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Using a multi-stakeholder experience-based design process to co-develop the Creating Active Schools Framework.

Andrew Daly-SmithThomas QuarmbyVictoria S J ArchboldNicola CorriganDan WilsonGeir K ResalandJohn B BartholomewAmika SinghHege E TjomslandLauren B SherarAnna ChalkleyAsh C RoutenDarren ShickleDaniel D BinghamSally E BarberEsther van SluijsStuart J FaircloughJim McKenna
Published in: The international journal of behavioral nutrition and physical activity (2020)
Following voting, the Creating Active Schools Framework (CAS) was designed. At the centre, ethos and practice drive school policy and vision, creating the physical and social environments in which five key stakeholder groups operate to deliver PA through seven opportunities both within and beyond school. At the top of the model, initial and in-service teacher training foster teachers' capability, opportunity and motivation (COM-B) to deliver whole-school PA. National policy and organisations drive top-down initiatives that support or hinder whole-school PA. To the authors' knowledge, this is the first time practitioners, policymakers and researchers have co-designed a whole-school PA framework from initial conception. The novelty of CAS resides in identifying the multitude of interconnecting components of a whole-school adaptive sub-system; exposing the complexity required to create systems change. The framework can be used to shape future policy, research and practice to embed sustainable PA interventions within schools. To enact such change, CAS presents a potential paradigm shift, providing a map and method to guide future co-production by multiple experts of PA initiatives 'with' schools, while abandoning outdated traditional approaches of implementing interventions 'on' schools.
Keyphrases
  • mental health
  • physical activity
  • healthcare
  • quality improvement
  • crispr cas
  • primary care
  • genome editing
  • public health
  • high school