Should Yoga be taught in all American Public Schools?

Yoga stretches into public schools

By RACHEL KONRAD
Associated Press

http://chron.com/disp/story.mpl/headline/nation/4505698.html

Guber and staff members Mattilyn Rochester, left, and Laurie Parlapiano, right, demonstrate a typical training session. SAN FRANCISCO — In Tara Guber’s ideal world, American children would meditate in the lotus position and chant in Sanskrit before taking stressful standardized tests.

But when she asked a public elementary school in Aspen, Colo., to teach yoga in 2002, Christian fundamentalists and even some secular parents lobbied the school board. They argued that yoga’s Hindu roots conflicted with Christian teachings and that using it in school might violate the separation of church and state.

Portrayed as a New Age nut out to brainwash young minds, Guber crafted a new curriculum that eliminated chanting and translated Sanskrit into kid-friendly English. Yogic panting became “bunny breathing,” and “meditation” became “time in.”

“I stripped every piece of anything that anyone could vaguely construe as spiritual or religious out of the program,” Guber said.

Now, more than 100 schools in 26 states have adopted Guber’s “Yoga Ed.” program and more than 300 physical education instructors have been trained in it.

Countless other public and private schools from California to Massachusetts — including the Aspen school where Guber clashed with parents — are teaching yoga.

Teachers say it helps calm students with attention-deficit disorder and may reduce childhood obesity. The federal government gives grants to gym teachers who complete a teacher training course in yoga.

“I see a lot fewer discipline problems,” said Ruth Reynolds, principal of Coleman Elementary School in San Rafael. Her observation of the school’s six-year-old yoga program is that it helps easily distracted children to focus.

“If you have children with ADD and focusing issues, often it’s easy to go from that into a behavior problem,” Reynolds said. “Anything you can do to help children focus will improve their behavior.”

In 2003, researchers at California State University, Los Angeles, studied test scores at the Accelerated School, a charter school where Guber sits on the board and where students practice yoga almost every day. Researchers found a correlation between yoga and better behavior and grades, and they said young yogis were more fit than the district average from the California Physical Fitness Test.

Guber, married to former Sony Pictures Entertainment CEO Peter Guber, embraced yoga after moving to California in the 1970s. Their 13-acre Bel-Air estate includes a clifftop garden leading to a Yoga House retreat.

In 2004, Americans spent almost $3 billion on yoga classes and retreats, books, DVDs, mats, clothing and related items. About 3 million American adults practiced yoga at least twice a week in 2006, more than doubling from 1.3 million in 2001, according to Mediamark Research.

Despite mainstream acceptance, yoga in public schools remains touchy. Critics say even stripped-down “yoga lite” goads young people into exploring other religions and mysticism.

Dave Hunt, who has traveled to India to study yoga’s roots and interview gurus, called the practice “a vital part of the largest missionary program in the world” for Hinduism. The Bend, Ore., author of Yoga and the Body of Christ: What Position Should Christians Hold? said that, like other religions, the practice has no place in public schools.

“It’s pretty simple: Yoga is a religious practice in Hinduism. It’s the way to reach enlightenment. To bring it to the west and bill it as a scientific practice for fitness is dishonest,” said Hunt, 80.

“I’ve talked to too many people who got hooked on the spiritual deception of yoga. They come to believe in this and become enamored with Hinduism or eastern mysticism,” he said.

Concerns about yoga’s spiritual implications have also fueled a cottage industry of books and videos that offer the purported benefits of yoga — flexibility, strength and weight loss — without mentioning the y-word.

Laurette Willis, 49, wrote an exercise regimen called PowerMoves Kids Program for Public Schools. The stretching routine includes pauses for children to contemplate character-building quotes from Martin Luther King Jr., Emily Dickinson, Harriet Tubman and William Shakespeare. Willis, who lives near Tahlequah, Okla., also created an exercise regimen called PraiseMoves: The Christian Alternative to Yoga.

“I’m not here to say that yoga is necessarily bad, but it is counter to what I think the public education system is for: It should have programs without any form of religious overtones whatsoever,” Willis said.

The dispute confuses some yogis, particularly Westerners who say they yoga as it’s practiced in the United States is primarily about fitness and stress relief.

