The Dutch Ministry of Education, Culture, and Science has blocked a new provision requiring all primary schools to incorporate daily movement into their core curriculum. This decision has alarmed health advocates, with neuropsychologist Erik Scherder and the children's rights organization Defense for Children contemplating a lawsuit against the government due to concerns about children's health and well-being.
The National Expertise Center for the Curriculum (SLO) had included "daily movement" among its core educational objectives, but the ministry eliminated this requirement just before its implementation. Recent statistics reveal that over 400,000 children in the Netherlands are overweight, a figure that has escalated dramatically in recent years.
Scherder has expressed grave concerns over this decision, emphasizing that childhood obesity issues have become pressing, with cases of type 2 diabetes now appearing in children as young as five—previously considered a disease associated with older adults. He describes the lack of daily movement opportunities for kids as a “pandemic,” noting that he has made numerous attempts to persuade the ministry to restore this critical component to primary education.
Engaging with experts like Joop Alberda, a former national volleyball coach, and Mirjam Sombroek, a professor of health law, the discussions have resulted in no actionable outcomes. Consequently, Scherder feels that pursuing legal action is now his only recourse, supported by the children's rights group which echoes his urgent call to action. Carrie van der Kroon, the director of Defense for Children, stated, "They have the right to play, to health, and to development. Those rights are at stake." She emphasized the urgency, stating, "Childhood is very short; we have no time to lose."
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