Become a coach this Christmas! Are you looking for work during the school holidays? We are looking for coaches to help support our upcoming Christmas Time2Move Holiday Programme! We are running the programme in leisure centres throughout Cornwall and will require support in these. This work will be flexible and can be suited to you …
The Chief Medical Officer Guidelines advises that all children aged 5-18 should engage in moderate-to-vigorous intensity physical activity for an average of at least 60 minutes per day across the week. At least 30 minutes of this should be during school hours.
This can include all forms of activity such as physical education, active travel, break time -school activities, play and sports.
When completing this review, think of the different ways you can incorporate more physical activity into each day.
Primary schools only – Did you know that you can spend your Primary Sport Premium funding on activities that make sure all of your year 6 pupils can swim at least 25 metres unaided? This could include top-up swimming lessons, renting transport, instructor time and so on.
Have you checked to see if swimming has been included as part of this year’s Cornwall School Games programme? Maybe your school could get involved?
PE, School Sport and Physical Activity recommendations
Embedding PE, school sport, physical activity and play throughout your whole school can have larger benefits that just ensuring your children can throw a ball. It can impact their social, emotional and mental wellbeing, their academic attainment, their physical health, their concentration levels, their ability to rest and relax and their memory.
Watch the 3 minute video below from Youth Sport Trust on the power of an active school.
Camelford Community Primary has used multi-component interventions directed by including the importance of physical activity, PE and school sport in the school development plan. New sports and activities have been introduced, students have been listened to, active lessons and active breaks between lessons and wake and shake, plus monitoring and evaluations conducted on physical and mental health and impact on learning.
Watch this video to see how Camelford Community Primary has achieved this.
Mental Health Awareness for Sport and Physical Activity
Student self monitoring recommendations
Coming soon
Active school planner recommendations
This is a free school for primary schools aimed at helping you increase levels of physical activity.
This easy to use tool will enable you to:
Look at where and how the school is increasing physical activity and reducing sedentary behaviour in pupils
Find guidance and best practice to continue to make improvements
Provide reports as evidence to show how you are using Primary Sport Premium Funding to improve health outcomes for pupils
The Sport England Active Lives Survey is an online national survey that the government uses to understand how children aged 5-16 engage with sport and physical activity, and the data they gather plays a key role in informing future policy and funding decisions.
The Active Lives Children and Young People Survey offers a fantastic opportunity for teachers and school leaders to see how their provision benefits young people and develop it further, so more pupils have the opportunity to be physically active and enjoy sport.
Include in your annual school report to parents and governors
Share across your staff
Learn which sports are most or least popular with your students to help guide choice and variety or after school clubs
Learn how levels of wellbeing are across your school to help inform decision about whole-school improvement priorities
Spot disparity and help tackle inequalities between students
Bikeability recommendations
The Cornwall Bicycle Project has a team of highly qualified Cycling coaches and instructors who are able to deliver a range courses or create bespoke courses. If there is a particular cycling activity that you would like us to host for you, your school, club or group of friends please get in touch with your idea.
​Here is an example of what we can deliver: After School Clubs, Bikeability, Balanceability, Learn to Ride, adult cycle confidence and fitness, Curriculum Enhancement Weeks, adult rides, long distance rides, bike maintenance and more.
These are the statutory programmes of study and attainment targets for physical education at key stages 1 to 4. They are issued by law; you must follow them unless there’s a good reason not to.
Cornwall Healthy Schools is a health improvement programme designed to support schools to develop an ethos and environment that enhances learning, promotes the health and wellbeing of pupils, and consults and encourages participation of all within the school community.
The Cornwall Healthy Schools programmes specifically seeks to improve the health and wellbeing across the education sector by working with and supporting schools.
Swimming isn’t just about being able to have fun in the water with family and friends (although it is and you should!). It’s also about knowing what to do if someone gets into trouble. Or if a strong current takes your friend away from the edge. Or you fall in when running by a river or canal.
Swimming is also incredibly good for physical and mental health and wellbeing – it’s the only activity you can do at any age and at any ability.
Why not try creating a ‘Daily Mile’ challenge board and encourage your pupils to walk, run, skip, cycle or scoot 1 mile each day as part of your routine?
Visit the Daily Mile website for free resources to get you started.
Did you know your classroom can be an active environment? Activity breaks are a great way to add physical activity into the day and get pupils moving.
Watch how Treloweth School achieve this through using RealPE.
2 minute video
Active environments recommendations
The Healthy Pupils Capital Fund was distributed by Active Cornwall within three localities in Cornwall to help schools give their youngest pupils more access to physical activity opportunities. Learn more about how schools have created active environments to encourage their pupils to move more during the school day.
11 minute video
Deploying young leaders recommendations
Coming soon
Student's voice recommendations
Have you thought about leadership and the benefits this can have for young people? Take a look at the Youth Sport Trust Bubble Leadership Model to understand how to embed this in your school.
The delivery of CPD can vary. If you don’t currently do anything, why not start by getting your staff to take a look at the videos from the 2021 Cornwall Virtual School Sport, PE and Physical Activity Conference.
There are multiple workshops to help staff understand why being active is important and how they can help to integrate physical activity into the school day in easy, simple ways.
Upskill all teachers to be confident in making their classrooms more active environments. There are tools to help you embed physical activity into the school day:
Gulval School provide an example of how they have engaged their local community with their PE, school sport and physical activity.
School governors and trustees recommendations
The Youth Sport Trust have a Governor’s Toolkit to help governors and trustees to identify how high-quality PE, school sport and physical activity can promote and improve the health, wellbeing and wider educational outcomes of pupils in schools.