A white board in the David Ellis Academy gymnasium is stuck on the wall.

And in time.

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Ronda Brodsky, a physical education and health teacher at David Ellis Academy, leads a P.E. class via Zoom from her home in West Bloomfield Township, Mich., Monday, Feb. 8, 2021. Student physical activity has dipped during the pandemic, and schools have struggled to help kids maintain an active lifestyle. Physical education teachers have an extra challenge adapting their classes for remote andor hybrid learning environments due to the active nature of their curriculum (AP PhotoMike Householder)

A white board in the David Ellis Academy gymnasium is stuck on the wall.

In this image made from video, Deion Hollis does push-ups during his fifth-grade physical education class at a home in Oak Park, Mich., Tuesday, Feb. 9, 2021. Deion and most of his classmates at David Ellis Academy take P.E. and other classes virtually due to the coronavirus pandemic. (AP PhotoMike Householder)

Like countless educators during the pandemic, Brodsky has had to make the adjustment to instructing her students virtually.

Ronda Brodsky, a physical education and health teacher at David Ellis Academy, leads a P.E. class via Zoom from her home in West Bloomfield Township, Mich., Monday, Feb. 8, 2021. Student physical activity has dipped during the pandemic, and schools have struggled to help kids maintain an active lifestyle. Physical education teachers have an extra challenge adapting their classes for remote andor hybrid learning environments due to the active nature of their curriculum (AP PhotoMike Householder)

For assistance, Brodsky turned to CATCH Global Foundation, a charity that provides free teacher training to qualified schools in Michigan.

In this image made from video, an empty gymnasium is shown at David Ellis Academy in Detroit, Monday, Feb. 8, 2021. It's coming up on a year since most of the students at the pre-K through 8th grade public charter school last had an in-person school day. (AP PhotoMike Householder)

Physical education teachers have an extra challenge adapting their classes for remote and/or hybrid learning environments due to the active nature of their curriculum.

In this image made from video, an empty classroom is shown at David Ellis Academy in Detroit, Monday, Feb. 8, 2021. It's coming up on a year since most of the students at the pre-K through 8th grade public charter school last had an in-person school day. (AP PhotoMike Householder)

One of the go-to tips Brodsky picked up was a scavenger hunt-type game in which she counts down from three and instructs her students to find something round or a stuffed animal in their home and rush back to their computer.

An empty hallway is shown at David Ellis Academy in Detroit, Monday, Feb. 8, 2021. It's coming up on a year since most of the students at the pre-K through 8th grade public charter school last had an in-person school day. (AP PhotoMike Householder)

“I actually like it,” the Ellis Academy fifth grade student said on a recent weekday just before he logged on to greet his teacher. “Because it’s kind of hard to sit in a chair all day.”

It details the planned activities for physical education classes on March 12, 2020 — the last day Ronda Brodsky taught physical education and health to students at the pre-K through eighth grade public charter school in Detroit.

Ronda Brodsky, a physical education and health teacher at David Ellis Academy, leads a P.E. class via Zoom from her home in West Bloomfield Township, Mich., Monday, Feb. 8, 2021. Student physical activity has dipped during the pandemic, and schools have struggled to help kids maintain an active lifestyle. Physical education teachers have an extra challenge adapting their classes for remote andor hybrid learning environments due to the active nature of their curriculum (AP PhotoMike Householder)

Ronda Brodsky, a physical education and health teacher at David Ellis Academy, leads a P.E. class via Zoom from her home in West Bloomfield Township, Mich., Monday, Feb. 8, 2021. Student physical activity has dipped during the pandemic, and schools have struggled to help kids maintain an active lifestyle. Physical education teachers have an extra challenge adapting their classes for remote andor hybrid learning environments due to the active nature of their curriculum (AP PhotoMike Householder)

Like countless educators during the pandemic, Brodsky has had to make the adjustment to instructing her students virtually.

But unlike many of her counterparts, she’s charged with getting children to move — a task made tougher when they are required to be in front of a screen at the same time.

“It was very difficult for me and I know a lot of them, because I’m not one that sits still well,” Brodsky said. “So, to tell me to sit in front of a computer now, I’m like, ‘OK, now what am I doing?’”

