Thank you for your trust in me. Through intense deliberation I have decided. The money will be given to women suffrage, child labor and deforestation. This money allocation will better the world not only for us but the children of the future. I have decided to give $600,000 as a gift.
Lansdowne Park used to be a publicly owned historic multi-purpose district, prior to its redevelopment Lansdowne Park contained a stadium (Frank Clair Stadium), an exhibition hall (Aberdeen Pavilion hall), and a multi-purpose entertainment hall (Horticulture Building). In September 2007, the Frank Clair Stadium was forced to shut down after cracks were found in the concrete structure, inspectors declared the structure unsafe and ordered immediate evacuation. Although this caused some immediate scheduling problems for local sports teams, Ottawa’s former mayor, Larry O 'Brien welcomed the closure and hinted to possible redevelopment plans for the stadium and surrounding area. For many years prior to the closure, Lansdowne Park was operating at a deficit and most of the actual green space was paved over due to lack of funds, this meant that public support for redevelopment was high. Less than a month after the closure the local city council approved a design competition for the site.
Introduction [Attention Getter] Do you want to escape to nature, walk or ride your bike on limitless trails, all while learning something new? [Relevance to Audience] The Clark County Wetlands Park is the largest park in Clark County.
For hundreds of years historians have attempted to preserve our nation’s greatest wildlife national parks. In 1916, president Woodrow Wilson signed an act to create the National Park Service. This act was designed for the protection of the 35 national parks and monuments, also those yet to be announced. The act was important because it allowed the federal bureau the privilege to act upon anyone harming the national parks or monuments. Throughout the book Mark Spence expressed how the Wilderness Act that was passed in 1964 factored into the three different parks and the dispossession of the native indians.
This program would help better areas like education, healthcare, housing, immigration, environment, and consumer
Students in a classroom need to have a set time to be able to go outdoors. As a future teacher, I plan to incorporate nature inside and outside the classroom. For example; in the classroom one can accomplish the walls to have trees, and the ceiling as the sky, and the floor as the ground. There are many ways to include nature inside the classroom for students to be able to learn and to communicate. In the book, “Last Child in the Woods” talks about researches “demonstrating on children how they have the ability to selected where they want to play through natural settings” (Louv, 89).
Homeschool groups can organize their robotics teams, community interest groups can borrow a place to meet up and host events. I hope that this grant will demonstrate to the selectmen the value of increasing future resources for more permanent structural additions to the
Youth Sports Are Too Intense “In the United States, about 20 million children and teens participate in some form of organized sports, more than 3.5 million children ages 14 and younger get hurt annually playing sports or participating in recreational activities” (Lucile Parkland Children’s Hospital). Children and their parents are sacraficing much of their time and money with youth sports. With kids starting at such a young age playing such intense sports it is increasing the amount of injuries that occur at younger ages. With the intensity increasing, children’s time is decreasing. These children have no more time for themselves or with their families.
This program is improving all schools and material throughout the state. Due to this grant, the state has begun to work on all of the education improvements that are
Dr. Frank L. Smoll states, “All children and youth need vigorous physical activity as part of their daily lives, and sports provide the benefits of exercise and the potential for acquiring a sense of accomplishment.” (Smoll 1/2).
Three ways to introduce outdoor activities to general high school education The three ways of introducing outdoor activities to general high school education are 1) one day outdoor activity, 2) three or four-day-camp, and 3) camping without digital tools. First, one day outdoor activity releases students from sitting in a classroom. Fresh air or beauty of nature such as mountains, dense forest, and the sea, can refresh student’s mind. These experiences can bring some new ideas to students.
Getting out of doors and engaging in physical means of socialization has dropped with the introduction of technology in our children’s lives. I know that our diet has a lot to do with this; however, children of the past engaged in more physical activities. Take away the x-box and other tech dependant activities, and children will find each other for a game of basketball, or
Putting the fun back into physical activity for children will do wonders to foster PA. You don’t see children playing in neighborhoods anymore. A constructive approach to developing outdoor free play is, in my opinion, the cornerstone of developing a love of doing, moving, and being physically active. Many children don’t enjoy the harshness of competitive sport (I was one of them) but do enjoy being out and about doing things. As a child play that involved running, cycling, swimming, and skating were all the things that I truly loved.
Should kids be sitting on the couch, watching movies, and eating chips all day? What kind of childhood experiences and learning opportunities for growth and development can be attained from being a couch potato? If you really think of it of course; your child is missing out on a lot of childhood experiences. Sitting on the couch, eating chips, is one of the factors to the fact that over one third of the world’s population is obese. Daniel Gould, Ph.D., director of the institute for the Youth Sports at Michigan State University, says, “A solution to obesity is competitive sport.
When children playing actively outdoors to explore new skills, abilities. He uses their entire body and also uses their all senses and children deals with many challenges on own behalf. • Wells & Evans (2003) argues that play effects the child’s life. The greater the amount of nature exposure, the greater the benefits. • Malone & Tranter (2003) Play in a miscellaneous games and outdoor activities to reduces or eliminates