@article{JPHE4045,
author = {You Fu and Ryan D. Burns and Wei Yang and Timothy A. Brusseau and James C. Hannon},
title = {Effects of a health-related physical fitness intervention on middle school students’ academic learning time during physical education},
journal = {Journal of Public Health and Emergency},
volume = {1},
number = {7},
year = {2017},
keywords = {},
abstract = {Background: This study examined the effects of the sports, play and active recreation for kids (SPARK) on middle school students’ academic learning time-physical education (ALT-PE) compared to the traditional physical education (PE) program.
Methods: A total of 12 target middle-school students were randomly selected from a pool of 174 who participated in PE lessons over 9 weeks. Two raters used a 12-second-interval observation/record protocol to record the student’s context level (general, subject matter knowledge, and subject matter motor). In the SPARK school, target students attended the SPARK lessons for 9 weeks that included three curricular sport activities in the order of soccer, flag football, and ultimate Frisbee. Target students’ percentages of time spent in ALT-PE context categories and subcategories were calculated and compared by different PE programs and sport activities. A series of 2 × 3 mixed design ANOVA tests were conducted using SPSS statistical software.
Results: Compare to traditional PE group, SPARK group had significant difference of percentage of time in general content (mean difference =−19.97%, P},
issn = {2520-0054}, url = {https://jphe.amegroups.org/article/view/4045}
}