体育活动与学业成就:学生和学校层面潜在调节因子的分析。

IF 5.5
Hannah K Behringer, Emilie R Saksvig, Peter J Boedeker, Paul N Elish, Christi M Kay, Hannah G Calvert, Adria M Meyer, Julie A Gazmararian
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引用次数: 0

摘要

背景:许多儿童没有进行足够的体育活动,学校为儿童提供了一个独特的场所,以达到建议的每天60分钟的中等至高强度体育活动(MVPA)。先前关于MVPA对学业成绩影响的研究尚无定论,而且很少有研究调查了这种关系的潜在调节因子。本研究考察了学生层面特征(性别、种族/民族、免费/减价午餐状况)和学校层面特征(符合免费/减价午餐资格的学生比例、体育活动环境和机会)是否调节了MVPA与学业成绩的关系。方法:在乔治亚州一个大型、多元化的大都市公立学区,从40所小学招募了4,936名四年级学生。学生们在三个学期(2018年秋季、2019年春季、2019年秋季)共15天的时间里佩戴加速度计来测量在校日的MVPA。学业成绩数据,包括数学、阅读、拼写的课程分数(分数),以及写作、数学、阅读和Lexile(阅读评估)的标准化考试分数,在基线(3年级,8-9岁)和4年级(9-10岁)的随访中收集。由于与covid -19相关的中断,五年级(10-11岁)没有测量标准化考试成绩。多水平模型评估了学生水平和/或学校水平特征是否在横截面和纵向mvpa -学业成就关系中起调节作用。结果:横断面分析表明,MVPA和AA之间的关系仅受学生西班牙裔对四年级秋季拼写成绩的影响(β = -0.159 p)。结论:总体而言,我们的研究结果并不表明学生或学校水平的特征会调节MVPA和学业成绩之间的关系。虽然对某些结果观察到统计上显著的结果,但实际差异可以忽略不计。在这一人群中,基于学校的MVPA似乎不会因学生性别、种族/民族、免费/减价午餐或学校特征而对学习成绩产生不同的影响。试验注册:本研究已在美国国立卫生研究院(NIH) ClinicalTrials.gov系统注册,ID为NCT03765047。注册于2018年12月5日-追溯注册。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Physical activity and academic achievement: an analysis of potential student- and school-level moderators.

Background: Many children do not engage in sufficient physical activity, and schools provide a unique venue for children to reach their recommended 60 daily minutes of moderate-to-vigorous physical activity (MVPA). Prior research examining effects of MVPA on academic achievement is inconclusive, and few studies have investigated potential moderators of this relationship. This study examined whether student-level characteristics (gender, race/ethnicity, free/reduced-price lunch status) and school-level characteristics (proportion of students qualifying for free/reduced-price lunch, physical activity environment and opportunities) moderate the relationship between MVPA and academic achievement.

Methods: In a large, diverse metropolitan public school district in Georgia, 4,936 students in Grade 4 were recruited from 40 elementary schools. Students wore accelerometers to measure school-day MVPA for a total of 15 days across three semesters (fall 2018, spring 2019, fall 2019). Academic achievement data, including course marks (grades) for math, reading, spelling, and standardized test scores in writing, math, reading, and Lexile (reading assessment), were collected at baseline (Grade 3, ages 8-9) and at follow-up in Grade 4 (ages 9-10). Standardized test scores were not measured in Grade 5 (ages 10-11) due to COVID-19-related disruptions. Multilevel modeling assessed whether student-level and/or school-level characteristics were moderators in the cross-sectional and longitudinal MVPA-academic achievement relationship.

Results: Cross sectional analyses indicated that the MVPA and AA relationship was moderated only by student Hispanic ethnicity for Grade 4 fall spelling marks (β = -0.159 p < 0.001). The relationship for Grade 4 fall spelling marks was also moderated by school physical activity opportunities (β = -0.128 (p < 0.001). Longitudinally, there was no significant moderation of the MVPA-academic achievement. A relationship by student gender, free/reduced-price lunch status, race/ethnicity; nor for school-level factors including proportion of students qualifying for free/reduced-price lunch, physical activity environment, and physical activity opportunities.

Conclusions: Overall, our results did not suggest that student- or school-level characteristics moderate the MVPA-academic achievement relationship. While statistically significant results were observed for certain outcomes, practical differences were negligible. In this population, school-based MVPA does not appear to differently affect academic performance based on student gender, race/ethnicity, free/reduced-price lunch, nor school characteristics.

Trial registration: This study was registered with the National Institutes of Health (NIH) ClinicalTrials.gov system, with ID NCT03765047 . Registered 05 December 2018-Retrospectively registered.

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