Pedagogical Proposal of Tele-Exercise Based on "Square Stepping Exercise" in Preschoolers: Study Protocol.
Alberto Domínguez-MuñozJorge Carlos-VivasSabina Barrios-FernandezJose Carmelo Adsuar-SalaJesús Morenas-MartínMiguel Angel García-GordilloFrancisco Javier Domínguez MuñozPublished in: International journal of environmental research and public health (2021)
Early childhood education aims to achieve the motor, cognitive, emotional, and social development of preschoolers by providing them with a variety of learning opportunities. The square-stepping exercise (SSE) is a balance and lower limb strength training programme used to prevent falls and stimulate cognitive function in older adults. This project aims to propose an SSE tele-exercise (Tele-SSE) protocol to evaluate its effects on the motor and cognitive development of children aged between 3 and 6 years. A randomized controlled trial with experimental (Tele-SSE) and control (general education) groups will be carried out. The application of Tele-SSE will be performed for 9 months (three times per week) and one additional follow-up after the intervention at the beginning of the next academic year. One-hundred and two preschoolers will be recruited and randomly distributed into the two groups: experimental (n = 51) and control (n = 51). Although the main outcome will be balance due to the nature of the SSE, outcomes will include physical and motor (body mass index, waist circumference, handgrip and lower-limb strength, speed-agility, and cardiorespiratory fitness) and cognitive (executive functions and attention, episodic memory, and language assessment, using the Fitness Assessment in the Preschool Battery (PREFIT) and The National Institutes of Health Toolbox-Early Childhood Cognition Battery. This project aims to improve cognitive and motor skills in preschoolers aged between 3 and 6 years old, based on a 9-month Tele-SSE intervention. If this intervention proves to be effective, it could be implemented in those centres, entities and associations specializing in early childhood education.
Keyphrases
- lower limb
- physical activity
- body mass index
- quality improvement
- randomized controlled trial
- healthcare
- high intensity
- study protocol
- working memory
- mental health
- resistance training
- weight gain
- body composition
- clinical trial
- autism spectrum disorder
- open label
- medical students
- skeletal muscle
- type diabetes
- white matter
- metabolic syndrome
- weight loss
- health information
- neural network
- human health
- risk assessment