| What mean-spirited posters here! Hours on hours of tracing letters and counting numbers has gotten DCPS nowhere when it comes to educational achievements. So, yes, how about bringing back some fun and adding a focus on life skills and efforts of building a sustainable city. Seeing how few 7 yo - no matter their color or the income of their often well-healed parents - can't ride on two wheels, there is definitely room for something to be learned. |
+1 There's an obesity epidemic and physical activity also helps with concentrating in school. |
| I love it! It will making bicycling even more popular. 10 years from now many of these kids will be using their bicycles to get around instead of having to ask their parents for a ride every time. |
Seriously. The problem is tha tmost of these kids have completely disengaged parents to begin, one reason many of them can't ride a bike. I wonder like a PP, where are all these bikes going to be stored. I would bet money that at least half will be stolen by the first semester. I am ALL for physical fitness but this just isn't very thought out. |
| I love the idea. Kudos to the educators who came up with it. |
| I think it's a good idea! |
| I agree! Great idea. |
I hate posters like you. The bikes are less likely to be stolen from inside a locked school than computers. Also please don't generalize. Many upper middle class white kids on my block don't ride bikes yet. I blame it mostly on the popularity of scooters. Either way, I think it's a great idea. I don't even care if they decided to focus on hula hoop or jump rope as long as they are active and doing something outside of standard work/test prep all day. |
| This isn't a PE lesson. Cornerstone lessons are classroom lessons. |
You think my kid can't ride a bike because I'm "disengaged"? Perhaps you should get out of your suburban cul-de-sac once in a while. |
+1. The bike riding is a really fantastic idea. The PP's judgment is faulty. And sucks. |
|
I went to school in England and we all had proper bike riding lessons as part of our school day. Most of us could ride bikes, but we learned hand signals, turning left, going around a roundabout ( circle) and general traffic safety.
I want to say we were about 9 or 10. |
+1 in Amsterdam. |
There are Cornerstones in every subject, including PE, music and art. This is a PE Cornerstone. Also, as I understand it, the lesson will be done at different times in different schools, so it's not like DCPS purchased enough bikes for every kid in the district. They will be moved around from school to school as needed. It will culminate with a 4 mile bike ride through the city. I think it's great. It's a skill that many kids don't have, and even the ones who do might not know how to ride safely on the street. I've seen all of the Cornerstones that have been written so far and I think they generally vary in quality, but this is a really good one. |
+another 100. Good exercise, plants the seed of an environmentally-friendly way to get around, and gets them OUTSIDE. I'm a fancy-schmancy Ivy type and if I were king I'd add far more outdoor and experiential learning into the curriculum. |