AI Article Synopsis

  • The research examined the connections between fundamental movement skills (FMS), muscular fitness, self-perception, and physical activity among school children aged 8 to 10 years.
  • Results indicated significant positive relationships between FMS proficiency and lower body muscular fitness, as well as athletic self-perception, with variations identified between boys and girls.
  • The study concluded that FMS proficiency is a key predictor of physical activity levels and highlighted the necessity for distinct strategies in physical education that take biological sex into account.

Article Abstract

Positive self-perception, physical activity and fundamental movement skill (FMS) proficiency are important aspects of a child's healthy development. The objective of this research was twofold: first, to explore associations between FMS, muscular fitness, self-perception and physical activity in school children; and second, to identify key predictors of FMS proficiency, athletic self-perception, physical activity levels in these participants and the differences between biological sexes. Primary school-aged children (n = 104; 53.85% female) from 8 to 10 years old (M = 9.04, SD = 0.69) engaged in two days of testing. All students were measured on FMS, standing long jump (SLJ), countermovement jump (CMJ), seated medicine ball chest throw and self-perception, followed by correlation and stepwise multiple linear regression analyses. The findings revealed significant positive correlations between FMS proficiency, lower body muscular fitness (CMJ, SLJ), and athletic self-perception for the entire cohort, with varying results between male and female subgroups. Additionally, athletic self-perception showed strong relationships with other self-perception domains. Notably, forward stepwise regression analysis identified FMS proficiency as a significant predictor of physical activity levels, explaining 12.8% of the variance. SLJ, scholastic perception, and physical activity explained 45.5% of FMS variance for females. In males, FMS proficiency significantly predicted physical activity, accounting for 13.3% of the variance. SLJ and athletic competence self-perception explained 42.1% of FMS variance in males. The study indicates that FMS, self-perception, muscular fitness, and physical activity levels may mutually enhance each other, and that there is a need for biological sex-specific strategies to be considered in physical education programs.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC11679965PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/jfmk9040272DOI Listing

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