Physical Activity Clinical Trial
Official title:
Interrupting Prolonged Sitting With Activity Feasibility Study
This study tested the feasibility of interrupting prolonged sitting with 10, 3-minute activity breaks in elementary school classrooms. Three elementary schools in Southeast Michigan (20 teachers, 500 students) participated in this study.
School environments have historically provided many opportunities for children to be
physically active through comprehensive programs, including recess, intramural physical
activity clubs, interscholastic sports and physical education. However, with recent cuts to
public school funding and an increased emphasis on standardized test scores, schools
districts across the country have reduced time allocated for structured physical activity in
favor of additional academic instruction time. This is troubling as uninterrupted prolonged
sitting time is associated with increased disruptive behavior, lower academic achievement and
increased obesity risk in children. As such, developing low-cost, innovative physical
activity interventions aimed at improving weight outcomes and cognitive function in children
are warranted.
Researchers have targeted the school classroom, where students spend the majority of their
time, as a potential intervention site. Classroom-based physical activity interventions have
been largely successful at increasing physical activity, improving physical fitness and
academic achievement among children. Yet, no intervention to date has been able to produce
significant improvements in weight status, in part due to the intensity, duration and
frequency of activities employed (i.e., low-to-moderate intensity; 10-30 minutes per session;
1-2 sessions per day). Preliminary evidence from our laboratory suggests intermittent
activity breaks performed at a moderate-to-vigorous intensity elicits greater total daily
physical activity energy expenditure without subsequent increases in food intake compared to
lower intensity activities. Other researchers have confirmed greater reductions in weight and
fat mass in response to higher rather than lower intensity physical activities. In addition,
short bursts of activity rather than continuous movements more closely mimics children's
natural activity patterns in free-living environments. Hence, incorporating intermittent
activity breaks of moderate-to-vigorous intensity as an intervention component may increase
the likelihood of classroom-based physical activity interventions improving weight outcomes
in children.
Implementing intermittent activity breaks in a classroom will require adjustments to both
teaching curricula and classroom design. Current teaching curricula promotes sedentary
behaviors by requiring children to spend between 6 and 8 hours in seated academic instruction
per day. Moreover, current classroom designs (i.e., size of the classroom and interior areas,
type of furniture, flooring and room arrangement) optimize student learning and classroom
management with little consideration given to physical activity and movement. Yet, simple
adjustments to teaching curricula (i.e. coupling physical activity with teacher's existing
lessons) and classroom design (e.g. using smart floor planning to restructure spaces in a
classroom) can dramatically increase movement and subsequent learning within that space. In
partnership with the School of Education and the Taubman College of Architecture & Urban
Planning, two traditionally non-health related fields, the overall objectives of this pilot
study are to: 1) develop a classroom curriculum and floor plan that promotes movement,
learning and positive behavioral outcomes; and 2) test the feasibility of implementing our
classroom-based physical activity intervention (Interrupting Prolonged sitting with ACTivity
or INPACT) in three elementary schools (20 classrooms) across the state of Michigan. Third
thru fifth grade teachers and students from Columbia Elementary, Estabrook Elementary and
Anderson Elementary will be recruited to participate in this pilot study with classroom
teachers delivering the physical activity intervention.
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