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Cross-country 'is physical abuse'

 

Athlete Paula Radcliffe uses cross-country running in training

Cross-country running at school could be a form of physical abuse, a

textbook for teenagers suggests.

A chapter of the book, distributed by Co-ordination Group

Publications, says children have the right to protection from

physical and emotional abuse.

 

It lists bullying and cross-country runs as possible examples.

 

Margaret Talbot, chief executive of the Association for Physical

Education, said this " trivialised " abuse and was based on

an " outdated notion " of PE.

 

'Just sloppy'

 

More than 30,000 copies of the book, designed for 14 to 16-year-olds

studying citizenship, have been distributed to schools.

 

The chapter which mentions cross-country running is called " Your

legal rights " .

 

Prof Talbot said: " I think what is in the book is just sloppy. They

haven't researched it properly.

 

" It gives ammunition to backroom lawyers. This is counter-productive,

as so many PE teachers try so hard.

 

" Cross-country is not the blunt instrument that everyone remembers

when they think of school sport. It's not a case of the whole school

doing it anymore just because the playing fields are out of use. "

 

Rates of child obesity have tripled during the last 20 years.

 

If current trends continue, half of all under-18s in England could be

obese by 2020, according to government figures.

 

'Popular'

 

Prof Talbot said cross-country running could help overcome this,

adding: " It is becoming very popular in primary schools and for

pupils who don't like sports where they compete directly with others,

like football.

 

" Top athletes such as Paula Radcliffe use it as part of their

training regime.

 

" What we must not try to do is put children off sport. The book is

using an outdated notion of what cross-country running is all about. "

 

But a Co-ordination Group Publications spokeswoman said the guide

was " light-hearted " and intended to make citizenship

subjects " accessible " to teenagers.

 

She said: " It is used as an aid for starting discussions. It seems

the part about cross-country has been taken as a serious suggestion,

but it is simply a way of getting students involved. "

 

A Department for Education and Skills spokesman added: " It is not

official guidance. We encourage all children to do at least two hours

of high-quality PE a week. "

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Hi Jo

 

>A chapter of the book, distributed by Co-ordination Group

>Publications, says children have the right to protection from

>physical and emotional abuse.

>It lists bullying and cross-country runs as possible examples.

 

From my experiences of cross-country at school, I'd have to agree. They didn't take any interest in my knee or asthma issues, and I remember one time sitting for half an hour with someone who'd had a major asthma attack half way through the " lesson " , without a teacher in sight - they just didn't care if children got injured or fell ill while they were running....

 

 

BB

Peter

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Hi Peter

 

I remember - in fact that was just about the only time you got asthma! I HATED cross-country runs. I hardly ever did them properly. Because we weren't supervised we used to run across the field, jump on a bus and get off about a hundred yards from school. I reckon if people like running they should be allowed to do it - horses for courses. I remember you being excellent at badminton, table tennis, and basket ball. I was good at badminton, netball and basketball. Even if kids just want to go for a walk it should be okay. Forcing them to do an activity they don't like will put them off for life.

 

BBJo

 

-

Peter Kebbell

Tuesday, August 08, 2006 12:55 PM

Re: Bad memories of school

 

Hi Jo

 

>A chapter of the book, distributed by Co-ordination Group

>Publications, says children have the right to protection from

>physical and emotional abuse.

>It lists bullying and cross-country runs as possible examples.

 

From my experiences of cross-country at school, I'd have to agree. They didn't take any interest in my knee or asthma issues, and I remember one time sitting for half an hour with someone who'd had a major asthma attack half way through the "lesson", without a teacher in sight - they just didn't care if children got injured or fell ill while they were running....

 

BB

Peter

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Hi Jo

 

Yeah - we did similar a lot of the time. Although actually just went for hiding around the corner, waiting for an hour, and then running back the 150 yards....

 

BB

Peter

On 08/08/06, jo <jo.heartwork wrote:

 

 

 

Hi Peter

 

I remember - in fact that was just about the only time you got asthma! I HATED cross-country runs. I hardly ever did them properly. Because we weren't supervised we used to run across the field, jump on a bus and get off about a hundred yards from school. I reckon if people like running they should be allowed to do it - horses for courses. I remember you being excellent at badminton, table tennis, and basket ball. I was good at badminton, netball and basketball. Even if kids just want to go for a walk it should be okay. Forcing them to do an activity they don't like will put them off for life.

 

 

BBJo

 

 

-

Peter Kebbell

 

 

 

Tuesday, August 08, 2006 12:55 PM

Re: Bad memories of school

 

Hi Jo

 

>A chapter of the book, distributed by Co-ordination Group

>Publications, says children have the right to protection from

>physical and emotional abuse.

>It lists bullying and cross-country runs as possible examples.

 

From my experiences of cross-country at school, I'd have to agree. They didn't take any interest in my knee or asthma issues, and I remember one time sitting for half an hour with someone who'd had a major asthma attack half way through the " lesson " , without a teacher in sight - they just didn't care if children got injured or fell ill while they were running....

 

BB

Peter

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