Low-Cost and Scalable Classroom Equipment to Promote Physical Activity and Improve Education

2015 ◽  
Vol 12 (9) ◽  
pp. 1259-1263 ◽  
Author(s):  
Shelly K. McCrady-Spitzer ◽  
Chinmay U. Manohar ◽  
Gabriel A. Koepp ◽  
James A. Levine

Background:We tested a low-cost and scalable set of classroom equipment, called Active Classroom Equipment, which was designed to promote physical activity while children learn. We hypothesized the Active Classroom Equipment would be associated with increased physical activity without impairing learning.Methods:Fourteen first-grade students in a public elementary school (7 females, 7 males, aged 6.9 ± (SD) 0.4 years, 24 ± 5.4 kg, BMI 15.8 ± 2.6 kg/m2) used the Active Classroom Equipment for 30 minutes each day throughout the school year. Five-day physical activity was measured using validated triaxial accelerometers at baseline (before the intervention began) and on 4 sequential occasions during the 9-month intervention.Results:For the baseline period, 5-day physical activity averaged 157 ± 65 AU/min. When the 14 children accessed the Active Classroom Equipment, their mean 5-day physical activity was 229 ± 103 Acceleration Units (AU)/min (P < .0001). There were sequential increases in physical activity over the 9-month intervention (Quarter 1: 163 ± 94 AU/min, Quarter 2: 227 ± 108 AU/min, Quarter 3: 278 ± 61 AU/min, Quarter 4: 305 ± 65 AU/min). Students’ Dynamic Indicators of Basic Early Literacy Skills (DIBELS) scores improved.Conclusion:Active Classroom Equipment may be one approach to increase physical activity.

1995 ◽  
Vol 10 (1) ◽  
pp. 37-48 ◽  
Author(s):  
Catherine E. Snow ◽  
Patton O. Tabors ◽  
Petra A. Nicholson ◽  
Brenda F. Kurland

2018 ◽  
Vol 45 (3) ◽  
pp. 173-183 ◽  
Author(s):  
Aleksis P. Kincaid ◽  
Scott R. McConnell ◽  
Alisha K. Wackerle-Hollman

Evidence of longitudinal relations between language and early literacy skills in early childhood and later reading (and other) achievement is growing, along with an expanding array of early education programs designed to improve later academic outcomes and prevent, reduce, or close later academic achievement gaps across groups. Assessment systems to support this intervention have been developed, but to date we have little evidence of these systems’ outcomes when used at a broad scale in community-based preschool programs. For this broad purpose, two research questions were addressed: (a) How much progress do children make on language and early literacy skills over the course of one school year? and (b) What is the relationship between child characteristics, baseline performance, and growth on language and early literacy skills? Results indicated growth over time for all measures and relations between child age, gender, and free-or-reduced-price status and students’ performance at the beginning of the school year, but (with one exception) no relation between these covariates and growth over time. Discussion centers on current status of language and early literacy assessment in early childhood education as well as needs and issues to be addressed in future research and program development.


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