Abstract

Physical activity (PA) is critical to early childhood health and development, and childcare is a key setting for establishing physically active play. In British Columbia (BC), a provincial standard for active play in childcare was enacted, identified here as the Active Play (AP) standard. Pragmatic constraints limit real-world data collection for evaluating policy impact. We explored whether information about policies, practices, and the environment varied when it was collected from managers or staff. Surveys were distributed to BC childcare centers before AP standard enactment to ascertain current PA and fundamental movement skill policies and practices. The full sample (n = 1037 from 625 facilities) and a subsample of paired managers and staff (n = 261 centers) were used to explore agreement across managers and staff in reported prevalence and relationships among indicators. The policy prevalence and relationships for active play and outdoor play variables were relatively similar for manager and staff data, although the matched data had modest agreement and less than optimal intraclass correlations. The prevalence of manager-reported PA policies ranged from 47% for screen-time limits to 77% for fundamental movement skill activities. The manager and staff data highlighted indoor and outdoor space as a primary factor in AP standard adherence. With reliance on sampling staff unfeasible, it appears that the manager data may adequately describe the policies and practices of childcare providers with some notable issues.

Highlights

  • Physical activity (PA) is critical to early childhood development

  • Our sample was 97% female (n = 942), 66% and 74% of staff and managers had an early childhood educator credential, respectively, 29% of staff had worked in childcare between 1 and 5 years, and just over 65% were between 40 and 59 years old (n = 632) based on 456 staff and 581 manager responses from 625 facilities

  • Our results showed that prevalence estimates were similar between managers and staff with respect to reporting PA practices that are typically scheduled and the PA environment

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Summary

Introduction

Physical activity (PA) is critical to early childhood development. Engaging in PA in the early years is associated with a number of physical, psychological, and social health benefits, as well as improved cognitive and language development [1]. FMS in early childhood is associated with greater PA in adolescence [5] and adulthood [6]. This increase in PA participation is thought to be driven by a hypothetical proficiency barrier, where a minimum skill capability is needed to engage in a wide variety of activities, and physical and psychological features may mediate an individual’s foundational skill capacity [7,8]. Movement skill proficiency is lower than anticipated in Canada

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