Abstract
It remains unclear whether the provision of additional physical activity in school improves academic outcomes. We conducted a secondary analysis of the Childhood Health, Activity, and Motor Performance School Study Denmark (CHAMPS-study DK), a natural experiment based on a trebling of curricular physical education, to investigate whether children receiving additional physical education performed better on their academic exams at the conclusion of compulsory education (i.e., 9th grade). Children from six intervention schools received 3–7 years of exposure to 270 weekly minutes of physical education (sports schools), while children from four control schools received the 90-min national standard (normal schools). Academic performance was based on the standard Danish 7-point scale (ranging from −03 to 12) and retrieved from national registries. The primary outcome was calculated as the average exam grade. Comparisons of participants at sports and normal schools were adjusted for individual socioeconomic factors and school-level academic environment. There were no differences in the pooled exam performance among 691 sports- and 510 normal-school participants (0.20 (95% confidence interval: −0.12 to 0.52)). Results for subject-specific exams indicated similar results. This analysis from a non-randomized natural experiment did not provide evidence that simply adding additional physical education is sufficient to affect academic performance relative to the national standard.
Highlights
Regular physical activity carries a plethora of both physical and mental health benefits across the human lifespan [1]
Intervention models for increasing in-school physical activity can roughly be divided into three categories: Physical activity delivered as part of the curriculum; that is, physical activity, for example, integrating into language, mathematics or science lessons
The primary analysis revealed that children enrolled in sports schools performed a fifth of a grade higher on their combined exam 7 of 12(CI): compared to children enrolled in normal schools
Summary
Regular physical activity carries a plethora of both physical and mental health benefits across the human lifespan [1]. Several lines of research further suggest that physical activity may be beneficial for the academic performance of school-age children [2,3,4,5]. Academic competencies such as mathematics and reading are highly important for individuals’. Intervention models for increasing in-school physical activity can roughly be divided into three categories: Physical activity delivered as part of the curriculum; that is, physical activity, for example, integrating into language, mathematics or science lessons This can be delivered through tailored educational activities, often in the form of games or activities
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