stationary standing desk – Xdesk Blog https://www.xdesk.com/blog Standing Desk, Adjustable Height Desk Blog Thu, 25 Jan 2018 18:11:33 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=4.9.1 New Jersey School Encourages Alternative Seating in Classrooms https://www.xdesk.com/blog/new-jersey-encourages-standing-desks/ https://www.xdesk.com/blog/new-jersey-encourages-standing-desks/#respond Wed, 27 Nov 2013 17:04:53 +0000 http://www.nextdesks.com/blog/?p=937 The Gill St. Bernard’s Lower School in Gladstone, New Jersey has jumped on the health

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The Gill St. Bernard’s Lower School in Gladstone, New Jersey has jumped on the health bandwagon and replaced straight-backed chairs and traditional desks with stability balls and standing desks.

The teacher’s wanted to allow students greater flexibility and mobility in the classroom. The small private school is comparative to an elementary school and strongly promotes the health and well-being of students.

The school director has a stability ball and a standing desk in her own office, and decided to promote this idea in the classroom. She firmly believes that using nontraditional classroom equipment can increase a student’s overall focus for a better learning experience.

“It’s more natural for students to move,” she said. “Having them stay still has a negative impact on learning.”

Nontraditional classroom equipment, like an adjustable height desk and a stability ball, results in new rules and regulations. The students were taught how to use the equipment safely, and had to sign a contract that promised to follow safety guidelines. Their parents were also included in the transition, and offered information on the health benefits of using a standing desk and nontraditional chair.

On parent was so pleased with the results that he bought two stability balls for him and his son to use at home. The teachers also reported fewer disciplinary issues in class. “The stability balls have made such a positive difference in class,” said a fourth grade teacher. “I’ve never had such a quiet, hardworking math class.”

The stability ball didn’t get all the credit, an adjustable height desk showed to have positive benefits on students’ concentration. One teacher was skeptical about incorporating a standing desk in her classroom, but she quickly converted once one student, who usually had trouble concentrating and remaining on task, was able to work through an entire class period behind the desk.

The student, who didn’t disrupt the classroom once, also turned in quality work when the class period was finished. The teacher was so impressed that she decided to order more standing desks for her students to use.

This isn’t the first school to use a standing desk or nontraditional desk chair in the classroom. Last February we touched on a study of a first-grade classroom in Texas that was equipped with adjustable height desks. The students used a stool instead of a stability ball, so they could sit and stand as needed.

After six weeks into the study, 70 percent of the students never used the stool during the day, with 30 percent standing the majority of the time behind the standing desk. The study went on to reveal that overweight students who stood the majority of the day increased calorie burn by 32 percent!

With childhood obesity and ADHD diagnosis on the rise, it’s no wonder schools are searching for new and improved ways to promote a child’s well-being and increase focus at the same time. Whether it’s a standing desk or a desk used with a stability ball, it’s becoming more and more apparent that children need the flexibility to move throughout the day for a better learning environment.

via The Messenger-Gazette

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The Adjustable Height Desk: A Brief History https://www.xdesk.com/blog/the-adjustable-height-desk-a-brief-history/ https://www.xdesk.com/blog/the-adjustable-height-desk-a-brief-history/#comments Sun, 04 Nov 2012 12:15:33 +0000 http://nextdesks.com/blog/?p=108 Wait! Before you stop reading even before the story begins, let me clarify: this is

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People have been using adjustable height desks longer than you think.

Wait! Before you stop reading even before the story begins, let me clarify: this is not some boring, put-you-to-sleep, Ben Stein-delivered history on adjustable height desks; this is a riveting, true, and seat-gripping history on adjustable height desks. Okay, perhaps not “seat-gripping,” but the adjustable height desk actually has an interesting background.

As we know, in recent years, standing desks and height adjustable desks, like the Xdesk, have been growing increasingly popular as people learn more about the health risks of sitting for long periods of time. But actually, the standing desk was “cool” long before this new trend.

Looking through Google Books, you’ll find many mentions of the standing desk, increasingly so during the 19th century. For example, school classrooms were often outfitted with standing desks.

Check out this excerpt from a 1989 book, School Hygiene: “In late years it has been suggested that even with the proper kind of desk, much sitting is liable to injure the abdominal organs and the circulation. Desks have accordingly been proposed which can be arranged for standing as well as sitting.”

And this is how the history of the adjustable height desk began.

Just as students were using adjustable height desks in the classroom then, schools and companies all over are starting to implement them again today. HERE is a great article in the New York Times about several schools that have decided to start using adjustable height desks in the U.S.

But that is today. Let’s get back to history.

Before even the 19th century, there was mention of standing desks. For example, Thomas Jefferson used a “six-legged, tall desk” with an adjustable slanted top. It was standing behind this desk (not sitting!) that Jefferson drew up brilliant blueprints for beautiful, now famous buildings like the Virginia State Capitol.

Leaders like Otto von Bismarck and Winston Churchill were also described as pouring through papers and proposals, standing behind their desks.

Authors, too, used standing desks and adjustable height desks when weaving the threads of some of their literary masterpieces. Charles Dickens, for example, was once described opting for a standing desk rather than a seat in this description by a visitor: “Books all round, up to the ceiling and down to the ground; a standing desk at which he writes; and all manner of comfortable easy chairs.”

Even Hemingway chose to stand rather than sit, though he was a bit more inventive. Apparently, this master of his craft had a regular desk, but he chose to stand at a makeshift standing desk he’d created out of his bookshelf.

As you can see, the adjustable height desk has gone through its ups and downs over the years. It started out popular in schools, was replaced by the stationary standing desk, and then seemed to disappear altogether. Today, though, the height adjustable desk is back in full force.

Schools are using them in their classrooms, workplaces are bringing them into the office, and the health benefits of adjustable height desks are spreading far and wide. This time though, as health and weight problems in the U.S. seem to be at an all time high, the adjustable height desk’s popularity seems to be more than a trend. It is time for change. It is time for the adjustable height desk to reclaim its position as the norm.

Do you have an adjustable height desk? How has it changed your life?

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