Posts Tagged ‘building’
Tuesday, August 31st, 2010
Young people with healthy lifestyles have a good balance of work and play, a healthy diet and an appropriate amount of physical activity and rest. A healthy lifestyle is about both physical and mental wellbeing.
Education for health is concerned with the social and emotional aspects of learning, and relates to issues that are real and relevant to many young people, including sex and relationships, body image, drug, alcohol and tobacco use.
Education for health should seek to encourage young people to eat sensibly, stay physically active and maintain good levels of personal wellbeing. Young people should be able to look after themselves, and stay safe from violence, exploitation and injury.
Good health and effective learning go hand-in-hand. Schools educating young people on, for example, the benefits of healthy eating and regular exercise can bring about both immediate and long-term improvement to their quality of life.
In order to live healthy and fulfilling lives, young people need to understand the consequences of the choices they make. They need opportunities to develop self-respect and build the confidence to make responsible, informed and healthy choices about their lives.
Schools can provide the knowledge, skills and understanding that pupils need to lead healthy lives, not just through what is taught, but also through the school’s routines, organisation and environment.
Developing a curriculum that supports healthy lifestyles
In order to help learners understand the characteristics of a healthy lifestyle and make informed decisions about living healthily, they should have opportunities across the curriculum to:
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meet, talk and work with a range of people, including professionals from the health and emergency services
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develop positive relationships with a wide range of people
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consider social and moral dilemmas, including the varied attitudes and values underpinning some of the healthy lifestyle issues they encounter in their communities
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find information and advice, for example through helplines and websites, and learn how to provide information to others
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prepare for change, for example by anticipating the challenges of new and widening social groups as they get older, and by considering the choices they may have to make
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feel positive about themselves, for example by giving and receiving positive feedback, and keeping a record of their progress and achievements.
The DCSF has identified five key objectives to help schools create a healthier environment for pupils.
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To promote a school ethos and environment that encourages a healthy lifestyle.
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To use the full capacity and flexibility of the curriculum to achieve a healthy lifestyle.
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To ensure that the food and drink available during the school day reinforces the healthy lifestyle message.
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To provide high-quality physical education and school sport, and promote physical activity as part of a lifelong healthy lifestyle.
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To promote an understanding of the full range of issues and behaviours that impact upon lifelong health.
Supporting resources
Healthy schools
The National Healthy Schools Programme
Making sense of health
Making sense of health
The National Institute for Health and Clinical Excellence (NICE)
NICE has issued the first national guideline addressing the assessment and management of weight and the identification and prevention of obesity in adults and children. The guideline contains wide-ranging recommendations, not just for the NHS, but also for schools and providers of early years' education, local authorities, employers and town planners.
The guideline recommends that schools address their environment and ensure that the ethos of all policies helps children and young people to maintain a healthy weight, eat a healthy diet and be physically active. This includes policies relating to building layout and recreational spaces, catering (including vending machines) and the food and drink children bring into school, the taught curriculum (including PE), school travel plans and provision for cycling.
The guideline is available from the NICE website, along with a version entitled 'Understanding NICE guidance: preventing obesity and staying a healthy weight.'
(NHSP) helps schools develop a whole-school approach to promoting young people’s health and wellbeing. The programme supports the link between health, behaviour and achievement – it is about healthy and happy children and young people doing better in learning and in life.
is an educational and community health, web-based resource for teachers and young people in primary and secondary education, and also for parents and public health professionals. It is a preventative health resource that aims to empower young people to make better lifestyle choices, engage with community health issues, become better informed patients and use the NHS more appropriately.
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Sunday, October 11th, 2009
Eating an adequate supply of healthy dietary fats is vitally important to your overall health as well as building muscles exercises. Fats are one of the main components in all of the cell membranes throughout your entire body. If you eat enough healthy natural fats, your cellular processes will proceed normally. On the other hand, if you eat man-made, heavily processed, chemically altered fats (damaged fats) that are found in most processed foods, your cellular function will be impaired as these damaged fats become part of your cell membranes, the body will have to work harder to operate correctly, and degenerative diseases can develop. In addition, healthy dietary fats are essential for optimal hormone production and balance within the body and are therefore essential for building muscles and burn body fat.
Did you know that eating a diet that is too low in fat will reduce your testosterone levels? You know what the results of that are: less muscle and more fat on your frame. Females, don’t be afraid…your testosterone is not going to go through the roof by eating more fat. It helps to keep everything in balance for both men and women, as long as you eat the right fats (more on the right fats in a minute). Other important functions that dietary fats play in a healthy body are aiding vitamin and mineral utilization, enzyme regulation, energy, etc. To burn fat is only a tiny part of being healthy
The Healthy Fatty Food Choices:
• Coconut fat (and other tropical oils)
• Extra virgin olive oil:
• Dark, bittersweet chocolate (>70% cocoa content)
• Avocados or guacamole
• High fat fish such as wild salmon, sardines, mackerel, herring, trout, etc.
• Nuts (any and all - walnuts, almonds, peanuts, cashews, macadamias, etc.)
• Seeds (sunflower seeds, pumpkin seeds, sesame seeds, flax seeds, etc.)
• The fat in organically raised, free-range animals: This is one area where most people have been misinformed by the mass media. Animal fat is inherently good for us, that is, if it came from a healthy animal. Human beings have thrived on animal fats for thousands of years. The problem lies in the fact that most mass produced animal products today do NOT come from healthy animals. They come from animals given loads of antibiotics and fattened up with hormones and fed un-natural feed. The solution is to choose organically raised, free-range meats, eggs, and dairy. At this time, the price is still a little higher, but it is worth it, and as demand grows, the prices will come down.
The Deadly Fatty Foods:
• Homogenized milk fat
• Refined oils
• Anything deep fried
• Hydrogenated oils (source of artificial trans fats)
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Sunday, September 27th, 2009
Exercise (essentially any form of physical exertion which results in the contraction of a muscle) has become a widespread interest over the past several years, especially in areas of weight training. While exercise is generally intended to promote good physical health, bodybuilding more specifically concentrates on building muscle mass and many individuals in society today begin bodybuilding to present a good image of themselves. Many different companies have grasped on to this concept of muscle mass growth and have formulated products which can enhance the process of muscle enlargement. For example, creatine monohydrate, a product advertised to “boost muscle
size and strength” and “improve athletic performance”, is available over the counter and has become a popular consumer good over the past couple years despite a lack of extensive research in to its effect (especially long-term) on the human body.
Because individuals with hardly any knowledge of how to properly weight train begin physical fitness, not only will the process of bodybuilding be rendered useless, it can also be harmful to various other parts of the body. Weed need proper tools to exercise and one of good option is
P90X. P90X is one of the best exercise tool. P90X or Power 90 Master Series has best exercise system for your body.
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