Tucker Patricia, Vanderloo Leigh M, Newnham-Kanas Courtney, Burke Shauna M, Irwin Jennifer D, Johnson Andrew M, van Zandvoort Melissa M
School of Occupational Therapy, University of Western Ontario , London, Ontario, Canada.
J Public Health Res. 2013 Sep 9;2(2):e19. doi: 10.4081/jphr.2013.e19. eCollection 2013 Sep 2.
The purpose of this paper is to provide an overview of the study protocol for the Learning Environments' Activity Potential for Preschoolers (LEAPP) study, the goal of which is to describe the activity levels of preschoolers attending various early learning venues and explore which attributes of these facilities (e.g. curriculum, policies, equipment, etc.) support activity participation.
This cross-sectional study aimed to recruit approximately 30 early learning environments requesting participation from preschoolers aged 2.5-5 years. Data collection included: Actical accelerometers (MiniMitter, Oregon, USA) to measure the activity levels of children for five consecutive days (15-second epoch length) while in care; the Environment and Policy Assessment and Observation tool to explore the early learning environment's impact on activity; anthropometric data; the Child Temperament Questionnaire to assess the influence of preschoolers' temperament on physical activity; and demographic information from parents/guardians and early learning staff. ANOVA and linear regression analyses will be conducted to assess variances in activity levels among preschoolers attending different early learning types and to explore the impact of early learning environments on their activity levels. Independent sample t-tests will be used to examine differences in activity levels based on sex and weight status.
This research will provide the first Canadian data to address environmental influences on preschoolers' activity levels in differing early learning environments. Additionally, this work will highlight the extent to which activity levels vary among preschoolers enrolled in full-day kindergarten, centre-, and home-based childcare. Significance for public healthThis study represents the first examination of the differences in physical activity levels among preschoolers attending various early learning environments. As such, it is important that the methodology undertaken be shared in the event that other researchers doing comparable work want to adopt a similar approach. Results of this research may inform the work of health promotion, public health, and early learning stakeholders. Specifically this work may impact early learning curricula, policies, and practices in service of helping Canada's preschool cohort become sufficiently physically active.
本文旨在概述学龄前儿童学习环境活动潜力(LEAPP)研究的方案,其目的是描述在各种早期学习场所就读的学龄前儿童的活动水平,并探讨这些场所的哪些属性(如课程、政策、设备等)支持活动参与。
这项横断面研究旨在招募约30个早期学习环境,邀请2.5至5岁的学龄前儿童参与。数据收集包括:Actical加速度计(美国俄勒冈州MiniMitter公司),用于在儿童受照顾期间连续五天测量其活动水平(每段时长15秒);环境与政策评估及观察工具,以探究早期学习环境对活动的影响;人体测量数据;儿童气质问卷,用于评估学龄前儿童气质对身体活动的影响;以及来自家长/监护人及早期学习工作人员的人口统计学信息。将进行方差分析和线性回归分析,以评估不同早期学习类型的学龄前儿童活动水平的差异,并探讨早期学习环境对其活动水平的影响。独立样本t检验将用于检验基于性别和体重状况的活动水平差异。
这项研究将提供加拿大首个关于不同早期学习环境对学龄前儿童活动水平的环境影响的数据。此外,这项工作将突出全日制幼儿园、中心式和家庭式儿童保育机构中就读的学龄前儿童活动水平的差异程度。对公共卫生的意义这项研究首次考察了在各种早期学习环境中就读的学龄前儿童身体活动水平的差异。因此,如果其他从事类似工作的研究人员想要采用类似方法,则分享所采用的方法很重要。这项研究的结果可能会为健康促进、公共卫生及早期学习领域的利益相关者的工作提供参考。具体而言,这项工作可能会影响早期学习课程、政策和实践,以帮助加拿大的学龄前儿童群体进行足够的身体活动。