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Effects of a 12-Week Physical Activity Protocol Delivered by YMCA After-School Counselors (Youth Fit For Life) on Fitness and Self-Efficacy Changes in 5–12-Year-Old Boys and Girls
106
Citations
39
References
2005
Year
Physical ActivityAdapted Physical ActivityEducationYouth FitFlexibility TrainingSelf-efficacy ChangesFitness ProgramsExercise BarriersPhysical HealthKinesiologyYmca After-school CounselorsPhysical EducationPhysical ExerciseHealth EducationHealth SciencesPhysical FitnessHealth PromotionElementary School PeRehabilitationHealth StandardsExercise SciencePhysical Activity EpidemiologyChildhood Physical ActivityPediatricsAthletic TrainingExercise Interventions
To address reduced physical education (PE) in elementary schools, a 12-week physical activity protocol was tested on 5-12-year-old, primarily African American, girls (n = 226) and boys (n = 344) at 14 YMCA after-school care sites. The 3 times/week, 45-min session curriculum included cardiovascular, resistance, and flexibility training, in which all children could participate simultaneously, and a behavioral skills education component. After-school counselors, formerly untrained in PE methods, administered the sessions, with periodic supervision by YMCA wellness staff members. Analyses of the eight Age x Sex subsamples indicated significant improvements on body composition, strength, and endurance, both within-groups and when predicted changes due to maturation were accounted for. Exercise barriers self-efficacy significantly increased in subsamples of 9-10- and 11-12-year-old girls only. The need for replication across ethnic groups was suggested. Limitations and the need for extension of research on supplementation of elementary school PE were discussed.
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