Project Ride Smart

Week 2 at Witter Ranch. At 7:00 am each day, 40 bikes were rolled out. Gina and Deanna were there to help along with fifth-grader Gymmat – thank you!Pollyanna prepped classes for the day’s activities.Students wore colored jerseys to identify their group. Before leaving the classroom, they complete a personal safety check.Outside students completed an ABCQuick Check on their bikes before riding.Sometimes a water break at the nearby park is a good idea.On Friday, we organized a few “fun” activities, beginning with a Chaos Box. The goal, after entering a small defined area, is to create order as quickly as possible. In less than 5 minutes every class was able to begin riding in a circle. Always counterclockwise, by the way. Mr McClurg’s class was the fastest at 51 seconds. Just before the start, Neilani began coaching those around her about what to do. I asked her how she already knew the solution. “I figured it out in my head.”The last time I did the Bean Drop, I had to repeatedly sweep up small kidney beans to keep the game going. This time I swept up not a single bean! 1.Use large dry white lima beans. 2.Students must drop one bean at a time in each of 6 buckets and, if the bean doesn’t land in the bucket, the student must stop to pick it up and try again.And there was an improvement to Paper Boy. I wrapped the newspapers in clear packing tape.At the end of each one-hour class, Otter Pops! It was hot, I had one after every class.

Project Ride Smart

This week, I worked at Witter Ranch School. Five classes of 5th graders. The daily arrival time was 7 am – oh my!As technology progresses, overhead projectors are disappearing. ELMOs (document cameras) are more common, but not at this school. So, to teach the Right of Way Rules, I went back to an “old school” solution – paper chart with movable vehicles. If the #1 rule is “First come, first served,” which car should leave the stop sign first? Second? Third?Outside, students prepare to do the ABCQuick Check. A=air in tires. B=brakes. C=chain, chain rings, cassette, cogs. Quick=quick release to adjust seat height.

Project Ride Smart-Monday

Only two days this week. It was also Teacher Appreciation Week. The Regency Park PTA welcomed teachers on Monday morning withandI always take the Red group for the street rides. I tell them they’re so lucky to be in the “fun” group (even though they’d been evaluated at a lower skill level).And then there are those special moments when you spot something and it makes you smile. (Thank you, Gina, for grabbing my camera and taking this picture!)

Project Ride Smart

This was week 2 at Regency Park. Two days of blacktop drills and two days of street rides. The team talked with Principal Tim Hammons before the first class.ABCQuick Check with one girl quick to try out her poses.Favorite comment of the week from a boy as we rode over a speed table, “Ooohh, that hill made me swallow my sneeze.”

Project Ride Smart

at Regency Park Elementary. I worked 4 days this week. Five classes of fifth graders, one hour/day for each class. My teaching partner is Doug Williams. The 40 bikes are stored in an unused classroom:This week: 3 days of classroom instruction, 1 day of blacktop drills, and 1 after-school coaching session.A favorite for the kids – the melon drop. Jill and Jack went for a bike ride. Jill was wearing her helmet when she crashed.Sadly Jack refused to wear a helmet and he also crashed. His poor watermelon head cracked, juice dripped out, and everyone oohed and ahhed. Always wear your bike helmet!

LCI spring training

A group of local LCIs (League Cycling Instructors) were invited to discuss and review the best practices for teaching Project Ride Smart in North Natomas or the bike education classes in San Juan Unified School District.dsc04779dsc04777dsc04781dsc04788L-R: Mellissa Meng/NNTMA, Dan Allison/San Juan USD, Elle Steele/San Juan USD & 50 Corridor.dsc04782

50 Bikes for 50 Kids

This year, I worked with Mary and Eric from Bike Hikers to build a bike with the student receiving it, Miguel Lopez. In the blue t-shirt was Miguel’s father, an invaluable member of our team since Miguel was a non-verbal special education student.dsc04526We were part of the morning group in the gym at Natomas Middle School where 25 students built bikes with their support teams.dsc04527My favorite bike mechanic, Bike Mike (yellow t-shirt) was also there to make sure we built the bike correctly.dsc04528Once built, Miguel was ready to move to the next room for phase 2:dsc04531 Snacks, a helmet specifically fitted for him, a photo op,dsc04536a thank-you-card writing station, and a free U-lock and cable.dsc04537What a great program for North Natomas sponsored by North Natomas Transportation Management Association – the same organization that promotes Project Ride Smart! Students receiving bikes were nominated by their teachers for the content of their character in keeping with Martin Luther King Jr Day.

Project Ride Smart – final week

Hurray! Classroom instruction and blacktop drills have been completed. Students were divided into skill groups. I worked with those students who needed more practice riding on the bike trail with minimal on-street instruction. In this group, the three students to the right LEARNED how to ride a bike for the first time after coming to both after-school coaching sessions. The young man at the left made an excellent “sweep” rider and assistant coach.dsc03917dsc03918Most bicycle crashes are the result of driver error … Tristan didn’t quite make the turn and landed on the rocks. His classmates quickly went to help him – it was great to see how encouraging they were.dsc03920Gina and I combined our yellow and red groups when we were short on volunteers to ride with us.dsc03921You can never tell what children will think the highlight of the day was. After this class, several happily proclaimed they drank “doggy water”. The fountains for humans provided not a drop, but the doggy faucet worked great. Some kids were surprised they could cup their hands and get a pretty good drink.dsc03936A big thank-you to Bike Hikers Becky, Joyce, and Kathy who came out on Thursday to ride with us! dsc03927A special thank-you to Kathy for being so gracious to observant ten-year-olds whose mouths dropped open when she rolled through the first stop sign. She apologized to each of them. dsc03929Another successful Project Ride Smart. dsc03939

Project Ride Smart

Another five days of Project Ride Smart at Natomas Park Elementary … with a rainy day Friday! A few video lessons:dsc03814ABCQuick Check is a standard practice before any use of the bikes.dsc03815Everyone is lined up to watch me demonstrate a proper left hand turn – the most challenging bicycle-driving maneuver we teach – while Gina described what was happening dsc03816For the blacktop drill and evaluation, Gina worked with the red and yellow groups. I worked with the blue and green.dsc03817No blacktop drills on Friday! Time to get creative.dsc03822Three colors of masking tape and we had a 4-way intersection. dsc03821After work on Thursday, Gina and I rode each of the three routes for next week’s street rides. There were lots of Halloween decorations to appreciate but this was our favorite. dsc03818

Velo Ball

Almost like going to the high school prom, I had to stop at Thais’ to have my picture taken. Those orange palazzo pants (from the Sewing Cave) were so comfortable.dsc03763The Velo Ball was at the California State Railroad Museum in Old Sacramento.dsc03765dsc03774Jim Brown, Executive Director of Sacramento Area Bicycle Advocates (SABA):dsc03769Waving is Board Member Sue Teranishi:dsc03773L-R: LCI Dan Allison, LCI Doug Williams and wife Ann, Matt and Abbey Stumpf – Abbey is Communications and Program Coordinator for North Natomas Transportation Management Association (NNTMA). NNTMA funds Project Ride Smart.dsc03776The next picture didn’t turn out well, but I have to include it. This is the lady to bid on and won one of the three t-shirts I donated for the silent auction. I hope she enjoys wearing it!dsc03784