Publication | Closed Access
Relation of Academic Performance to Physical Activity and Fitness in Children
408
Citations
9
References
2001
Year
Physical ActivityAdapted Physical ActivityPwc 170EducationLong JumpFitness ProgramsKinesiologyAcademic PerformanceExercisePhysical EducationPhysical ExerciseClinical ExerciseHealth SciencesPhysical FitnessClinical Exercise PhysiologyChild DevelopmentExercise SciencePhysical DevelopmentPhysical Activity EpidemiologyExercise PhysiologyChildhood Physical ActivityAthletic TrainingExercise Performance
The objective of this study was to examine the association of scholastic performance with physical activity and fitness of children. To do so, school ratings of scholastic ability on a five-point scale for a nationally representative sample of 7,961 Australian schoolchildren aged 7–15 years were compared with physical activity and fitness measurements. Consistently across age and sex groups, the ratings were significantly correlated with questionnaire measures of physical activity and with performance on the 1.6-kilometer run, sit-ups and push-ups challenges, 50-meter sprint, and standing long jump. There were no significant associations for physical work capacity at a heart rate of 170 (PWC 170 ). The results are concordant with the hypothesis that physical activity enhances academic performance, but the cross-sectional nature of the observations limits causal inference, and the disparity for PWC 170 gives reason to question whether the associations were due to measurement bias or residual confounding.
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