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Less Than a Third of California Students Post Healthy Fitness Scores

Coronado's students reflect trend of fifth-graders lacking in fitness, but older students improving as they age, according to the state Department of Education's results for the 2011-2012 school year.

Fewer than a third of the more than one million fifth-, seventh- and ninth-graders in California who took the 2012 Physical Fitness Test posted healthy scores in all six of the tested areas, according to results released by the state.

State Superintendent of Public Instruction Tom Torlakson called the statistics, in which just 31 percent of the students were noted as healthy, “a tremendous public health challenge.”

This “affects more than their health – study after study has demonstrated the very clear link between physical fitness and academic achievement,” he said.

However, Torlakson said he was pleased to observe that students generally became more fit as they grew older, scoring better in Grades 7 and 9 than they did as fifth-graders.

The numbers in the Coronado Unified School District reflected that trend; 208 fifth-graders, 247 seventh-graders and 282 ninth-graders were given the tests. The scores for the students can be viewed here.

The FITNESSGRAM program used by the state has six individual tests including aerobic capacity, body composition, abdominal strength, trunk extensor strength, upper body strength, and flexibility.

The California State Board of Education designated the FITNESSGRAM in 1996 as the required Physical Fitness Test that local educational agencies administer to students annually in grades five, seven, and nine.

State law requires all public schools in California to report the findings in their School Accountability Report Cards and provide students with their individual results.

The categories measured are:

  • Aerobic capacity, via a one-mile run.
  • Body composition, by skinfold measurements.
  • Abdominal strength and Endurance, by curl-ups
  • Truck extensor strength and flexibility, by a trunk lift in inches.
  • Upper body strength and endurance, by 90-degree push-ups, a modified pull-up and flexed arm hang.
  • Flexibility, by a sit-and-reach and a shoulder stretch – touching fingertips together behind the back on both the right and left sides.

Torlakson’s Team California for Healthy Kids initiative engages celebrity athletes, community leaders, public health advocates, parents, teachers and students to partner together to help students make healthy choices.

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kim May 20, 2013 at 03:50 pm
This is a great event. Thank you to all of the volunteers who helped make it a fun and enrichingRead More experience for my family. We need to get the word out about this helpful event in Coronado for the future. It was a learning experience for children and adults alike. I feel better now with my daughter riding her bike on the busy streets of Coronado. Thanks again to all of the Police Officers, Boy Scouts, Girls Scouts and local volunteers.