Copyright © National Academy of Sciences. All rights reserved.
Educating the Student Body: Taking Physical Activity and Physical Education to School
The Effectiveness of Physical Activity and Physical Education Policies and Programs
333
Status and Trends
The committee found no information on trends in the volume of class-
room physical activity and only one study providing an estimate of the
proportion of the daily total step count accumulated during classroom time.
A study of 6th-grade students near Phoenix, Arizona, using pedometers
to measure physical activity found that about 20
percent of the daily step
count during school hours occurred during instructional classroom time for
both boys and girls (Tudor-Locke et al., 2006). Baseline levels of classroom
physical activity are likely to vary by grade, race/ethnicity, sex, students’
socioeconomic status, subject, geographic location, and other factors.
Impact on Physical Activity
Although vigorous- or moderate-intensity physical activity is possible
during normal classroom time, classroom physical activity is more likely
to involve shifts from sedentary to light-intensity activities. Within the
past decade, research has demonstrated that shifting the amount
of time
spent in sedentary activities (metabolic equivalent [MET] values
≤
1.5) to
light-intensity activities (MET values >1.5-<3.0) results in improved health
outcomes for adults (e.g., Wijndaele et al., 2010, 2011; Grøntved and Hu,
2011; Matthews et al., 2012). Likewise, a qualitative review of 232 studies
of children aged 5-17 found a dose-response relationship between more
sedentary behavior and negative health outcomes, including unfavorable
body composition
and decreased fitness, lower scores for self-esteem and
prosocial behavior, and decreased academic achievement (Tremblay et al.,
2011). On the other hand, cohort studies that have controlled for vigorous-
or moderate-intensity physical activity have yet
to demonstrate a relation-
ship between reductions in sedentary activity (which is the same as increases
in light-intensity activity) and health or risk factor outcomes (Carson and
Janssen, 2011; Ekelund et al., 2012). The implications of these findings are
still being discussed and have not yet been explicated in current physical
activity recommendations. Nonetheless, it
appears prudent to assume that,
while vigorous- or moderate-intensity physical activity may have more or
unique physical (including brain) health and cognitive benefits for children,
light-intensity physical activity is preferable to sedentary activity from both
health and academic perspectives. Therefore, modifications that increase
light-intensity activity in the classroom should be viewed as beneficial even
though no change in the volume of vigorous- or
moderate-intensity physical
activity occurs.
Isolating the impact of classroom physical activity interventions on the
overall physical activity of children and adolescents is a frustrating venture.
Many efforts to increase classroom physical activity are imbedded within
programs also designed to increase activity during physical education,
Copyright © National Academy of Sciences. All rights reserved.
Educating the Student Body: Taking Physical Activity and Physical Education to School
334
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