Posted on 09/01/2015 9:17:49 AM PDT by Citizen Zed
Starting this fall, all second graders in D.C. public schools will learn to ride in PE class.
Before the start of the new school year in Washington, D.C., as families were buying supplies and teachers were drafting their lesson plans, Miriam Kenyon was spending her days in a warehouse in the citys Northeast quadrant, surrounded by bikes.
She and a group of volunteers were building them: Diamondback Vipers and Mini Vipers, 16- and 20-inch kids models. Theyre BMX bikes, so theyre really sturdy and theyre made for multiple uses, explains Kenyon, the director of health and physical education at District of Columbia Public Schools (DCPS).
All the bikes in the warehousea huge fleet numbering 475had to be ready by the time the first bell rang on August 24. Once assembled, they were divvied up and shipped to elementary schools for a novel educational experiment.
The goal: to teach every second grader in the citys school system how to ride a bike.
Every kid should know how to ride a bike, Kenyon says. Its a great way not only to get to school, but to exercise, and to see your city. It promotes independence.
Bike safety instruction is fairly common in schools around the United States. In D.C., the nonprofit Washington Area Bicyclist Association sends instructors into schools as part of the national Safe Routes to School program. The instructors teach safety basics and bring in bikes and helmets so the kids can practice their skills.
But thats not the same thing as teaching kids how to ride, which typically doesnt happen at school. Dan Hoagland, WABAs education director, started noticing on his school visits that large cohorts of students in D.C. couldnt ride at all. He talked about it with Kenyon. In the back of my mind, as I ran these programs, I thought, How do we figure out a way to more comprehensively approach bike education for kids?
Earlier this year, Kenyon discovered how: through a DCPS initiative called Cornerstones. New this fall, Cornerstones assigns common projects to students across the citya core curriculum in miniature, basically. Officials hope it will improve academic rigor and narrow the achievement gap that separates affluent and poor, white and black students.
When Cornerstones was announced, Kenyon saw her opportunity and grabbed it. Bike-riding instruction could become a Cornerstone project in physical education. The District Department of Transportation agreed to fund the purchase of 475 bikes, and a universal bike-riding programthe first of its kind in a U.S. school districtwas born.
Heres how it works: The bikes will rotate around schools. The fleet is large enough for a quarter of the 79 elementary schools in DCPS to have 25 bikes at a time, so every child in a PE class should be able to get his or her own bike and helmet. (When there arent enough bikes to go around and the kids have to share, they dont get as much hands-on time.)
The bikes will stay in the first set of schoolsa cross section spread across the cityfor several weeks. Then theyll move to another set of schools, and so on, until the end of the school year, when every second grader in the city will have completed the program and, assuming all goes well, can pedal with confidence. Kenyon has ordered another 475 bikes with DCPS funding, so eventually, there will be enough to serve half of the schools in the fall, half in the spring.
The choice of second grade was deliberate. Kenyon realized it would be impossible for a PE teacher to get 20 or more non-riders proficient within weeks. So Kindergarten and Pre-Kyears when many or most kids cant ridewere out. But waiting too long would cause problems, too; older kids who dont know how to ride can be embarrassed or scared of falling.
We had to pick an age group where some kids know how to ride and some dont, Kenyon says, and second grade was the sweet spot. While the non-riders learn the essentials, experienced cyclists will be able to hone their skills on the obstacle course or complete a challenge like the how-slow-can-you-go snail ride.
To celebrate the end of the course, each class will do a half-day group ride from the school to a local park and back. Kenyon has mapped a five-to-seven-mile route around every elementary school, with a shorter loop for fledgling riders. We can take them to a safe place to bike, like Anacostia Park or Fort Dupont Park or Rock Creek Park. They can see beautiful areas of their city and enjoy them by riding.
An avid cyclist herself, Kenyon grew up in a bike-loving family in D.C. When she was seven, she recalls, the family vacation was a ride to Harpers Ferry, West Virginia, some 60 miles away. But the goal of the new program isnt to produce long-distance riders.
Urban biking has a well-documented equity problem. As Capital Bikeshare expands and D.C. adds more bike infrastructure, theres a danger that low-income residents will be left out of the citys two-wheeled renaissance. Universal bike education could prevent that.
The proverbial wisdom of as easy as riding a bike doesnt always hold true in low-income neighborhoods. There are many reasons why a poor kid might not learn to ride: Buying a bike is out of reach for some families. Parents are understandably concerned about their kids safety on the street. The best and safest places to bike, the protected lanes and park trails, are more likely to be across town.
If every kid in D.C. learns to ride a bike, none of those barriers will disappear. But bike-riding kids have more freedom to explore their city, and thats a small defense, at least, against worsening spatial segregation.
More young people of all backgrounds will be ableand motivatedto use resources that now skew to D.C.s professional classes. And they will grow into bike-riding adults, who can enjoy recreational biking or commute by bike if they choose, and lobby for safe, pleasant places to bike wherever they live.
Thats great news for anyone who cares about their city being equitable. Bike advocates, who traditionally havent focused much on families and kids, grasp the importance of programs like Kenyons.
We cant survive if were only going after the white, bearded guys with bikes, Hoagland admits. If we want to create the next generation of advocates, we need to make sure theyre enjoying and excited about bicycling from as young an age as possible.
They can’t read or add, but they are fantastic at kick-outs and curb-jumps.
In 3rd grade, they teach them how to steal bikes.
You should see what sons of Obama do to bicycles that they’ve acquired.
Ridiculous.
Thats your DAD`S job.
Disgusting.
They can’t read or do simple math but they are learning to ride bikes??????????????????
Astonishing.
.
Racist.
feed, indoctrinate, teach bike riding,. Too bad schools dont teach.
Can you spell Libility? With a capital L!
I don’t mind kids riding bikes in gym class. But I have this sneaking suspicion that this is just a way for the school to buy a bunch of bikes and give them away to the kids.
Makes sense. You can’t steal a bike without riding it.
Strange, my father taught me.
You are way too worried. They would never let kids learn the way we learned...far too dangerous... When they say bikes, they mean this...
BUBBLE BIKE - For kids in our bubble wrap world.
Tax dollars at work.
Sheesh - when I was a kid we’d go to the top of Heartbreak Hill, sit on a bike, and the other kids would push the bike till it rolled down the hill at 20 mph
Of course we’d all crash at the bottom but we learned to ride very quickly.
If they can’t pass that class, they can take a remedial class titled: How to Fall Off a Log.
Now this we need, drive-by shootings done on bicycles will save fuel and therefor the planet. White-devil crackers be rapin’ the planet! /sarc
Ok son, your ready to go to school now....
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