Do you agree with this class credit requirement for a high school diploma?
Posted by admin on Feb 18, 2010
Hello, my name is Evan Ritter, I’m 16 and I go to Red Land High School in the West Shore School District in South – Central Pennsylvania. In order to graduate high school and get your diploma, you must have three gym credits. In your freshman year, you take a semester of Gym/Health. They alternate every other day. In ninth grade health, you learn about weight management, nutrition, drugs, and a pregnancy/STD’s unit. Once in a while, you skip health days for certain things in gym. In ninth grade gym, your performance is key. You get changed into your gym clothes right when you get to the locker room (the uniform costs about $27 with no monetary assistance, if you don’t have it, you get docked ten points each day), and you line up in the gym. After attendance is marked, you run around the gym for five minutes (which is not air conditioned, that’s left for the computer rooms), if you stop to take more than one break, or walk, your warm-ups don’t count. After the warm-up run, you line up in order and do various exercises including many push-ups crunches, arm exercises and bends. After your warm-ups are completed, you play different sports. These include basketball, baseball, soccer, floor hockey, volleyball, football, and sometimes dodgeball, bombardment, freeze tag, and other childish games. Twice a year, once in the beginning and end of the semester, you do a fitness test. You have to complete a 15 minute run around a quarter mile track field (you have to run around it four times to make a mile, obviously, to get a 70 which is one point above failing), you must also complete a 300 yard shuttle run, which is scaling 75 feet twelve times, running to a cone and turning around (You must complete it in one minute to get a 70, one point about failing), a one minute push-ups test, you must do 30 push-ups in one minute to get a 70, one point above failing, there’s a one minute pull ups test you have to do ten to get a 70, one point above failing, a one-minute crunch test in which you must do 30 in one minute to get a 70, one point above failing, and a sit-ups test in which you must complete 35 to get a 70, one point above failing. Some students have asthma, some are overweight, and some are just slow at stuff. I am overweight with asthma. I’ve failed the last two years of gym for not performing efficiently enough in the fitness tests, and not wearing a uniform due to the price. My family is below the poverty line and it’s hard to manage with this kind of thing. I did fine in health, did my homework, completed classwork and projects, but the gym an health grades are averaged out together. I believe gym should not be mandatory to graduate. I see no educational value to it, I find it embarrassing for some kids, and very tiring and just unneccessary. I’ve encountered some students on the verge of suicide from feeling outcasted and exploited while other students watch and laugh as we take the tests, one student at a time. I think the health class should be a semester long class instead of every other day with gym. You can be an expert at health, but not be able to run fast and fail the class (literally). I think the gym classes should be offered, but not automatically part of your schedule. The fitness test continue for two more years with added other sports.
There are also classes that aren’t mandatory called child development (learning about the child from conception to toddler ages, including food, care, health, and other important topics), only offered to ninth graders, early child psychology only offered to tenth graders, and child psychology, only offered to eleventh graders. I did not get to take child development in my freshman year. There are around 60 students in our school at any given time that have children or are expecting. I think this class should be very important and mandatory, perhaps in place of gym? Maybe it should be shared with health. If all three won’t be needed to graduate, I think at least, the first, freshman class should.
Does anyone else agree with what I’ve said here, and do you think it would be wise to push further with this, perhaps to change the class credit requirement for a gym class? If so, what should I do next (this Yahoo! Answers post was my first step)?
Sincerely,
Evan Ritter
I hated gym too, but nothing you have suggested is particularly unusual, and you have to meet certain standards in your academic classes too, even if you are not naturally academically inclined.
As to the uniform, I’m willing to bet that you have other clothes which cost you more than $27. It is a matter of choice if you decided not to buy the uniform and get docked instead. Sorry, but I’m not terribly sympathetic.


Public school is crap.
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I hated gym too, but nothing you have suggested is particularly unusual, and you have to meet certain standards in your academic classes too, even if you are not naturally academically inclined.
As to the uniform, I’m willing to bet that you have other clothes which cost you more than $27. It is a matter of choice if you decided not to buy the uniform and get docked instead. Sorry, but I’m not terribly sympathetic.
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I do think that gym class should be a required class in order to graduate. Too many kids are just sitting around all the time, and any physical activity is beneficial. However, if you are truly be grading as you describe, I disagree with the grading system. As long as students are participating and trying their best, they should not fail gym. Not everyone is naturally athletic. While I was not overweight in high school, I have never been good at the fitness test. I am so inflexible, I can’t even touch my toes. About the required uniform… you say you can’t afford it, but if you can afford a computer and the internet, I feel that you really could. And if you honestly can’t, did you ever try talking to the school about it? Or maybe there’s a church in the community that could help you out?
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Yes. However financial and medical situations should be taken into account (if not it may be illegal). With a nation failing its own health and sadly many childrens health being failed, it is important schools show their interest in their student’s health as well as their knowledge in areas of health.
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