Part1- Introduction to Physical activities & Healthy life

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Part1- Introduction to Physical activities & Healthy life


Here we have two kids. A boy named Sanjay, and a girl named April.
Sanjay and April are kids just like you. Although they are cartoons. I guess they're not exactly
just like you now are they? Maybe I'll give them jetpacks. Why not?
You know what? Maybe jetpacks are a bad idea. My bad.

Now, we really want Sanjay and April to be happy kids. For that to happen we want them
to have fun being active and to learn to make healthy choices. But to do this, there are
skills they have to learn first.
Yeah! Skills! Watch this. Sanjay, let's have you run a race. We'll draw a track here,
and give you a really tough opponent to run against. How about a cheetah? They're pretty
fast.

And let's put April on a baseball diamond. She can be playing against someone tough too.
How about a team of elephants who use their trunks to hit the ball?
Now, in order for Sanjay and April to get better at their activities, they have to learn
some basic skills first. Think about it. If Sanjay hasn't learned how to run properly,
he won't be able to run a race very well. And April won't really be ready to play baseball
until she learns to catch.
To be active, and to have fun playing lots of games and sports, there are a lot of basic
skills you should learn. Things like how to dodge, skip, jump, kick, overhand throw, catch
and run.

If you learn skills like these, you'll end up using them in sports and physical activities,
and you'll be confident playing them. This is called being physically literate.
If you become physically literate and learn these basic skills, then you'll be able to
try more activities, and activities are fun! If you can run, you can take part in soccer,
basketball or hiking. If you can throw you can play baseball, cricket or wheelchair bocce.
If you can balance you can do yoga, gymnastics or even shark riding.
OK. You got me. I made shark riding up. But imagine?

Now, not only do we want Sanjay and April to be active, we also want them to learn to
make healthy choices. There are skills you have to learn for that too! But instead of
running and catching, these are thinking and doing skills! Things like saying kind words,
listening to each other, and knowing what you're feeling. Learning these help you make
healthy decisions, like eating well, wearing your bike helmet and making smart life choices.
This is called health literacy.

If you learn the skills of health literacy, you might choose to do fun activities like
read a book, go outside and be active or draw instead of only playing video games. And you
may choose to eat more fruits and vegetables, instead of mostly candy.
I know, Mr Cheetah! But being healthy is just as important for Cheetahs as it is for kids!
So if Sanjay and April can learn health literacy and physical literacy, they'll really be on
the right track!

Then Sanjay and April will feel good about participating in those activities. And they'll
want to try more activities because they know they have the skills to be good at it! They'll
also have the skills to make choices for their health and wellbeing!
And, in the end, they'll be active, happier and healthier!
Even if you take away their jetpacks. Sorry guys.
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How to start living a healthier lifestyle Tips for a healthy life

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we'd all like to live a healthier lifestyle right whether that means
getting more exercise are taking a nasty habit or losing weight but how do you
get started me you know what you do we're back here which is a calvo
executive editor of shape magazine with some more helpful hints high how r u
that wealth so you have a half plate will can you tell me that with that is
yes i think for help her weight loss.

one of the most important things you can do is
half of your plate with fruits or vegetables and every male what that does
is it helps keep your calories under control and it also insures that you're
getting
plenty of fiber phyto-chemicals vitamins and minerals in your diet which help
control
all your risk factors for diseases like heart disease
cancer
and it can even keep your skin looking wrinkle free and smooth and
healthy and glowing
so what about the network is a lot of people don't to go to doctor now for a
picnic point nsw break it what what you think about that i think that
you'd be pick a day
you know whether it's your birthday
and i think that that's a great day for people to to sort of take stock of their
health care and other you're older and think that what you can do is you can
sit down and you can say okay
this week i'm going to make all of my doctors appointment so i'm going to
schedule a screening with the dermatologist for my skin cancer track
i'm going to get a mammogram at some of them and i'm going to schedule my
gynecology appointment so i can get my pap smear and my checkup i'm going to
schedule my physical now you obviously don't have to go to the doctor on that
week that if you take an hour one day and you just sit down and you may call
it the appointments over the next couple of months you'll have it in your
calendar and you will make sure that you were getting the preventative care that
you need to catch a problem before it becomes or be a problem
and outlast thinking about
downtime and really all that such busy lifestyles it's so hard to find out
rehearsal busy and stressed
increasingly research has shown that stress has become factor in a lot of
diseases everything from from catching a cold
to developing cancer to developing heart disease even depression
so it's very important to take time for yourself during the day and it can be
just anything that you enjoy
we know it doesn't have to be like boeing need to get a massage need to
officially relax it can just be you know i love my job and their content play
with my dog for ten minutes i'm just going make that my coming home ritual
or isle of
asia historical fiction i'm just going to carve out fifteen minutes a day to
read something that i really really enjoy i'd personally i am not happy if
i'm not reading a novel that i'm really in grossman and i just make sure that i
have one in my bag at all times and whenever i have a couple of minutes i'd
just pull it open and it it makes me happy and it believes the straps and i
think that everybody has something special like that's what the law and
it's nice to think of it in small increments doesn't we get overwhelmed
yet looking at the whole picture and they're just small things you can do
throughout the so what about exercises that is leanings
is one of the best exercises and you can do it anywhere and its kisi to do and it
doesn't you don't have to be a super athlete to be able to do it
ten minutes to save time very intense home forty five-pound woman if she's
walking briskly about a hundred mesangial so you really eat at kicking up a little bit to burn that many but an brisk walking is great for your heart even slow walking is good for you it's
good for your health it's good for your weight control
you know the bodies of the more you can walk take the stairs instead of the
elevator walk two appointments
you know park your car a little bit further away from the entrance to your
office in the mall
and walk.