In this image made from video, Deion Hollis does push-ups during his fifth-grade physical education class at a home in Oak Park, Mich., Tuesday, Feb. 9, 2021. Deion and most of his classmates at David Ellis Academy take P.E. and other classes virtually due to the coronavirus pandemic. (AP PhotoMike Householder)

In this image made from video, Deion Hollis does push-ups during his fifth-grade physical education class at a home in Oak Park, Mich., Tuesday, Feb. 9, 2021. Deion and most of his classmates at David Ellis Academy take P.E. and other classes virtually due to the coronavirus pandemic. (AP PhotoMike Householder)

For assistance, Brodsky turned to CATCH Global Foundation, a charity that provides free teacher training to qualified schools in Michigan.

“Hopefully, we’ll get back to our new evolved normal sometime hopefully next fall or whenever COVID is in the rearview mirror,” said Abby Rose, a program manager with CATCH Global Foundation. “But for now, those P.E. teachers do need some good sort of best practices and strategies.”

Student physical activity, which is associated with a range of benefits, has dipped during the pandemic, and schools have struggled to help children maintain an active lifestyle.

Ronda Brodsky, a physical education and health teacher at David Ellis Academy, leads a P.E. class via Zoom from her home in West Bloomfield Township, Mich., Monday, Feb. 8, 2021. Student physical activity has dipped during the pandemic, and schools have struggled to help kids maintain an active lifestyle. Physical education teachers have an extra challenge adapting their classes for remote andor hybrid learning environments due to the active nature of their curriculum (AP PhotoMike Householder)

Ronda Brodsky, a physical education and health teacher at David Ellis Academy, leads a P.E. class via Zoom from her home in West Bloomfield Township, Mich., Monday, Feb. 8, 2021. Student physical activity has dipped during the pandemic, and schools have struggled to help kids maintain an active lifestyle. Physical education teachers have an extra challenge adapting their classes for remote andor hybrid learning environments due to the active nature of their curriculum (AP PhotoMike Householder)

Physical education teachers have an extra challenge adapting their classes for remote and/or hybrid learning environments due to the active nature of their curriculum.

That’s where CATCH Global Foundation comes in. The nonprofit brings resources to schools in underserved areas that might not otherwise be able to afford such a program, said Rose, who added that more than 10,000 schools use some form of CATCH.

Brodsky took advantage of live virtual teacher training, which will continue through the end of the current school year.

In this image made from video, an empty gymnasium is shown at David Ellis Academy in Detroit, Monday, Feb. 8, 2021. It's coming up on a year since most of the students at the pre-K through 8th grade public charter school last had an in-person school day. (AP PhotoMike Householder)

In this image made from video, an empty gymnasium is shown at David Ellis Academy in Detroit, Monday, Feb. 8, 2021. It's coming up on a year since most of the students at the pre-K through 8th grade public charter school last had an in-person school day. (AP PhotoMike Householder)

One of the go-to tips Brodsky picked up was a scavenger hunt-type game in which she counts down from three and instructs her students to find something round or a stuffed animal in their home and rush back to their computer.

“It gets them up and down, so you get more of the anaerobic, but it also gets them going,” said Brodsky, who also leads her students from afar in traditional exercises such as jumping jacks and push-ups.

For Deion Hollis, Brodsky’s physical education class is one of the highlights of his school day.

In this image made from video, an empty classroom is shown at David Ellis Academy in Detroit, Monday, Feb. 8, 2021. It's coming up on a year since most of the students at the pre-K through 8th grade public charter school last had an in-person school day. (AP PhotoMike Householder)

In this image made from video, an empty classroom is shown at David Ellis Academy in Detroit, Monday, Feb. 8, 2021. It's coming up on a year since most of the students at the pre-K through 8th grade public charter school last had an in-person school day. (AP PhotoMike Householder)

“I actually like it,” the Ellis Academy fifth grade student said on a recent weekday just before he logged on to greet his teacher. “Because it’s kind of hard to sit in a chair all day.”

An empty hallway is shown at David Ellis Academy in Detroit, Monday, Feb. 8, 2021. It's coming up on a year since most of the students at the pre-K through 8th grade public charter school last had an in-person school day. (AP PhotoMike Householder)

An empty hallway is shown at David Ellis Academy in Detroit, Monday, Feb. 8, 2021. It's coming up on a year since most of the students at the pre-K through 8th grade public charter school last had an in-person school day. (AP PhotoMike Householder)