Abstract

To date, little research has longitudinally examined young children’s physical activity (PA) during school hours, nor questioned children’s perceptions of their own PA behaviours. This study investigated 20 children’s actual physical activity levels (APA) and their perceived physical activity levels (PPA) (10 infants, mean age 6.6 years; 10 juniors, mean age 9.5 years). APA was evaluated using accelerometers across 36 whole school days (371 min per day); 18 days included Physical Education (PE) lessons and 18 did not. A repeated-measures three-factor ANOVA analysed: type of day; age phase; parts of the day and sex. PPA was collected by an interactive handset and an adapted version of the PA Questionnaire for Children (PAQ-C). Participants undertook 10 more minutes of moderate to vigorous PA (MVPA) on PE days (53 ± 19 min) compared to non-PE days (43 ± 15 min) (F = 92.32, p < 0.05) and only junior boys reached daily MVPA recommendations (60 ± 13 min) on PE days. Juniors over-estimated, and infants under-estimated, their APA levels. Educators need more support to teach and embed different PA intensities into the school day to enable children to better understand the health benefits associated with varying the intensity of their PA during school hours.

Highlights

  • The purpose of this study is to examine children’s actual physical activity (APA) levels and their perceived physical activity (PPA) within an English elementary school setting, during the 9 am–3.10 pm structured school day

  • This study investigated whether there were any differences between children’s actual physical activity levels (APA) versus perceived physical activity levels (PPA), with the purpose of potentially addressing ways to reduce any levels of mismatch

  • In order to ascertain whether children do, incorrectly report their physical activity levels, this study aims to analyse younger (6–7 years old) and older (9–10 years old) children’s perceived and APA levels within the elementary school setting

Read more

Summary

Introduction

Academic Editors: Lynne M. Boddy and Paul B. TchounwouReceived: 9 February 2021Accepted: 23 March 2021Published: 27 March 2021Publisher’s Note: MDPI stays neutral with regard to jurisdictional claims in published maps and institutional affiliations.Licensee MDPI, Basel, Switzerland.Attribution (CC BY) license (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/The purpose of this study is to examine children’s actual physical activity (APA) levels and their perceived physical activity (PPA) within an English elementary school setting, during the 9 am–3.10 pm structured school day. This study investigated whether there were any differences between children’s APA versus PPA, with the purpose of potentially addressing ways to reduce any levels of mismatch. Comparisons were also made between

Objectives
Methods
Results
Discussion
Conclusion
Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call