Sex differences in 3- to 5-year-old children's motor competence: A pooled cross-sectional analysis of 6241 children.
Clarice Maria De Lucena MartinsElizabeth K WebsterVicente Romo-PerezMichael Joseph DuncanLuís Filipe LemosAmanda E StaianoAnthony D OkelyMagistro DanieleFabio CarlevaroFarid BardidFrancesca MagnoGlauber Carvalho NobreIsaac EstevanJorge Augusto Pinto da Silva MotaKe NingLeah E RobinsonMatthieu LenoirMinghui QuanNadia Cristina ValentiniParvaneh Shamsipour DehkordiPenny CrossRachel A JonesRafael Dos Santos HenriqueSedigheh SalamiSi-Tong ChenYucui DiaoPaulo Felipe Ribeiro BandeiraLisa M BarnettPublished in: Scandinavian journal of medicine & science in sports (2024)
There is some, albeit inconsistent, evidence supporting sex differences in preschoolers' motor competence (MC), with these observations not uniform when analyzed by age, and cultural groups. Thus, this study examined sex differences across ages in 3- to 5-year-old children's MC. A cross-country pooled sample of 6241 children aged 3-5 years (49.6% girls) was assessed for MC using the Test of Gross Motor Development-2nd/3rd edition, and children were categorized into groups of age in months. Multiple linear regression models and predictive margins were calculated to explore how sex and age in months affect scores of MC (i.e., locomotor and ball skills), with adjustments for country and BMI. The Chow's Test was used to test for the presence of a structural break in the data. Significant differences in favor of girls were seen at 57-59 and 66-68 months of age for locomotor skills; boys performed better in ball skills in all age periods, except for 42-44 and 45-47 months of age. The higher marginal effects were observed for the period between 45-47 and 48-50 months for locomotor skills (F = 30.21; and F = 25.90 for girls and boys, respectively), and ball skills (F = 19.01; and F = 42.11 for girls and boys, respectively). A significantly positive break point was seen at 45-47 months, highlighting the age interval where children's MC drastically improved. The identification of this breakpoint provides an evidence-based metric for when we might expect MC to rapidly increase, and an indicator of early delay when change does not occur at that age.