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In preschool children, physical activity during school time can significantly increase by intensifying locomotor activities during physical education classes.

Juliana KainBárbara LeytonJohana Soto-SánchezFernando Concha
Published in: BMC research notes (2018)
532 children (mean age 5.2 years, 50% girls) were selected from a nationwide program which provides 3 weekly PE. Children wore accelerometers during one school day which included PE. We recorded the type and duration of each activity indicated by the teacher, classifying each one into the corresponding FMS, extracting its MVPA minutes from the accelerometer software. Children were categorized into active and low active. Comparisons used T-tests. In PE, active children accumulate 40 and 36 percentage points (pp) more MVPA minutes (boys and girls respectively), while during school time, 4 pp more in each sex. Girls are significantly less active. Just considering locomotion, active boys and girls accumulate 11 more MVPA minutes during PE. Active boys surpass the MVPA guideline for PE, while active girls almost reach it. Low active children (especially girls) should intensify locomotor activities during PE.
Keyphrases
  • physical activity
  • young adults
  • mental health
  • spinal cord injury
  • healthcare
  • data analysis
  • high school