IN THE CLASSROOM -- Silly Willy learning
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Deirdre Newman
It’s 10 in the morning, and the first-graders in Brenda Colgate’s
class at Andersen Elementary School in Newport Beach are getting
lethargic.
Surveying the situation, Colgate knows exactly how to respond -- she
pops in one of the Silly Willy Workout Tapes, which she started creating
six years ago.
The kids clear the desk areas and start marching, clapping and doing
jumping jacks while saying the five vowels. Soon they are using their
bodies to create vowel shapes.
“I do it almost every morning to get them to wake up,” Colgate said.
“Many times, they come in sleepy and groggy and it seems to make them
more alert.”
There are six different tapes in the series -- each with a different
theme. Some are focused on phonics, some on athletic skills and some on
learning the ABCs. Colgate said she was inspired to create the series to
show kids that fitness can be fun.
“Some kids feel more comfortable in front of the television and
computer. That’s OK, but they should still feel comfortable working out
and not being judged,” Colgate said.
Colgate’s passion for exercise started early -- she began teaching
fitness classes for kids, adults and seniors when she was 18. After
getting a teaching credential, she went back to school and earned a
master’s degree in exercise physiology from the University of
Connecticut.
As she worked with preschoolers, she said she found a lack of
appropriate music that progressed from warmups to aerobic endurance and
muscle strengthening and ended with cooling down.
The exercise aficionado considered making her own tape with other
people’s songs, but they proved too expensive to copyright. So she met
with a local songwriter who said she would provide the music as long as
Colgate provided the words, music and theme.
“I was hopping around her living room making sure the tempo would
work,” Colgate said.
She supplied the narration and even contributed some of the lyrics.
Her three daughters also are featured on some of the tapes’ songs.
As a teacher, Colgate understands that each child learns differently
using various senses. Her tapes combine audio, visual and kinesthetic
skills -- appealing to a broad spectrum of students.
Richie Lamas, 6, said he enjoys doing Silly Willy Workouts in class.
“It’s good because I like it when I stretch. It makes me feel good,”
Richie said.
Gretchen Mars, who co-teaches with Colgate at Andersen, said her
2-year-old daughter, Megan, is addicted to the Silly Willy tapes and
videos.
“To have her marching at age 2 is great,” Mars said. “It helps with
exposure to the alphabet, even at 2.”
Colgate said she hopes her tapes will help stave off the current
childhood trend of obesity. And she said fitness for youngsters is even
more important now with some districts cutting physical education classes
and instructors.
“I think if they can be exposed early and have a good feeling, maybe
we’ll catch some of them,” she said.
* IN THE CLASSROOM is a weekly feature in which Daily Pilot education
writer Deirdre Newman visits a campus within the Newport-Mesa Unified
School District and writes about her experience.
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