Copyright © National Academy of Sciences. All rights reserved.
Educating the Student Body: Taking Physical Activity and Physical Education to School
Status and Trends of Physical Activity Behaviors
and Related School Policies
37
National Association for Sport and Physical Education, American College
of Sports Medicine) are known to influence youth’s school-related physical
activity. Understood as well is that the strength of that influence is, in turn,
affected by incentives and enforcements associated with those guidelines,
recommendations, and policies (see Figure 1-3 in Chapter 1). What remains
unclear is which guidelines, recommendations, policies,
incentives, and
enforcements are most influential in today’s social milieu.
What should also be apparent is that, despite some excellent research
and a few good public health surveillance systems, current monitoring of
overall and school-related physical activity behaviors and school-related
policies and practices that enable or impede those behaviors is inadequate.
These deficiencies have arisen for several reasons. First, physical activity has
only recently been acknowledged as a vital public health issue, so
monitor-
ing of the volume of physical activity at the population level is a recent
objective with still insufficient priority. The Physical Activity and Health
Branch of the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) was not
established until 1996, and the first formal federal-level physical activity
guidelines were not published until 2008 (HHS, 2008). Second, physical
activity is a notoriously difficult behavior to measure. Third, understanding
of the types and amounts of physical activity relevant to health and health
outcomes is still growing. The types and amounts of physical activity rec-
ommended for children and adolescents have changed
several times in the
past 20 years, frustrating efforts to monitor trends. Fourth, information is
scarce on prevalence and trends for policies that may enable (or inhibit)
physical activity. Examples include school- and district-level policies on
recess and training for physical education teachers, as well as community or
neighborhood policies on active transport to and from school. Monitoring
of policies and practices is improving but needs expansion and matura-
tion. Finally, schools and school districts vary greatly in size,
resources,
environmental setting, urbanization, population characteristics, traditions,
and policies. Summary assessments and measures may capture the national
gestalt but omit important differences among subgroups.
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