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Part 3 - Applying Physical & Health Literacy

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So, I'm sure you understand that it's important to be physically active and healthy. It's
a pretty obvious thing to say, isn't it? Like saying you'd rather live on land than underwater.
Or you'd rather call your friends than fax them.

But just how important is being active and healthy? Well, let’s look. In the entire
world, physical inactivity is the fourth leading risk factor for mortality behind high blood
pressure, tobacco use and high blood sugar. Physical inactivity is the main cause for
about ¼ of all deaths caused by breast and colon cancer, diabetes, and heart disease.
Now, people aged 5 – 17 should accumulate 60 minutes of moderate to vigorous physical
activity in a day. But currently, only 7% of youth are getting the recommended amount
of physical activity.

We have a similar problem when we examine healthy living. Less than half of children
and youth are getting the recommended number of servings or fruit and vegetable daily.
Without change, these children will have lifespans that are three to four years shorter than
today's adults, due to obesity.
So, it's clearly very important to be physically active, and healthy. And to work towards getting
better at it.

But here's the problem. Before you can make changes and get to a position where you're
physically active and making healthy decisions you've got to learn something called health
and physical literacy.

What's that you ask?...Ahem…Health literacy is the ability to develop critical thinking
skills to make good decisions about your health. Physical literacy is the ability to move with
competence and confidence in a wide variety of physical activities.

It's like this: say you want to drive a car. You don't just hop in the seat, and start
zipping around. You've got some basic skills to learn first. Steering, stopping, parallel
parking. OK, maybe you still can't parallel park.

The point is, you have to learn the basic skills and strategies before you can drive.
Your health is the same way.

Let’s take physical literacy. To feel comfortable and confident being physically active, and
therefore more likely to be regularly active, you need to learn fundamental movement skills
like how to dodge, hop, skip, jump, kick and overhand throw.

Once you’re comfortable and confident with these skills, you can start to apply various
strategies in physical activities. For example, when playing sledge hockey, you may be playing
defense so learning to ‘defend a space’ will be a very useful strategy. This applies
to hockey and basketball too! When you play bocce or wheelchair curling, ‘avoiding obstacles’
will help you to score points and learning 'aim and accuracy' helps with jai alai and
squash.

It's the same if you want to be healthy. To be health literate, you have to learn basic
critical and creative thinking skills like planning, processing, drawing conclusions
and reflecting. Through these, you develop the ability to make healthy choices like eating
well, avoiding smoking and making good decisions about your emotional well being.
Making good choices isn't like flipping on a switch. We learn how to do it.

Health and physical literacy get you to a place where you're competent and confident
in physical activities and making healthy smart choices about your life. This will help
you get better grades, make friends and just generally make you a happier, healthier person.
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Part 2 - Exploring Physical & Health Literacy

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Let’s look at these two people here. We'll call this guy Marco, and this girl Kim. They're
just random teenagers. Nothing too crazy. Although, really, these are drawings so why
be boring, right? There you go, Marco. Have some 'spring-feet'.They look great.

Now, the big difference between Kim and Marco is that Kim leads a healthy, physically active life. She plays soccer, break-dances, eats well and generally takes good care of herself.

Marco, unfortunately, doesn’t make the healthiest choices. He doesn't really get much exercise either, which is kind of a waste if you think about it, because he's got spring-feet now. Anyway, this is a problem, because making healthy choices and being physically active
is really important at their age. It can help you make friends, do well at school, and feel
good about yourself.

So, it's pretty important! But to be able to make healthy choices, and to become active,
you have to learn health and physical literacy.
Look at it this way – if you want to be good at rocket science, you don't just go
ahead and start building a rocket. That … could be a problem.
If you want to make a rocket properly, you have some basic skills to learn first. Things
like math, physics and engineering. And then you use those skills to actually design and
build the rocket.
Well, it's the same with being physically active and making healthy choices. You have
to learn and practice some basic skills.

So, let’s look at physical literacy. To feel comfortable and confident when you're
being active, it helps to learn things like how to dodge, hop, skip, jump, kick, overhand
throw, catch and run.

On the other hand, if you're really, really good at them – you can compete in the ultimate
physical activity: soccer-basket-rugby-bowling ball!

(Clears Throat) Okay we're still working on trying to come up with the rules for that

one.

If you don't feel comfortable with these fundamental skills, you might not choose to participate
in a bunch of fun activities and sports.

The same is true if you want to be healthy. To be health literate, you have to learn basic
thinking skills like communicating, and knowing what you're feeling. Through these, you develop
the ability to make healthy choices, like eating well, not smoking and making good decisions
about your emotional wellbeing.

So, for example, if Marco were health literate, he'd know that a well-balanced dinner is better
than, let’s say… a bucket of Martian food.
Um, I don't think so, Marco.

So, let’s have Marco learn the skills of health and physical literacy. Then he can
confidently pursue the activities he likes, have a strong sense of wellbeing, and hopefully
just become generally happier and healthier, and not just for today, but for the rest of
his life.

Plus, we're going to let him keep the spring-feet, because they're just awesome.
I see good things in your future Marco.


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