Kyhälä , A-L , Reunamo , J & Valtonen , J O 2021 , ' Children’s time use and moderate-to-vigorous physical activity in early childhood education and care in Finland ' , South African Journal of Childhood Education , vol. 11 , no. 1 . https://doi.org/10.4102/sajce.v11i1.933
Title: | Children’s time use and moderate-to-vigorous physical activity in early childhood education and care in Finland |
Alternative title: | Lasten ajankäyttö ja vähintään kohtuukuormitteinen fyysinen aktiivisuus varhaiskasvatuksessa |
Author: | Kyhälä, Anna-Liisa; Reunamo, Jyrki; Valtonen, Juha O |
Contributor organization: | Department of Education Teacher Education |
Date: | 2021 |
Language: | eng |
Number of pages: | 22 |
Belongs to series: | South African Journal of Childhood Education |
ISSN: | 2223-7674 |
DOI: | https://doi.org/10.4102/sajce.v11i1.933 |
URI: | http://hdl.handle.net/10138/340792 |
Abstract: | Background: The role of early childhood education and care (ECEC) is crucial in the implementation of the physical activity recommendations during long ECEC days. Young children should engage in 180 minutes of physical activity spread throughout the day, including 60 minutes of moderate-to-vigorous physical activity (MVPA). To attain the goal more information is needed on children’s time use and PA in children’s activities. Aim: The purposes of this quantitative observational study were twofold: (a) to examine children’s time use and (b) to describe which children’s activities best generate physical activity, specifically MVPA, in ECEC. Setting: Altogether, 2,879 Finnish children, aged 1- to 6-years, participated in this study. Methods: The data of 57,881 observations were analysed using cross-tabulation and a z-test. Results: Daily routines (e.g. eating, dressing, napping and transition), task or seatwork and material play accounted for almost 70% of children’s sedentary behaviour and less than 10% of MVPA. The best MVPA generators were physical activities (that generated 57.4% of all MVPA in boys vs. 62.8% in girls, respectively), rule play (11% in boys vs. 6.7% in girls), and role play (10.1% in boys vs. 9.9% in girls), as well as action not allowed (3.3% in boys vs 1.2% in girls). Conclusions: Educators should integrate physical activities, rule play and role play more in ECEC day to support the realization of the recommendations. |
Subject: | 516 Educational sciences |
Peer reviewed: | Yes |
Rights: | cc_by |
Usage restriction: | openAccess |
Self-archived version: | acceptedVersion |
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