Department of Exercise Science, Arnold School of Public Health, University of South Carolina, Columbia, South Carolina.
Department of Physical Education and Athletic Training, College of Education, University of South Carolina, Columbia, South Carolina.
Am J Prev Med. 2018 Jul;55(1):e1-e10. doi: 10.1016/j.amepre.2018.03.005. Epub 2018 Jun 18.
Schools are called upon to provide children with 30 minutes/day of moderate to vigorous physical activity (MVPA). Most school-based physical activity interventions have not targeted schools that serve children from low-income families. This study evaluated the effects of a pilot, competency-building professional development program on the school day MVPA and total activity (light- to vigorous-intensity activity) of students from schools that serve low-income families.
Single group intervention with multiple follow-up repeated cross-sectional measures.
SETTING/PARTICIPANTS: Students attending eight elementary schools in one low-income school district serving 3,719 students.
Participatory-based, experiential, competency-building professional development workshop for physical education and classroom teachers. Baseline was fall 2015, and the intervention was delivered during spring 2016 through spring 2017.
Hip-placed accelerometers were used to derive the percentage of children accumulating 30 minutes of MVPA during the school day, minutes of MVPA, and time spent sedentary. Analyses were conducted during July 2017.
A total of 1,570 first- and fourth-grade students (49.8% girls, 87.0% African American, 88% free and reduced-price lunch) were measured across the project. Primary analyses indicated that the percentage of girls and boys meeting the 30-minutes/day guideline increased by 9.3% (95% CI=4.7%, 13.9%) and 10.4% (95% CI=5.5%, 15.3%), respectively. A corresponding increase of 1.7 (95% CI=0.5, 2.8) and 2.5 (95% CI=1.1, 3.8) MVPA minutes accumulated during the school day were observed for both girls and boys, respectively. Primary analyses indicated that statistically significant increases in MVPA and total activity for boys and girls were observed across the school day, during classroom time, and during physical education.
Participatory-based, experiential, competency-building professional development is an effective strategy for increasing students' MVPA and total activity in low-income schools. However, data from this study indicate that targeting settings outside of the school day may be more appropriate given that schools were providing more than two thirds of the recommended 30 minutes/day of MVPA prior to intervention.
学校被要求为孩子们提供每天 30 分钟的中等到剧烈强度的身体活动(MVPA)。大多数基于学校的身体活动干预措施并未针对为来自低收入家庭的儿童服务的学校。本研究评估了一个试点、能力建设专业发展计划对服务低收入家庭的学校学生在学校日 MVPA 和总活动(轻到剧烈强度活动)的影响。
单组干预,多次随访重复横断面测量。
设置/参与者:一所为 3719 名学生服务的低收入学区的 8 所小学的学生。
体育和课堂教师参与式、体验式、能力建设专业发展研讨会。基线是 2015 年秋季,干预措施于 2016 年春季至 2017 年春季实施。
使用臀部放置加速度计得出学生在学校日累计 30 分钟 MVPA 的百分比、MVPA 分钟数和久坐时间。分析于 2017 年 7 月进行。
共有 1570 名一年级和四年级学生(49.8%为女孩,87.0%为非裔美国人,88%为免费和减价午餐)在整个项目中进行了测量。主要分析表明,女孩和男孩符合 30 分钟/天指导方针的比例分别增加了 9.3%(95%CI=4.7%,13.9%)和 10.4%(95%CI=5.5%,15.3%)。女孩和男孩在学校日分别积累了 1.7(95%CI=0.5,2.8)和 2.5(95%CI=1.1,3.8)MVPA 分钟的相应增加。主要分析表明,在整个学校日、课堂时间和体育教育期间,男孩和女孩的 MVPA 和总活动均有显著增加。
参与式、体验式、能力建设专业发展是增加低收入学校学生 MVPA 和总活动的有效策略。然而,本研究的数据表明,由于学校在干预前已经提供了超过推荐的 30 分钟/天 MVPA 的三分之二以上,因此针对学校日以外的环境可能更为合适。