Linear/nonlinear relations of activity and fitness with children's academic achievement

David M Hansen, Stephen D Herrmann, Kate Lambourne, Jaehoon Lee, Joseph E Donnelly, David M Hansen, Stephen D Herrmann, Kate Lambourne, Jaehoon Lee, Joseph E Donnelly

Abstract

A growing research base suggests that the benefits of physical activity (PA) and aerobic fitness for children extend beyond overall health/well-being to include academic achievement (AA). The majority of research studies on relations of PA and fitness with AA have used linear-only analytic approaches, thereby precluding the possibility that PA and fitness could have a differing effect on AA for those more/less active or fit.

Objective: This study aimed to evaluate both linear and nonlinear associations of PA and aerobic fitness with children's AA among a sample of 687 second and third grade students from 17 Midwest schools.

Study design: Using baseline data (fall 2011) from a larger 3-yr intervention trial, multilevel regression analyses examined the linear and nonlinear associations of AA with PA and with progressive aerobic cardiovascular endurance run (PACER) laps (i.e., aerobic fitness), controlling for relevant covariates.

Results: Fitness, but not PA, had a significant quadratic association with both spelling and mathematics achievement. Results indicate that 22-28 laps on the PACER was the point at which the associated increase in achievement per lap plateaued for spelling and mathematics.

Conclusions: Increasing fitness could potentially have the greatest effect on children's AA for those below the 50th fitness percentile on the PACER.

Trial registration: ClinicalTrials.gov NCT01699295.

Conflict of interest statement

Competing interests: The authors declare that they have no competing interests. No form of payment was given to anyone to produce this manuscript.

The authors declare that they have no competing interests. The results of the present study do not constitute endorsement by ACSM.

Figures

Figure 1
Figure 1
Predicted achievement scores and trend lines for reading, math, and spelling

Source: PubMed

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