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Be Active Your Way Blog

February Blog Theme

February marks another milestone in the movement for a healthier generation - the 3rd year anniversary of the Let's Move! campaign. This month, Be Active Your Way bloggers will reflect on work that has been done to combat childhood obesity, as well as the road ahead.

To celebrate the Anniversary of Let's Move!, you'll hear from:

Piggybacking and Other Strategies

by ACSM December 7, 2011

Generous partners sometimes underwrite sophisticated marketing campaigns, reaching target audiences with carefully honed messages about health and wellness. But without such resources, proponents of physical activity must find other ways of getting the point across. This is the intersection of advocacy, strategy and ingenuity.

The American College of Sports Medicine (ACSM) uses a special-event strategy that I'll paraphrase as "taking the show to the audience." The idea, in short, is to piggyback on a gathering that is already being planned and promoted in its own right. This eases the burden of creating an event out of whole cloth and taking on all the responsibility for planning, promoting and paying for it as a forum for your announcement. An important bonus is the added momentum such leverage lends to both events.

Savvy leaders of nonprofits use a similar strategy to communicate key points. Examples abound of campaigns relying on partner organizations' use of existing communication channels to pass along message points. Traditionally, this has meant passing on articles and online links. More recently, the headlong momentum of social media means that posts, "likes" and retweets can propel an idea faster than you can say, "Please share this."

A related notion flips the reality that, for many families, mothers are the gatekeepers of family health information. While this is quite true (and central to many programs that target women to promote family health and wellness), another strategy reaches families at their point of connection with important programs and institutions - schools.

I saw this at work recently at Capital City Public Charter School in Washington, DC. Capital City has a culture of wellness that infuses the curriculum. Students at all levels pursue age-appropriate physical activity - from in-class learning to after-school sports and field trips - guided by fitness teachers, parents and guests. Beginning in first grade, students learn about bodily systems and nutrition. The dedication to holistic fitness and wellness helped earn Capital City Public Charter School the distinction of being selected to receive the first Live Positively fitness center award by the National Foundation for Governor's Fitness Councils, chaired by Jake Steinfeld and in partnership with ACSM.

Capital City's health-and-fitness culture extends beyond students, faculty and staff. By design, those messages reach whole families. Youngsters naturally bring home and share what they learn. Beyond that, the school has after-hours programming aimed at parents and siblings. This approach clearly works, at least for this diverse urban community. And I believe it can be equally successful throughout the country.

How can your organization use established programs to convey messages about physical activity?

What communication vehicles already in use could reach target audiences with health-and-fitness information?

News & Reports 5/17/10

by ODPHP May 17, 2010

man holding newspaper

This week, we discuss efforts to increase physical activity among youth via private partnerships, state funding opportunities, and federal legislation:

American Heart Association and Nintendo Join Forces to Promote Healthy Living Through Active-Play Video Games (Source:  Businesswire.com)  Concern over children’s health spurs non-traditional partnership between AHA and Nintendo.

Pennsylvania Announces Active Schools Grant Program in Elementary Schools for 2010-11 School Year  (Source:  PRNewswire.com)  Grants assist schools in providing 30 minutes/day of physical activity for students.

Phys. Ed. Legislation Generates Mixed Reactions (Source:  Education Week)  Respondents agree that increased physical activity among students is needed, but disagree on the proposed mandates of the FIT Kids Act.

 

How can the effectiveness of these approaches be maximized?  Share your ideas!

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News & Reports

First Family Fun Fitness Festival in the Military Community

by DoD DeCA April 21, 2010

Case Lot Sale

With May being National Physical Fitness Month the military community is holding its first Family Fun Fitness Festival. The Defense Commissary Agency has partnered with the exchanges and Morale, Welfare, and Recreation to offer customers savings, physical activity events, and health and wellness information. More than 180 installations worldwide have signed on to participate in commissary case lot sales, exchange sidewalk sales, morale, welfare, and recreation fitness events, healthy food demos, and  prize giveaways. Many of the participating installations are tipping the scales of creativity in combining fitness, fun and family. At U.S. Army Garrison Heidelberg, Germany, they are featuring events such as a fun run with pets, a relay race toting cases, a circuit course where trainers work with families in eight exercises, and a family recipe exchange. Misawa Air Base, Japan, is scheduling a nutritional scavenger hunt along with a yoga demo, massages, a 100-yard dash and a weight-lifting competition. At Naval Support Activity Memphis, Tenn., members of USA Karate will be giving demonstrations in karate, Brazilian jiu-jitsu and cage fitness, offering free classes to three different age groups

There is much interest and commitment from all areas of the military community, including industry partners, in promoting physical activity and good nutrition for military families. We are on the move in the military community!

How are you creating partnerships to help promote physical activity in your communities?

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