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South Carolina Bill to Reduce Childhood Obesity With Required Play and More PE /article/south-carolina-bill-to-reduce-childhood-obesity-with-required-play-and-more-pe/ Fri, 16 Feb 2024 12:30:00 +0000 /?post_type=article&p=722319 This article was originally published in

COLUMBIA 鈥 Recess would be required for elementary and middle school students in a proposal attempting to decrease childhood obesity rates.

The bill discussed by a House panel Tuesday would mandate at least 20 minutes of outdoor play every school day for students in kindergarten through eighth grade. It would also double the time sixth- through eighth-graders must spend in structured physical education classes, from 30 hours to 60 hours for the year.

The goal, said bill sponsor Rep. Patrick Haddon, is to get students more physically active to reduce obesity rates.


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Nearly 40% of students in the state were overweight or obese last school year, according to data collected through the .

鈥淭his is a big problem that鈥檚 been in the making for some years now,鈥 said Haddon, R-Greenville.

In nearly half the state鈥檚 public schools, students in second, fifth and eighth grades, as well as high schoolers, take the FitnessGram test to evaluate their general health and physical abilities. Those findings show childhood fitness has been falling, said Russell Pate, who leads a group at the University of South Carolina researching children鈥檚 physical activity.

During the 2022-23 school year, 54% of children received unhealthy scores on cardiorespiratory tests that involved running a mile and sprinting. When asked to do pushups to measure upper body strength, 44% of tested students needed improvement, according to the most recent report.

That makes for 鈥渁 critical public health issue,鈥 Pate told legislators.

When children don鈥檛 have time to play outside, they don鈥檛 learn how to play, said David Stodden, a professor of educational and developmental science at USC.

鈥淚f kids can鈥檛 play, they can鈥檛 use this equipment,鈥 Stodden said, showing lawmakers a photo of a playground.

Not using the playground means losing valuable interactions with other children, hindering them socially, Stodden said. Plus, exercise boosts the parts of the brain used to learn other skills, such as reading and math, he said.

Patrick Kelly, a lobbyist for the Palmetto State Teachers Association, speaks during a subcommittee meeting on Tuesday, Feb. 13, 2024. Kelly raised concerns about a bill that would expand physical education requirements for middle schoolers. (Skylar Laird/SC Daily Gazette)

The proposal, however, could add stress to already overburdened schools and teachers, said Patrick Kelly, a lobbyist for the Palmetto State Teachers鈥 Association.

Schools have been enough teachers in all subjects, and physical education is no exception, Kelly said. Plus, the additional 30 hours of physical education it would mandate for middle schoolers would take time away from lessons in math, reading, science and social studies, he said.

鈥淭he legislation seeks to allocate the most valuable and scarce resource we have in our schools, which is the time that we have with our students,鈥 said Kelly, who is also a Columbia-area high school history teacher.

More flexibility for schools struggling to meet those requirements would help, Kelly said.

While the panel of legislators did not vote Tuesday, they generally agreed they did not want to further burden teachers.

鈥淭he one thing that I don鈥檛 want to have happen is we implement something with the time (requirements), and we don鈥檛 have the structure and the personnel to actually make it happen,鈥 said Rep. David Vaughan, R-Simpsonville.

is part of States Newsroom, a nonprofit news network supported by grants and a coalition of donors as a 501c(3) public charity. SC Daily Gazette maintains editorial independence. Contact Editor Seanna Adcox for questions: info@scdailygazette.com. Follow SC Daily Gazette on and .

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