Enjoyment mediates effects of a school-based physical-activity intervention.

PURPOSE The study evaluated whether targeted changes in factors influencing enjoyment of physical education (PE), physical activity enjoyment, and self-efficacy beliefs about participating in physical activity mediated the effect of the Lifestyle Education for Activity Program (LEAP) intervention on participation in physical activity. METHODS High schools (N=24) paired on enrollment size, racial composition, urban or rural location, and class structure were randomized into control (N=12) or experimental (N=12) groups. Of the 4044 girls enrolled and eligible, 2087 (51.6%) participated in the measurement component of the study. There were 1038 girls in the control group and 1049 girls in the experimental group. INTERVENTION LEAP was a comprehensive school-based intervention emphasizing changes in instruction and school environment designed to increase physical activity among black and white adolescent girls. It was organized according to the Coordinated School Health Program and included a PE component with core objectives of promoting enjoyment of PE, physical activity enjoyment, and self-efficacy. RESULTS Latent variable structural equation modeling indicated that: 1) the intervention had direct, positive effects on physical activity and factors influencing enjoyment of PE, which subsequently explained the effects of increased physical activity enjoyment and self-efficacy on increased physical activity; and 2) an additional, indirect effect of physical activity enjoyment on physical activity operated by an influence on self-efficacy. CONCLUSIONS Increases in enjoyment partially mediated the positive effect of the LEAP intervention. To our knowledge, we have provided the first experimental evidence from a randomized controlled trial linking increased enjoyment with increased physical activity among black and white adolescent girls.

[1]  P. Bentler,et al.  Significance Tests and Goodness of Fit in the Analysis of Covariance Structures , 1980 .

[2]  Donald B. Rubin,et al.  A Simple, General Purpose Display of Magnitude of Experimental Effect , 1982 .

[3]  E. Deci,et al.  Intrinsic motivation in sport. , 1987, Exercise and sport sciences reviews.

[4]  D D Allensworth,et al.  The comprehensive school health program: exploring an expanded concept. , 1987, The Journal of school health.

[5]  B. Byrne,et al.  Testing for the equivalence of factor covariance and mean structures: The issue of partial measurement invariance. , 1989 .

[6]  T. Baranowski,et al.  School Promotion of Healthful Diet and Physical Activity: Impact on Learning Outcomes and Self-Reported Behavior , 1989, Health education quarterly.

[7]  Deborah Kendzierski,et al.  Physical Activity Enjoyment Scale: Two Validation Studies , 1991 .

[8]  M. Browne,et al.  Alternative Ways of Assessing Model Fit , 1992 .

[9]  J. Horn,et al.  A practical and theoretical guide to measurement invariance in aging research. , 1992, Experimental aging research.

[10]  James L. Arbuckle,et al.  Full Information Estimation in the Presence of Incomplete Data , 1996 .

[11]  R. Dishman,et al.  Increasing physical activity: a quantitative synthesis. , 1996, Medicine and science in sports and exercise.

[12]  H A Feldman,et al.  The effects of the Child and Adolescent Trial for Cardiovascular Health upon psychosocial determinants of diet and physical activity behavior. , 1996, Preventive medicine.

[13]  S. Trost,et al.  A prospective study of the determinants of physical activity in rural fifth-grade children. , 1997, Preventive medicine.

[14]  A. Bandura Self-Efficacy: The Exercise of Control , 1997, Journal of Cognitive Psychotherapy.

[15]  G. Welk,et al.  Effects of physical activity interventions in youth. Review and synthesis. , 1998, American journal of preventive medicine.

[16]  H. Gotham,et al.  Determinants of exercise among children. II. A longitudinal analysis. , 1998, Preventive medicine.

[17]  P. Bentler,et al.  Cutoff criteria for fit indexes in covariance structure analysis : Conventional criteria versus new alternatives , 1999 .

[18]  S. Osganian,et al.  Three-year maintenance of improved diet and physical activity: the CATCH cohort. Child and Adolescent Trial for Cardiovascular Health. , 1999, Archives of pediatrics & adolescent medicine.

[19]  S G Trost,et al.  Factorial validity and invariance of questionnaires measuring social-cognitive determinants of physical activity among adolescent girls. , 2000, Preventive medicine.

[20]  Mark A Pereira,et al.  Changes in physical activity patterns in the United States, by sex and cross-sectional age. , 2000, Medicine and science in sports and exercise.

[21]  J. Prochaska,et al.  A review of correlates of physical activity of children and adolescents. , 2000, Medicine and science in sports and exercise.

[22]  A. Bandura Social cognitive theory: an agentic perspective. , 1999, Annual review of psychology.

[23]  R. Motl,et al.  Measuring enjoyment of physical activity in adolescent girls. , 2001, American journal of preventive medicine.

[24]  Craig K. Enders,et al.  The Relative Performance of Full Information Maximum Likelihood Estimation for Missing Data in Structural Equation Models , 2001 .

[25]  L. Mâsse,et al.  Emerging measurement and statistical methods in physical activity research. , 2002, American journal of preventive medicine.

[26]  A. Dunn,et al.  Psychosocial mediators of physical activity behavior among adults and children. , 2002, American journal of preventive medicine.

[27]  Edward McAuley,et al.  Predicting long-term maintenance of physical activity in older adults. , 2003, Preventive medicine.

[28]  Marsha Dowda,et al.  Validation of a 3-Day Physical Activity Recall Instrument in Female Youth , 2003 .

[29]  David M Murray,et al.  Evaluating the Lions-Quest "Skills for Adolescence" drug education program. Second-year behavior outcomes. , 2002, Addictive behaviors.

[30]  Marsha Dowda,et al.  Self-efficacy partially mediates the effect of a school-based physical-activity intervention among adolescent girls. , 2004, Preventive medicine.

[31]  Andrea L Dunn,et al.  Self-management strategies mediate self-efficacy and physical activity. , 2005, American journal of preventive medicine.