We are pleased to announce an exciting new alliance between Active Living Research and GP RED to co-host and coordinate...
School Gardens and Physical Activity: A Randomized Controlled Trial of Low-Income Elementary Schools
Wells, N. M., Myers, B. M., & Henderson, J., Charles R. (2014). School Gardens and Physical Activity: A Randomized Controlled Trial of Low-Income Elementary Schools. Preventive Medicine, 69(Suppl), S27-S33.
OBJECTIVE: This study examines effects of a school garden intervention on elementary school children's physical activity (PA). Method: Twelve schools in New York were randomly assigned to receive the school garden intervention (n=6) or to the waitlist control group that later received gardens (n=6). PA was measured by self-report survey (Girls Health Enrichment Multi-site Study Activity Questionnaire) (N=227) and accelerometry (N=124, 8 schools) at baseline (Fall 2011) and follow-up (Spring 2012, Fall 2012, Spring 2013). Direct observation (N = 117, 4 schools) was employed to compare indoor (classroom) and outdoor (garden) PA. Analysis was by general linear mixed models. RESULTS: Survey data indicate garden intervention children's reports of usual sedentary activity decreased from pre-garden baseline to post-garden more than the control group children's (Δ = −.19, p = .001). Accelerometry data reveal that during the school day, children in the garden intervention showed a greater increase in percent of time spent in moderate and moderate-to-vigorous PA from baseline to follow-up than the control group children (Δ = +.58, p = .010; Δ = +1.0, p = .044). Direct observation within-group comparison of children at schools with gardens revealed that children move more and sit less during an outdoor garden-based lesson than during an indoor, classroom-based lesson. CONCLUSION: School gardens show some promise to promote children's PA.
- DOWNLOAD "School Gardens and Physical Activity: A Randomized Controlled Trial of Low-Income Elementary Schools" PDF (0.49 MB) Research Papers
Related Tools & Resources
STAY UP TO DATE
RECENTLY ADDED TOOLS & RESOURCES
MOVE! A BLOG ABOUT ACTIVE LIVING
The "Active Living Conference" aims to break down research and practice silos and...