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FRESNO, Calif., Feb 13,
2007 - Break the Barriers, Inc., the nation's premier sports-arts
center uniting the able and disabled, will receive $500,000 per year
for the next three years from The Carol M. White Physical Education
Program (PEP). The PEP funds will be used exclusively to improve and
expand the physical education and after-school programs in the Fresno,
Clovis, Madera, Kings Canyon, Fowler and Golden Valley Unified School
Districts. Program partners include CSU Fresno, Fresno and Madera
County Offices of Education, Kids Kan, Inc. and, Joe Herzog, Region
28 chairman for the California Association for Health, Physical Education,
Recreation and Dance (CAPHERD).
The Carol M. White Physical Education Program is part of the U.S.
Department of Education that provides grants to initiate, expand,
and improve physical education programs for K-12 students in order
to help them make progress toward meeting state standards for physical
education.
"The goal of the PEP project is to develop a fully inclusive
and integrated physical education, health and nutrition program
in California's Central Valley," said Break the Barriers Co-founder
and Executive Director Deby Hergenrader. "Students who participate
in the project will adopt healthier habits and benefit from creative,
regular exercise doing activities they enjoy, and learn to make
more nutritious food choices."
Dr. Gale Gorke, founder and executive director of Kids Kan, Inc.,
will serve as project director. Gorke has spent more than 25-years
in public education administration, and has implemented the PEP
project in multiple communities.
"We have a solid infrastructure in place from which to implement
and sustain the project. Improvements are being made to the curriculum
to meet state P.E. standards, and we are employing measures to evaluate
the short- and long-term effects of the project," said Gorke.
"However, I think our greatest success will result from the
increased skill and knowledge of the PEP staff due to ongoing training,
and the enthusiastic support and involvement of the parents and
the local communities."
The PEP funds will boost the existing physical education programs
in the schools, districts and communities by developing research-based
lab training schools and a community lab training site at Break
the Barriers; and by providing updated training in P.E., health
and nutrition standards in the university credential and certification
programs at the school sites and at the lab training sites.
The physical education program will be expanded by adding fully
inclusive Adaptive Physical Education activities (adapted or modified
to address the individualized needs of children and youth who have
gross motor developmental delays), so all students may participate
equally in the P.E., after school, and recreation programs. Research-based
sports, recreation, health, fitness, and nutrition programs are
being adapted to meet the specific needs of participants. There
will also be a focus on integrating California's Health and Nutrition
Content Standards with California's current and new Physical Education
Standards.
About Break the Barriers
Fresno-based Break the Barriers is a non-profit 501 (c) (3) organization
established in 1985. Through sports, arts, aquatics, health and
fitness programs for the able bodied and the disabled, Break the
Barriers is recognized as a "National Role Model for Inclusion"
by the U.S. Department of Special Education, acknowledged throughout
California, the United States, and abroad for its equity advocacy.
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