Physical activity and academic achievement across the curriculum: Results from a 3-year cluster-randomized trial

Abstract We compared changes in academic achievement across 3 years between children in elementary schools receiving the Academic Achievement and Physical Activity Across the Curriculum intervention (A + PAAC), in which classroom teachers were trained to deliver academic lessons using moderate-to-vi...

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Veröffentlicht in:Preventive medicine 2017-06, Vol.99, p.140-145
Hauptverfasser: Donnelly, Joseph E, Hillman, Charles H, Greene, Jerry L, Hansen, David M, Gibson, Cheryl A, Sullivan, Debra K, Poggio, John, Mayo, Matthew S, Lambourne, Kate, Szabo-Reed, Amanda N, Herrmann, Stephen D, Honas, Jeffery J, Scudder, Mark R, Betts, Jessica L, Henley, Katherine, Hunt, Suzanne L, Washburn, Richard A
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Abstract We compared changes in academic achievement across 3 years between children in elementary schools receiving the Academic Achievement and Physical Activity Across the Curriculum intervention (A + PAAC), in which classroom teachers were trained to deliver academic lessons using moderate-to-vigorous physical activity (MVPA) compared to a non-intervention control. Elementary schools in eastern Kansas ( n = 17) were cluster randomized to A + PAAC ( N = 9, target ≥ 100 min/w ee k ) or control ( N = 8). Academic achievement (math, reading, spelling) was assessed using the Wechsler Individual Achievement Test-Third Edition (WIAT-III) in a sample of children (A + PAAC = 316, Control = 268) in grades 2 and 3 at baseline (Fall 2011) and repeated each spring across 3 years. On average 55 min/w ee k of A + PACC lessons were delivered each week across the intervention. Baseline WIAT-III scores (math, reading, spelling) were significantly higher in students in A + PAAC compared with control schools and improved in both groups across 3 years. However, linear mixed modeling, accounting for baseline between group differences in WIAT-III scores, ethnicity, family income, and cardiovascular fitness, found no significant impact of A + PAAC on any of the academic achievement outcomes as determined by non-significant group by time interactions. A + PAAC neither diminished or improved academic achievement across 3-years in elementary school children compared with controls. Our target of 100 min /w ee k of active lessons was not achieved; however, students attending A + PAAC schools received an additional 55 min /w ee k of MVPA which may be associated with both physical and mental health benefits, without a reduction in time devoted to academic instruction.
ISSN:0091-7435
1096-0260
DOI:10.1016/j.ypmed.2017.02.006