5 tips + heart-pumping exercises to improve your children’s heart health
Fitness expert, Brent Bishop shares 5 tips and exercises to get your children more active and off the electronics.
Today, children should be getting a minimum of 60 minutes of heart-pumping exercise a day. Within the last 30 years, children’s obesity rate has tripled! Along with increasing your children’s activity, the intake of fruit-flavored juices, soft drinks and sport drinks should be reduced. Fitness expert, Brent Bishop shares 5 tips and exercises to get your children’s heart pumping and get them off the electronics.
Tips:
- Turn screen time to lean time
- Interest is Everything
Choose interest-driven activities:- If pushed into an activity they aren’t interested in, often the opposite effect happens = frustration
- Make activities relevant
- Consider temperament and personality according to sport or activity choices
- Some children may be less competitive and more self-conscious in team environments. Sometimes activities like martial arts, gymnastics and skateboarding are better suited.
- Age appropriate
- Get Creative
For example piggy back racing, game creation, run and fetch toys etc. - Be Actively Present
Children require more stimulation nowadays – you MUST be present at least some of the time. - Lead by Example
Parents dedicated to exercise = kids interested in exercise.
What to do:
4-8 years old
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- Keep it basic (ex. non-competitive games like moving like an animal)
9-12 years old
- Coordination and complex movements can be enhanced
- Open to competition but base this on temperament – kids receive competition differently
Exercises
Exercise 1. (4-8yrs old)
Game – Move like an animal/superhero
- Call out or show pics of different animals – children imitate for a specific distance.
- Ex. bear crawl, kangaroo jump, Superman, Spiderman, etc.
Exercise 2. (4-8yrs old)
Follow the leader
- One leader faces group, every move they make the group copies/follows.
- Change leader each minute.
Exercise 3. (9-12yrs old)
Cone reaction drill
- Place children around one cone in a circle format and one child (or parent) as the role of ‘coach’.
- While running on the spot the coach calls out a movement (ex. jump, squat, twist, etc) and children make that move.
- When the coach calls out cone, they all try to pick up the cone in the center as fast as possible.
Exercise 4. (9-12yrs old)
Partner reaction
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- Stimulate the mind, proprioception and body.
- Partner faces one direction while running on the spot. Other partner taps head, shoulder etc to elicit specified reaction.
Exercise 5. (All ages)
Mission impossible