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Biological maturity and primary school children's physical activity : influence of different physical activity assessment instruments

journal contribution
posted on 2011-07-01, 00:00 authored by S Fairclough, L Boddy, Nicky RidgersNicky Ridgers, G Stratton, S Cumming
Biological maturation may attenuate hypothesized sex differences in children’s physical activity but overall the evidence for this is equivocal. In this study, we investigated how the selection of different physical activity assessment instruments affects the detected relationship between biological maturation and late primary school children’s physical activity. Altogether, 175 children (97 girls, 78 boys) aged 10.690.3 years completed the PAQ-C self-report questionnaire and wore ActiGraph GT1M accelerometers for 5 consecutive days. Maturity status was predicted by estimating attainment of age at peak height velocity. Following initial exploration of sex differences in PAQ-C (t-test) and multiple ActiGraph outcome variables (MANOVA), the influence of maturity status was controlled using ANCOVA and MANCOVA. Unadjusted analyses revealed that boys were significantly more active than girls according to the PAQ-C (PB0.0001, d0.52) and ActiGraph (PB0.0001, d0.360.72). After controlling for maturity status, the differences in PAQ-C scores increased (P0.001, d0.64), but the significant differences disappeared for the ActiGraph data (P0.36, d0.170.33). The detected relationship between maturity status and late primary school children’s physical activity is dependent on the physical activity assessment tool employed, reflecting the different aspects of physical activity captured by the respective measures.

History

Journal

European journal of sport science

Volume

11

Pagination

241-248

Location

Oxfordshire, England

ISSN

1746-1391

eISSN

1536-7290

Language

eng

Publication classification

C1 Refereed article in a scholarly journal, C Journal article

Copyright notice

2011, Taylor & Francis

Issue

4

Publisher

Taylor & Francis