New York State requires that all schools provide students in all grades with physical education (PE). However, in New York City, the majority of schools are failing to meet the state PE mandate. Several reports demonstrate the breadth of the problem. A New York Times article found that about 1 in 5 NYC high school students reports having no gym class in an average week. An audit conducted by former Comptroller Liu reported that none of the 31 NYC elementary schools visited was meeting the New York State PE mandate.
While
the problem affects nearly all NYC schools, schools in neighborhoods that are
predominantly low-income and Black or Latino are even more unlikely to provide
adequate PE. The disproportionate
lack of access to PE for low-income students of color only exacerbates
existing racial disparities and inequities in child obesity and academic
achievement.
Ensuring
access to PE for all students in NYC could go a long way to addressing these
health and educational inequities. There is a plethora of evidence
demonstrating that PE improves student health, reduces
child obesity, and improves
academic performance, including test scores. Yet with all that said, why are
schools failing to provide their students with adequate PE instruction?
The
cause
of the problem is manifold. Many schools are simply unaware of the
requirements. The PE
standards as laid out by the state require that students in grades K through 6 receive 120
minutes of PE per week. The students in grades 7 and 8 should receive at
least 90 minutes of PE per week and all students in grades 7-12 should have at
least three gym classes per week in one semester and two classes per week in
the other semester. Recess cannot be counted toward meeting these minimum time standards.
Yet
even when schools have knowledge of the requirements, many struggle to meet
them. Some schools utilize non-certified instructors for
PE, which may prevent students from receiving quality physical education
instruction. And space limitations due to co-location of multiple schools in
buildings with one gymnasium also impede a school’s ability to provide all students
with adequate PE time.
So
what can be done? With a new mayoral administration bent on tackling the city’s
widening inequities, education and health advocates alike are coming together
to raise the importance of providing quality and comprehensive PE to all of NYC’s
students. New York Lawyers for the Public Interest has teamed up with a wide
variety of stakeholders, including Bronx Health REACH, to advocate for improved access to PE in all NYC public
schools.
The
NYC Department of Education (NYC DOE) has the opportunity to reverse the trend
in PE and work to support and ensure compliance with the state PE mandate. The
NYC DOE should provide schools with resources on the PE requirement by posting information
on their website and sharing best practices across the five boroughs, including
examples of co-located schools that have coordinated schedules to meet the PE
time requirements. The NYC DOE should also document and regularly report schools’
compliance.
The
NYC DOE should also adequately staff the department with professionals who can provide
schools with support and technical assistance with offering a comprehensive PE
curriculum. The NYC DOE could work toward these goals within the Office
of School Wellness, which it jointly oversees with the Department of Health
and Mental Hygiene.
The
new mayoral administration is in charge of one of the largest public school
systems in the nation, with one of the most diverse student populations. We
hope that the new mayoral administration will improve the physical and academic
wellbeing of millions of students and take a step to advance health and
educational justice by making improved access to quality physical education a
priority.
This blog post was written by Sascha Murillo, a Community Organizer in the Health Justice Program at New York Lawyers in the Public Interest, and can also be found on the NYLPI Health Justice page here.)
This blog post was written by Sascha Murillo, a Community Organizer in the Health Justice Program at New York Lawyers in the Public Interest, and can also be found on the NYLPI Health Justice page here.)