Quantcast
breaking news

Kid's Fitness: Turning the Tables

By: Erika Edwards, NBCNC
Updated: December 27, 2012
watch video
From video games, to computer time to time in front of the television, technology has been blamed for our increasingly sedentary lifestyle.

Now a small North Carolina company is changing that by turning technology into an impetus for active play in children.

Sqord is a combination computer game, social network and real world exercise.

Coleman Greene is a co-founder.

"Our idea is not to say that technology is the problem, but rather embrace it, and say that it can be part of the solution," he says.

Kids wear a practically indestructible power band that contains a 3-axis accelerometer.

It tracks their physical activity throughout the day, capturing a range of motion, duration and intensity.

"Then you swipe it over a little bay station, which plugs into the side of a computer, then wirelessly uploads to our website," Greene explains.

On the website kids see which of their friends "Sqord" the most exercise in a day.

Although bragging rights are involved, kids can only communicate with their friends by selecting a pre-determined list of positive phrases and virtual high fives.

Sqord targets the 8 to 13-year-old crowd.

Childhood obesity experts say it's during this time period that physical activity plummets.

"It's quite a vulnerable period during this middle school transition, and parents may have to work harder to try to find their children outlets for activity," says the University of North Carolina's Dr. Dianne Ward.

You don't have to be a soccer star or the fastest runner.

When you're wearing the band, all you have to do is play.

In our experiment with Sqord, kids literally would not stop moving, jogging extra laps and hopping around while waiting to see their score.

"I even noticed that when I put it on, I wanted more points, so I went out and played a little soccer with my brother," said 13-year-old Morgan.

Like any good online tool, Sqord is slowly going viral, piquing the interest of YMCAs.

Pilot programs have begun in some Florida and Colorado schools.

The Sqord technology will be available to the public after the first of the year.

Visit www.Sqord.Com for more information.

Comments

Readers Feel...

hello
Related Content

Life in Texas towns affected by the Cline Shale oil boom is bound to change in a big way, but people from all over the area met Thursday at McMurry University to create a Cline Shale Consortium. The...

An Abilene woman battling a life-threatening lung disease has waited years for the perfect match of donor lungs, and she made it all the way to the operating table twice just to find the lungs...

A married couple who graduated from Hardin-Simmons in 2009 has opened a food truck. They are haoping "The Smokery," located on the corner of Shelton and North 1 street, will become an Abilene ...

Riding motorcycles is a way of life. ...

35-year-old Gabriel Flores was taken to the Taylor County Jail after firing a gun in the direction of his wife three times....

David Olson is no ordinary man. ...

The Montague County Sheriff's Office has released the dash camera video of a shooting incident in which a sheriff's officer suffered three gunshot wounds....

Texas public universities awarded more than 50,000 bachelor's degrees in spring 2013, an increase of more than 5,000 from 2012, according to preliminary data from the Texas Higher Education...

This session, the Texas Association of Business put a focus on legislation related to criminal justice, as it advocated for bills aimed at helping ex-offenders get jobs. Here's a look...

APD responds to a call about a man hitting a fence with his vehicle. During a records check, the man urinates on the side of the road. ...

 
Find Articles Here
 
End
      Page 694 of 640
 
Search BigCountryHomepage.com