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Educating the Student Body: Taking Physical Activity and Physical Education to School
Relationship to Growth, Development, and Health
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psycho social and physical environments, the individual,
and in this case
the behavior of physical activity. Using this framework, physical activity
itself has been shown to be a consistent positive correlate as well as a deter-
minant of physical activity in children and adolescents. A large amount of
reviewed research has found that physical education and physical activity
experiences can increase children’s confidence in being active and lead to
continued participation in physical activity (Bauman et al., 2012). RCTs
have shown that both self-efficacy and social interactions leading to per-
ceived social support influence changes in physical activity (Dishman et
al., 2009). Skill mastery, confidence building, and group support are well-
known strategies for advancing student learning and well-being in many
educational domains in the school setting and apply equally to school
physical education and other physical activity.
Early observational studies
of physical, social, and environmental determinants of physical activity
at home, school, and recess indicated that prompts to be active (or not)
from peers and adults accounted for a significant amount of the variance
in directly observed physical activity (Elder et al., 1998). One longitudinal
study following the variability and tracking of physical activity in young
children showed that most of the variability in both home and recess activ-
ity was accounted for by short-term social and physical environmental
factors, such as prompts from others and being outdoors (Sallis et al.,
1995). Another study, examining activity among preschool children, found
that,
contrary to common belief, most of the time spent in preschool was
sedentary, and correlates of activity were different for preschool boys and
girls (Byun et al., 2011). In addition, significant variation in activity by
preschool site was noted, indicating that local environmental conditions,
including physical environment and equipment, policies, and teacher and
administrative quality characteristics, play an
important role in promoting
physical activity (Brown et al., 2009).
Studies in middle and high school populations have strengthened the
evidence base on relationships among self-efficacy, physical activity, and
social support (from adults and peers). This research has highlighted the
central contribution of self-efficacy and social support in protecting against
a decline in activity levels among adolescent girls (Dishman et al., 2009,
2010). Evidence indicates further that these impacts spread to activities out-
side the school setting (Lytle et al., 2009). Findings of a related study suggest
that leisure-time physical activity among middle school students was linked
to motivation-related experiences in physical education (Cox et al., 2008).
A recent review of reviews (Bauman et al., 2012) found that population
levels of physical activity are low and that consistent individual-level corre-
lates of physical activity are age, sex, health status, self-efficacy, and previous
physical activity. Physical activity declines dramatically as children progress
from elementary through high school (Nader et al., 2008). Boys are con-