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
329
of attention deficit hyperactivity disorder (ADHD).
Recess breaks also
provide students with the opportunity to develop social skills through peer
interaction, as well as free time in which to role play (AAP, 2013). Thus,
recess provides opportunities for social and emotional development of
youth in addition to its potential to increase physical activity levels.
Policies
Evidence discussed in detail in Chapter 6 and summarized here indi-
cates that implementing recess policies can have a positive impact on
increasing both overall physical activity in youth
and the amount of recess
offered during the school day. As discussed in Chapter 2, strong physical
activity–related state laws and local policies are associated with higher
levels of implementation of physical activity opportunities at the school
level. Existing evidence specific to state-level recess laws and local policies is
mixed. Slater and colleagues
(2012) found that weak state laws were associ-
ated with schools offering at least 20
minutes of daily recess; no associa-
tion was found for strong state laws or strong or weak school district–level
policies. However, the authors note that only three states have an existing
strong state-level recess law and, as discussed above,
school districts are not
required to address recess in their wellness policies.
Evenson and colleagues
(2009) examined the impact of a state law
on school-based physical activity. They evaluated the impact of North
Carolina’s Healthy Active Children Policy, which requires all children in
kindergarten through 8th grade to receive at least 30 minutes of moder-
ate to vigorous physical activity each school day.
The policy allows school
districts flexibility in meeting this requirement through physical education,
recess, or other approaches. The authors found that elementary schools
(69 percent) were most likely to meet the 30-minute daily requirement by
offering daily recess.
In a study conducted among a nationally representative sample of
Norwegian
students, Haug and colleagues
(2010a) found that schools with
a written policy addressing physical activity and those offering organized
noncurricular physical activity during the school day were most likely to
report student participation in daily recess, although
it is unclear whether
these written policies contained strong or weak language. In contrast, in a
random sample of low-income rural Colorado elementary schools, Belansky
and colleagues (2009) found that the number of minutes of recess provided
to students decreased after implementation of the
federally mandated local
wellness policy. The authors attribute this decline in recess minutes to the
weak language of the policy. Finally, Turner and colleagues
(2013) found an
association between strong state and school district policies and the practice
of withholding recess for behavior management or academic reasons. More
Copyright © National Academy of Sciences. All rights reserved.
Educating the Student Body: Taking Physical Activity and Physical Education to School
330
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