your Number?” below.) Ask your child various questions about his or her findings.
Here are
some examples: - What’s your heart rate when
you’re walking as fast
as you can? How do you feel at this level of
intensity? (Responses might
include, “This is easy,”
“I feel warm,”
or “I’m breathing harder
now.”) - What do you feel like
when you’re doing other activities?
Which heart rates are comfortable,
and which are challenging?
- At
what heart rate do you
start to feel out of breath?
- What is your
average heart
rate after two, five or 10 minutes of doing various
activities?
- What is the highest heart-rate number that
you can
reach in various activities?
- How much does your
heart rate drop
in one minute when you stop an activity? (The fitter
the heart, the faster the
heart rate drops.)
- How does
your heart rate vary throughout the
day and the week? How does your
heart rate compare with that of other family
members?
- What happens to your heart rate when you watch
a scary
scene on TV? What about when you think about taking a big test?
What about happy
or relaxing stuff? (Emotion often has a strong effect
on heart rate, which may
surprise kids and help them understand how
their body and mind are
connected.)
Heart to Heart
In addition to
discussing your children’s
answers to those questions, you might have
them write their responses in a
special journal. They may have a lot of
questions. Don’t feel you have to become
an expert on heart-rate
training to answer all these inquiries, but do
strategize with your
children about how they might go about finding additional
information
(a trip to your local library, gym, bookstore, or a quick Web
search,
for example). After determining what their heart rates are after
riding a bike for 10 minutes, ask them to guess what it would be after
15
minutes or 20 minutes, and then have them discover the answers
themselves.
Playing “what if” with the heart-rate results also creates
a context for
challenging kids to understand ➺ the patterns by which
their heart rates
fluctuate and to experiment with ways to improve
their previous marks. As
your children’s interest in and mastery of
heart-rate monitoring progresses, you
might find yourself doing some
research with them or seeking out a PE teacher or
professional trainer
to help answer their questions. This quest into physical
self-discovery, combined with confidence in using technology and
getting more
informed about fitness topics, can start your kids on a
healthy and exciting
journey — with luck, one that will last a
lifetime. Heart Zones (www.heartzones.com) founder Sally
Edwards,
MA, MBA, is a professional triathlete and the author of 20
books on fitness and
sports. Bev Robinson, BPE, BEd, MA, is a
professional educator with the
Calgary Board of Education. She is a
multiple Canadian and World Cup cycling
champion and a member of the
Canadian National Cycling Team.
What's Your Number?
Using a chart or other interactive tool is
a great way
to make your child’s
heart-rate-monitoring activities more
interesting
and
motivating. You can work
with your child to
re-create the
chart below using construction paper and
markers
(you can also print out a
letter-size, PDF version of it here). The beats-per-minute
(bpm) numbers
written into the chart are for example only. Your child’s
actual
heart
rate may vary considerably. Once you
have the
chart, have your
children do each activity for
three to 10 minutes
while wearing a
heart-rate
monitor. Then record their bpm. For
example, their heart
rate at a fast jog
might be 175 bpm. You
can also use
other methods to
record their heart rates,
such
as a
spreadsheet, a big wall chart or a
special notebook. You might
even
consider investing in a downloadable
heart-rate
monitor
that allows them to
store data in a computer,
produce graphs
and track fitness progress.
Step It Up
Not ready to take the heart-rate-monitor plunge? Pick up a
pedometer and
have your children track how many steps
they take
during the day. This can
encourage them to
continually increase their
daily step count. How many steps do
they take on a normal school day?
How does this compare with a
regular weekend
day? The research is
inconclusive as to the
number of steps per day that
children should
achieve, but the
President’s Council on Physical Fitness and
Sports
recommends
the average should be 11,000 for girls ages 6 to 17, and
13,000 for boys ages 6 to 17.
Equipment Tips
When shopping for a heart-rate monitor that will motivate
your munchkin, keep
these tips in mind:
Get the right fit. Be sure
to select a smaller heart-rate
monitor for your child. Polar recently
introduced an “E Series” line of monitors
small and simple enough for
children to use. They were designed to be used as
part of Polar’s “New
PE” in-school program, which focuses on getting kids to
work out at
their individual heart-rate and fitness levels. If you buy a larger
model, you can easily alter elastic straps to fit smaller kids — just
make a few
stitches in the elastic or use a large safety pin to take up
the slack.
Keep it simple. Select a monitor with a good display
(ideally one that lets you see
the heart rate big and bold, front and
center) and no more than three buttons.
Avoid complex functions like
time and distance and downloadable workout
histories unless you’re
certain that your techno whiz kid will be transfixed by
these more
advanced features. Too many details can present barriers to entry.