Baron Baptiste, who owns three studios in the Boston area and practices with his 7-year-old son, loves Guber’s program. He said his son takes yoga far less seriously than he does.

“We adults need to be reminded to lighten up, breathe in the joy and have some fun,” he said.

Re: Should Yoga be taught in all American Public Schools?

yoga in school?! what a bunch of hipies....

Re: Should Yoga be taught in all American Public Schools?

Many schools in Texas have already started teaching Yoga and have got extremely positive response from kids and parents.

Re: Should Yoga be taught in all American Public Schools?

exercise is good for american kids, they are too fat

Re: Should Yoga be taught in all American Public Schools?

This is the kind of attitude that keeps us all in the dark ages.

Re: Should Yoga be taught in all American Public Schools?

how about an option of yoga, tai chi, etc etc

Re: Should Yoga be taught in all American Public Schools?

^ ^ did u say "yoga tay chai"!! , kyun nahi kyun nahi....

Re: Should Yoga be taught in all American Public Schools?

zeeray walay biscuit or papay bhi lay aaon bhag kar?
waisay nan khatai bhi ho jaye...

Re: Should Yoga be taught in all American Public Schools?

Yoga is nothing special.. Culture starved Westerners are easily impressed with and will try to copy anything exotic, especially the celebs who are always looking for ways to be different.

I'm a bit put off by the cultishness of Yoga myself not because of religious reasons but because I find it a bit gay..

I get the same calm feeling and a rush of happy-hormones with any good exercise and stretching.

Re: Should Yoga be taught in all American Public Schools?

Any exercise is good exercise

Re: Should Yoga be taught in all American Public Schools?

Yoga is a very special knowledge of mind and body. It has various proven benefits like lowering blood pressure releasing stress etc. Don't look at it as a religious ritual. Besides in Islam aren't we asked to acquire knowledge. consider it that keep your mind open. What are you scared of ? Don't say "OM" while meditating say" Allah" If you are strong with your religion a bunch of exercises won't take it away from you.

Re: Should Yoga be taught in all American Public Schools?

Yoga is haram.....the ultimate objective of yoga is not physical exercise, but it is to realize divinity within u.

Re: Should Yoga be taught in all American Public Schools?

So anything which is getting accepted by large number of people excluding muslims is a cult. What a mental faculty you are gifted with. I know one muslim woman who teaches art of living based on yogic/breathing exercises. I won't tell you the name of city or country who knows some mad caps may harm her.

Re: Should Yoga be taught in all American Public Schools?

I learnt art of living/breathing exercises from a Muslim teacher. I use the breathing techniques for the betterment of my mental and physical health and I continue to perform namaaz fast teach my kids the best I can about Islam. If there is something I did not like in any of the teachings that art of living course offered, i simply discard it from my mind. I have taken what I felt good in that course and I have benefitted by keeping an open mind.
Bit like making a cup of tea....boil tea leaves to extract the flavour and discard the leaves when used...you cannot say that tea leaves are all bad beacause of the residue can you?

Re: Should Yoga be taught in all American Public Schools?

Certainly! I would not only approve but also fully support such a movement!

Re: Should Yoga be taught in all American Public Schools?

Yess, I too agree..Yoga, particularly Hatha Yoga, is even practiced by some ultra-conservative Muslims here in Gulf...I know at least three local Qataris (one of them sufferring from diabetese), who regularly visited the class conducted by a Yogi from Germany (disciple of Swami Parmahansa Yogananda)

Apart from this, those who are in Dubai and read local news paper-Gulf-News, already know that Dubai Police regularly arranges Yoga classes as a part of stress relieving excercise for the cops.

I think in modern time when certain diseases can be controlled by Yogic practices, nobody should mind it, simply becuase they are a gift of another faith.

Re: Should Yoga be taught in all American Public Schools?

There is only one God who has many incarnations.

Kashmir has three religions represented within it's borders: Islam, Hinduism and Buddhism. You as a human being and as a Kashmiri should respect all three.

Re: Should Yoga be taught in all American Public Schools?

Yoga is a very good idea

Re: Should Yoga be taught in all American Public Schools?

na, i wouldnt want my kids to be taught something like that.

Re: Should Yoga be taught in all American Public Schools?

yoga is only for indians--- no one else has such soft muscles less bodies.

Yoga is not a fisible excercise for most of the non indian males.