Michigan State research finds more vigorous exercise equals better academic performance Contact: Jim Pivarnik, MSU Departments of Kinesiology, Epidemiology, and Physical Medicine and Rehabilitation: (517) 353-3520, jimpiv@msu.edu; Dawn Podulka Coe, Grand Valley State University Department of Movement Science: (616) 331-3023, coed@gvsu.edu; or Tom Oswald, MSU University Relations: (517) 432-0920, oswald@msu.edu
Aug. 3, 2006
EAST LANSING, Mich. – Middle school students who perform more
vigorous physical activity than their more sedentary counterparts tend
to do better in school, according to a study published today by
researchers from Michigan State University and Grand Valley State
University.
The research is published in the August issue of Medicine & Science in Sports & Exercise, the official journal of the American College of Sports Medicine.
For one academic year, the study tracked more than 200 sixth
graders. For one semester half of the students took the general
physical education class offered by the school, while the other half
took part in a non-physical education course. Halfway through the
school year they switched.
The researchers found that students taking the physical education course did no better or worse in their academic classes.
However, they also found that students who took part in more
vigorous physical activities – such as organized sports like soccer or
football, or non-organized after-school activities such as
skateboarding – did approximately 10 percent better in core classes
such as math, science, English and social studies.
“We have precious few studies that link activity or fitness to
measurable academic outcomes,” said Jim Pivarnik, an MSU professor with
appointments in kinesiology, epidemiology, and physical medicine and
rehabilitation who is one of the study’s co-authors. “Considering all
the factors that go into what determines students’ grades in school, a
10 percent increase by the most physically active kids is huge.”
It’s long been speculated that fitness and improved academic
performance go hand in hand, said Dawn Podulka Coe, the study’s lead
author who was a Michigan State University doctoral student when she
led the project.
“Physical education and activity during the school day reduce
boredom and help keep kids’ attention in the classroom,” said Coe, who
is now an assistant professor in the Department of Movement Science at
Grand Valley State University. “We were expecting to find that students
enrolled in PE would have better grades because of the opportunity to
be active during the school day. But enrollment in PE alone did not
influence grades.
“The students who performed better academically in this study were
the most active, meaning those who participated in a sport or other
vigorous activity at least three times a week.”
It’s important to note, said Pivarnik, that the grades of the
students taking the physical education course did not change for either
the good or the bad. This is noteworthy because in this day of “No
Child Left Behind” and standardized testing, many public school boards
think physical education is a luxury they just can’t afford.
“If kids have PE every day, is it going to hurt grades? The answer
is no,” Pivarnik said. “But, maybe if we pump up the volume a little
bit, if they are a little more vigorously active, it might make a
difference.”
The difference between vigorous activity and moderate activity is
heart rate. Moderate activities, such as walking or raking leaves,
don’t get the heart rate up or make the person breathe harder.
Vigorous activities, such as running or swimming for exercise, increase heart rate, causing the exerciser to breathe harder.
The fitness levels aspired to in this project are derived from
federal government guidelines for health-related behaviors known as
“Healthy People 2010.” Developed from these guidelines, which range
from limiting alcohol use to wearing seatbelts to avoiding violent
behavior, was a list of leading health indicators that can be targeted
for change.
“No. 1 on the list: physical activity; No. 2: obesity,” Pivarnik
said. “These are highest on the list because they are modifiable and
they are related to so many diseases.”
Other participants in this study were Mathew Reeves, an associate
professor in MSU’s Department of Epidemiology, and former MSU
kinesiology faculty members Christopher Womack and Robert Malina.
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