Avoid calorie-counting mechanisms, too, or at least don’t emphasize
them: The
focus should be firmly on fitness and fun, not on fat burning
or weight loss.
Make it durable. Kids play hard, so sturdy is good.
Is the receiver’s face
recessed so it is less prone to being scratched?
Are the latching mechanisms and
hinges on the receiver and
transmitter all solid? Is the wristwatch element
water resistant? Are
batteries changeable by you or a jewelry shop, or must you
return them
to the manufacturer for service? Look for a good warranty, too: A
reputable manufacturer will offer a two-year replace-or-repair
program.
Heart-Pumping Fun: 12 Games to Try at Home
Here are a dozen active games that will get kids’ hearts pumping — whether they
are tracked by a heart-rate monitor or not. These games take the “work” out of
the “workout,” so your kids will actually want to do them. All have simple
rules, most can be played by just one to three kids, and most require little or
no equipment or supervision. If you do have the time to join in the fun,
however, your participation will probably be welcomed (if only to referee) — and
you’ll get some heart-healthy exercise of your own.
Skip It. Rope skipping
is terrific cardiovascular exercise. There are many advanced jump-rope skills,
but have kids start with basic skipping and jumping. Two or more kids can see
who can skip or jump longest without tripping on the rope — or bungling the
lyrics of a rhyming song.
Octopus Tag. From the middle of a field, the
“octopus” yells “Octopus!” and “swimmers” on either sideline must dash to the
opposite “shore” (sideline) without getting tagged. The swimmer tagged first
becomes the new octopus. 52-Card Pickup. A deck of cards is scattered in the
middle of a grass field. At “Go,” kids race from the sideline to collect them,
but they can retrieve only one at a time before returning to the sideline. The
game ends when all cards have been retrieved, then scores are added based on the
cards’ numbers (face cards are worth 10 points). This can be a team game, with
teams using opposite sidelines.
Speed. Remember “Around the World,” that
basketball game where you advance around the key to the next spot each time you
make a shot? “Speed” is a more exciting, faster-paced version because there’s no
waiting turns, and hustle is as important as shooting accuracy. Several spots
are marked with chalk, then two kids compete by simultaneously starting at the
spots farthest apart and shooting nonstop until the winner makes all the shots
on the circuit.
Refrigerator Tag. Two or more players stand at bases (a
baseball diamond is best), with “It” in the middle. When It yells out a food,
beverage or almost anything else, the players dash to the base that best
describes their opinion of it: “Like It” (first base), “Love It” (second base),
“Hate It” (third base) or “Never Tried It” (home plate). If It tags a player
before he or she reaches base, that player is the new It.
Scrabble Scramble.
Index cards with letters of the alphabet are scattered face-down on a field. At
“Go,” one child from each team of two or three players races to the letters,
grabs one and runs it back, then a teammate does the same, and so on. Teammates
on the sideline try to form a word while awaiting their next turn to run, and
each game ends when a team succeeds. Points are given for the number of letters
used; play continues until a team reaches 25 points.
All-In Tag. This is
traditional tag, except whomever is tagged also becomes “It” until all players
are It. The fun lies in players forgetting who is and isn’t It.
Pedal for Prizes. Install a bike computer ($30 and up) on your child’s bike and promise
prizes for mileage accumulated.
Scavenger Photo Hike. Make hiking more fun
for kids by having them take and share pictures of three items in each of
several categories. Categories might include different species of trees,
flowering plants, birds, mammals, reptiles and insects.
Soccer or Basketball. Your child doesn’t have to join a team to enjoy these sports. In
fact, he or she may enjoy them more without the trappings of organized sports:
the uniforms, coaches, referees, timed periods and copious rules. The minimal
requirements: a backyard lawn for soccer (yard barrels can serve as goals) or a
driveway hoop for basketball.
Active Video Games. If the weather is lousy or
it’s dark out, your child can get a decent workout playing a Wii-type game.
They’ve been shown to raise the heart rate appreciatively. Among the most
popular: Dance Dance Revolution, Wii Tennis, Wii Boxing, XerBike Pro and
LaserSquash.
Exercise Vids. A low-cost, indoor alternative to Wii-type games
are exercise DVDs. Many are made just for kids, although teens may prefer any of
the thousands geared to adults. Workout, dance and martial arts DVDs are sold at www.collagevideo.com or www.exercisetv.tv, or can be rented from www.netflix.com. — Bob Cooper For a list
of resources and additional game ideas, see the Web Extras! at the top right of this page..
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