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Weighted Building Blocks?
October 3, 2006
We realize the importance of our voices only when we are silenced.
-Malala Yousafzai
No joke. Children who were given weighted blocks to play with used more calories and had higher heart and respiration rates than they did when they used ordinary blocks.  According to the researchers, "The benefits of physical activity to children are substantial, but the amount of time spent in physical activity decreases as children age."

They suggest that one solution might be to make some tasks more physically demanding. "A subtle way to do so would be to slightly change the task requirements of already common activities performed either during play or instructional situations" (Nagourney, 2006).

In this study five boys and five girls, ages 7 and 8, took part in sessions in which they were asked to carry blocks across a room and stack them no more than two high for more than 10 minutes. In one session, the blocks were hollow cardboard; in the other, the blocks had small steel blocks glued inside that brought their weight to three pounds.

The researchers, Professor John Ozmun and graduate student Lee Robbins, of Indiana State University, suggest that weighted toys might help keep children a bit fitter, and be particularly useful for children with disabilities in which muscle weakness is a problem.

A brief summary of this study, presented at a recent conference of the American College of Sports Medicine, is at the New York Times. You must register with them for FREE to view this article.


Contributed by Michael Kalinowski


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Good for business.
GREAT for kids.

www.thomaschildcarebus.com


Comments (1)

Displaying 1 Comment
Judith Pack · October 03, 2006
Red Bank, NJ, United States


Although I agree with the goal of this proposal--to help children become healthier and more fit--I question the solution. If we allow children the time to play, in the ordinary, natural way that children play, most children would be fit. The real problem is that throughout the U.S., schools and child care centers are reducing the amount of time children spend playing, both outdoors and indoors. Teacher-directed tasks have replaced the time once spent on child initiated play. Child initiated play required children to use their muscles, their minds and their hearts.



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