Sample Press Release
For more information, contact:
Your Name (email) (phone number)
May is National Physical Fitness & Sports Month
May 1-7 is National Physical Education and
Sport Week
PARENTS THE KEY TO CHILDREN BEING MORE PHYSICALLY ACTIVE
Try these 101 Tips for Family Fitness Fun
May 2006 – "Healthy, physically active kids learn better!" That
is the key message (your name), physical education teacher at (name
of your school) wants to express in honor of May: National Physical
Fitness and Sports Month. With more inactive and overweight children
than ever before, physical education teachers across the country want
to remind parents that children learn by example and offer 101 suggestions
for getting more physically active with a new brochure called, 101
Tips for Family Fitness Fun. If parents enjoy and participate
in physical activity, so will their children!
"Children and adolescents should spend at least 60 minutes
every day in a variety of moderate to vigorous physical activities,"
says Charlene R. Burgeson, Executive Director of the National Association
for Sport and Physical Education (NASPE). "Maintaining healthy
bodies is not only vital for physical well-being, but for mental and
emotional development as well. The 101 Tips brochure, produced
by NASPE and Walk4Life, Inc., gives parents some new ideas for family
fitness activities and encourages them and their children to enjoy
physical activity as part of a normal routine in their lives."
Among the recommendations in the brochure are suggestions that parents
schedule a regular time throughout the week for their family to be
physically active, select fitness-oriented gifts, and reward children
with activity rather than food. Tips for "fitness fun" are
grouped for home, kitchen, school, the great outdoors, your own backyard,
and much more.
"During National Physical Education and Sport Week, May 1-7,
and throughout the year, we want parents to examine the quality of
their children's physical education programs, and to urge schools
to provide adequate, safe, and effective physical activity opportunities,"
said Thomas J. Templin, Ph.D., NASPE President and professor at Purdue
University. "There
is no place in this country for poor physical education programs. We
believe every student in our nation's schools from kindergarten
through grade 12 should have the opportunity to participate in a quality
physical education program. Children need to develop the knowledge,
skills and confidence necessary to lead healthy, active and productive
lives. To do that, all programs must facilitate achievement of the
National Standards for Physical Education."
According to Dr. Robert P. Pangrazi, one of the author's of
NASPE's Physical Activity for Children: A Statement
of Guidelines for Children Ages 5 -12, and director of educational
development for Walk4Life, Inc., "Keeping children and youth
turned on to physical activity is one of the biggest challenges facing
parents. That is why it is important to help children explore a wide
variety of physical activities to determine what they like and then
encourage them to participate in those activities on a regular basis."
To receive a free copy of 101 Tips for Family Fitness Fun,
send a stamped, self- addressed legal size (#10) envelope to: NASPE/101
Tips, 1900 Association Drive, Reston, VA 20191. For bulk purchases,
call 1-800- 321-0789. Stock number is 304-10322.
The preeminent national authority on physical education and a recognized
leader in sport and physical activity, the National Association for Sport
and Physical Education (NASPE) is a non-profit professional membership
association that sets the standard for practice in physical education
and sport. NASPE's 17,000 members include: K-12 physical education
teachers, coaches, athletic directors, athletic trainers, sport management
professionals, researchers, and college/university faculty who prepare
physical activity professionals. NASPE seeks to enhance knowledge, improve
professional practice, and increase support for high quality physical
education, sport and physical activity programs through research, development
of standards, and dissemination of information. It is the largest of
the five national associations that make the American Alliance for Health,
Physical Education, Recreation & Dance (AAHPERD). To assess whether
your child is receiving a quality physical education program, visit www.naspeinfo.org/observePE for
an observation assessment tool.