Abstract

Background: Promoting physical activity (PA) in children is associated with a wide range of desired outcomes. With children increasingly not meeting recommended levels of activity, the school setting offers many opportunities to improve this. Increasing children’s on-task behaviour is of particular importance to teachers, and while it has previously been suggested that PA can improve classroom behaviour, a consensus on the dose-response relationship of PA content, and its interaction with children’s individual differences, is yet to be reached. This study aimed to investigate this relationship more closely and assess the differences between objective and subjective measures of PA intensity.Method: Data was collected from 76 primary school-aged children (M age = 9.3 years, SD = 0.7 years; 46 females). The PE lesson intervention followed a 3 (intensity: low, medium, high) by 2 (complexity: low, high) within-person design. Children’s task-behaviour was observed pre- and post-the intervention PE lesson during “business as usual” classroom lesson. PA was measured objectively with wrist-worn accelerometer devices for 24 h before the intervention, and subjectively rated on a five-point Likert scale after each intervention lesson.Results: The results indicated a difference in subjective and objective measures of PA intensity on children’s on-task behaviour. Objective measures positively predicted task-behaviour at moderate to high intensities, whereas subjective ratings were beneficial only at sub-maximal intensity. Findings suggested that boys’ on-task behaviour improved at higher intensities, whereas girls were also responsive to lower intensity lessons. Less active children showed more improvement in on-task behaviour after a range of lessons, whereas more active children only benefited from the highest intensity lessons. Finally, children exhibiting the highest levels of off-task behaviour improved their on-task behaviour after all intervention lessons.Conclusion: The findings suggest that higher intensities of PA have a generally positive effect on children’s subsequent behaviour, although certain individual characteristics make children more responsive to lower PA intensities. Furthermore, passive off-task behaviours were less prevalent after lower-intensity PA. Thus, individual differences, as well as the target behaviour, are important factors to take into account when designing optimal PE lessons for improving classroom behaviour.

Highlights

  • Children and adolescents around the world are not meeting the minimum daily requirement of moderate-to-vigorous physical activity (MVPA), with only one in four children aged 11 being sufficiently active in 2017/18 (Inchley et al, 2020), and a declining trend from early adolescence into early adulthood (van Sluijs et al, 2021)

  • Overweight and obese samples are investigated in isolation, or BMI is used as a control variable rather than a predictor

  • In a systematic review of PA interventions for overweight and obese youth, Martin et al (2018) found no evidence of increased inhibition control after PA. This is in line with the results from a study by Mora-Gonzalez et al (2019), who found no association of chronic MVPA or sedentary time with EF in an overweight and obese sample

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Summary

Introduction

Children and adolescents around the world are not meeting the minimum daily requirement of moderate-to-vigorous physical activity (MVPA), with only one in four children aged 11 being sufficiently active in 2017/18 (Inchley et al, 2020), and a declining trend from early adolescence into early adulthood (van Sluijs et al, 2021). Physical activity (PA) is widely accepted to be beneficial to physical, mental, and cognitive health, both during childhood and into later life (van Sluijs et al, 2021), making PA behaviour in youth a crucial target for interventions. Recent meta-analyses show that PA interventions in schools fail to reach the desired outcome of increasing activity levels in youth, and especially in girls (Owen et al, 2017; van Sluijs et al, 2021). We investigated the dose-response relationship between the PA content of PE lessons (complexity, objective, and subjective intensity—the dose) and subsequent task-behaviour in primary school classrooms (the response), and whether this relationship differed based on the individual characteristics of the participants (BMI, sex, habitual PA, and baseline task-related behaviour). This study aimed to investigate this relationship more closely and assess the differences between objective and subjective measures of PA intensity

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