Effects of a Classroom-Based Program on Physical Activity and On-Task Behavior
Center for Health, Exercise and Sport Sciences · East Carolina University
Abstract
Physical activity of 243 students was assessed during school hours. Intervention-group students (N = 135) received a classroom-based program (i.e., Energizers). The control group (N = 108) did not receive Energizers. On-task behavior during academic instruction time was observed for 62 third-grade (N = 37) and fourth-grade students (N = 25) before and after Energizers activities. An independent groups t-test compared in-school physical activity levels between intervention and control classes. A multiple-baseline across-classrooms design was used to evaluate the effectiveness of the Energizers on on-task behavior. Additionally, a two-way (time [pre- vs postobservation] x period [baseline vs intervention]) repeated-measures analysis of variance compared on-task behavior between observation periods. Magnitudes of mean differences were evaluated with Cohen's delta (ES).
Students in the intervention group took significantly (P
Citation impact
- FWCI
- 12.01
- Percentile
- 100%
- References
- 32
Authors
6- MTMatthew T. MaharCorresponding
Center for Health, Exercise and Sport Sciences, East Carolina University
- SKSheila K. Murphy
Center for Health, Exercise and Sport Sciences
- DADavid A. Rowe
Center for Health, Exercise and Sport Sciences
- JAJeannie A. Golden
East Carolina University
- ATA. Tamlyn Shields
Center for Health, Exercise and Sport Sciences
Topics & keywords
- Task (project management)
- Intervention (counseling)
- Analysis of variance
- Psychology
- Significant difference
- Repeated measures design
- Test (biology)
- Physical activity
- Quality Education