Los Angeles Times

L.A. students flunk fitness test

Fewer than one-third of those tested pass each area assessed.

- By Joy Resmovits joy.resmovits@LATimes.com Twitter: @Joy_Resmovits

How physically fit are the students of the Los Angeles Unified School District?

According to a statewide test, not nearly as fit as they should be.

L.A. Unified students at two of three tested grade levels performed a tad less well on the California Physical Fitness test last year than they did the year before. And overall, fewer than one-third of the tested students passed each fitness area assessed.

Just under one-fifth — 19.1% — of Los Angeles Unified fifth-graders performed in “the Healthy Fitness Zone” in all six areas tested: aerobic capacity, body compositio­n, abdominal strength, trunk extensor strength, upper body strength and flexibilit­y. Last year, 20.1% of fifth-graders passed the six subjects.

Seventh-graders did a little better (22.3%) and ninthgrade­rs a little better still (26.8%), though they were down from 28.3% last year.

On average, California’s students fared significan­tly better than their Los Angeles counterpar­ts, but they too lost a bit of ground.

Statewide, about 1.3 million students took the test, which is supposed to “assist students in establishi­ng lifetime habits of regular physical activity,” according to informatio­n about it on the website of the state Department of Education.

State Supt. of Public Instructio­n Tom Torlakson — a former high school track coach — stressed the importance of good physical health. “Healthy, active, and well-nourished children are more likely to attend school and are more prepared and motivated to learn,” he said in a statement.

Adults, he said, should be “eating healthy foods and exercising so we can serve as role models for healthy living.”

Los Angeles Unified has enacted several health-oriented policies, including a revamp of its lunch program and a ban on the sale of junk food from student stores. There’s also a program that dispatches 19 physical-education teachers to elementary school classrooms to help teach healthful habits.

Still, according to the test results, across all three grades and six fitness areas, 8.7% to 28.8% of district students face a “health risk.”

Students in fifth, seventh and ninth grades are required by state law to have their fitness assessed.

The fitness test includes a variety of measures of physical health. To look at flexibilit­y, for example, it has students sit and extend one leg out in front of them and then bend their trunks, arms extended, as far as they can toward it. Students also do push-ups, trunk lifts, runs and walks, and their body mass is measured.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States