Feb 11

PE is not a luxury

It is how children cope. It is how life skills are learnt.

We are living through a children’s mental health crisis in case the Government hadn’t noticed!

Anxiety is rising. Behavioural needs are rising. SEND referrals are rising.

And in response, we are quietly removing one of the most powerful supports children have.

Movement.

PE is not just about sport. It is about regulation.

Exercise helps the nervous system discharge stress. It releases endorphins. It supports mood, sleep and emotional control.

Children today are not stressed by bears in the woods. They are stressed by:
school pressure
social comparison
sensory overload
constant transitions
uncertainty

Without regular movement, that stress has nowhere to go.

You cannot build learning on a dysregulated body

In my clinical work, I talk constantly about executive functions.

These are the skills children need to function in school and life:
emotional regulation
impulse control
planning and prioritising
working memory
time management

They are the air traffic control system of the brain. Just like the air traffic controllers help planes land and take off safely without crashes, executive functions help us achieve goals, whether that is passing an exam, being a good friend or remembering to feed the dog!

But here’s the part policy often ignores.

Executive functions do not develop in isolation.

They grow from foundations.

And one of those foundations is exercise and movement.

You cannot expect children to sit still, concentrate and self-regulate if their bodies are screaming for regulation. We are a species that thrives on movement. It is only with the rise of factory work that we were moved from physical beings to sedentary ones, and let's not talk about the issues that arise from desks and screens!

Cutting PE does not protect learning time.

It undermines it.

Movement supports learning, behaviour and sleep

The benefits of PE extend far beyond the lesson itself.

Regular movement:
improves sleep quality
reduces anxiety
supports behaviour regulation
increases readiness to learn in the classroom

Poor sleep (sleep being another executive function foundation) alone significantly impacts attention, mood and behaviour. PE supports sleep by helping the body regulate stress and energy.

Removing it is short-sighted and costly in the long term.

This is short-term thinking with long-term consequences

Let’s be clear.

This is not really about money. It is about what we value.

We would never remove food (another executive function foundation) from schools and expect children to cope.

Movement is just as fundamental.

By cutting PE now, we store up costs later:
increased mental health support
behaviour interventions
exclusions
disengagement from education

This is not saving money. It is shifting the bill.

Schools should grow humans, not exam machines

Schools are under enormous pressure to deliver results.

But education should not just be about passing exams.

It should be about learning how to:
cope with frustration
regulate emotions
work with others
feel competent in your body

PE is one of the few places in school where these skills are practised, not preached.

The joy from school is being removed. Joy, yet another foundation of Executive Function is long lasting where as fun, also needed is short acting. Joy comes from being in a community, having purpose and being creative.

School focuses on exams, which are competitive, where competing against and being compared to your friends and enemies is the norm. This does not  cultivate joy which is so important.

So what does ….. Sport, art, drama - the very things that are being stripped from the school day.


Recently a client was offered a reduced timetable to help with anxiety. The lessons the school was happy to cut… sport, drama, art , oh and French. All the lessons that bring them joy .

We are cutting the wrong things

If we want children who can learn, cope and thrive and that are ready for the real world beyond school, we need to stop stripping away the foundations of good executive function.

More movement, not less. More joy, not less, more opportunity for regulation, not more competition and pressure.

Cutting PE is not a neutral decision.

It is a choice and it matters.

And children, especially the most vulnerable, will live with the consequences.
gee eltringham

The founder

I started twigged out of both personal urgency and professional insight.
As The Toolkit Therapist and parent to a neurodivergent child, I experienced first hand the overwhelm and isolation families often face after a diagnosis.
Frustrated by the lack of practical, empathetic support, I set out to create what I couldn’t find: simple, evidence-based tools that make everyday life easier.
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