Free make-up and music for pupils who walk to school
Ruth Bloomfield17 Sep 2009
Teenagers are being offered free music, clothes and make-up to encourage them to walk to school.
Secondary school pupils will also get pedometers to count the number of steps they take each day under a pilot scheme to combat obesity.
Every pupil who walks a minimum of 60,000 steps between Monday and Friday for four weeks will be rewarded with shopping vouchers.
The average number of steps in a mile is between 2,000 and 2,500, so walking 60,000 steps is equivalent to between 24 and 30 miles.
Prizes on offer would include vouchers to use at high street stores such as HMV, Boots and H&M.
The scheme will be launched this academic year and Ealing council is hoping that pupils who volunteer will be encouraged to continue walking after the project has ended. If successful it could be adopted by councils across London.
Ian Gibb, the council's cabinet member for children and young people, said he hoped the project would help reduce both childhood obesity and traffic on the roads.
"We want to promote healthy lifestyles and there are some obesity problems among young people in the area, as there are everywhere," he said.
"We would ideally like children to move away from being driven to school or jumping on the bus.
"You can lecture kids about walking, but we felt that we needed to offer some kind of extra incentive to encourage them to want to walk.
"Hopefully once they have the habit of walking to school it will stick."
Mr Gibb said that the value of the vouchers had not yet been decided and that the scheme would not target overweight pupils only.
"We don't want to stigmatise it as a fat camp for children," he said. "We will run the project through the individual school councils, and we want all children to be encouraged to walk to school."
Tam Fry, a member of the board of the National Obesity Forum and chairman of the Child Growth Foundation, today welcomed the proposal.
"Any initiative which encourages people to take exercise has got to be encouraged because we have got such a problem now, particularly with teenagers and the amount of exercise they take," he said. "There is a lot of evidence about the particular difficulty of interesting teenage girls in activity. They would much prefer to sit around and talk to their friends, and they hate team sports. But they can do things like simple walking."
However, he stressed that overweight pupils should not be singled out. "It has got to be everybody doing it, so that no one is stigmatised," he said.
Ealing will also launch "walking tournaments", giving a prize to the school whose pupils walk the most steps.
Reader views (4)
Bonkers! So they get dropped off around the corner, that's really going to help. Look for the kid with 50 pedometers around his legs selling steps to his clsssmates - he's the one who will make it in life! (or she, obviously, mustn't upset the PC brigade)
- Paul, London, 18/09/2009 08:36
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Don't I remember a report about six weeks ago that showed that children were attaching their pedometers to their pet dog's collar and encouraging the dog to chase after sticks etc. in the local parks?
- Jim, London, 17/09/2009 14:19
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How about simply not giving them free Oyster cards so they walk the 2 stops rather than waiting 15 minutes for the bus and then getting off 2 minutes later? It'd also save Londoners something in the region of £50 million per year.
- Bob, Cheam, 17/09/2009 13:19
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I was told to walk to school, mainly because we didn't have a car, nor were there free buses! However, your headline is wrong, it is not FREE. Some one has to pay.
This is typical of the extravagent nature of the public sector. In case they hadn't noticed there are now 2.5 million people looking for work, we have a national debt of proportions that are eye watering, and still they waste money on schemes like this. @Walk to school to tackle obesity@ hasn't been thought through, as soon as the walk past Greggs they'll be in for a pie or a cake, or a bottle of coke to replace the sweat. Joined up thinking? Doh!!!
- Alan, carlisle uk, 17/09/2009 13:19
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