332 results on '"Daly-Smith, A"'
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2. Study protocol for the ACTIVE SCHOOL study investigating two different strategies of physical activity to improve academic performance in Schoolchildren
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Jeppesen, Lise Sohl, Damsgaard, Linn, Stolpe, Malene Norup, Melcher, Jesper Ninn Sandfeld, Wienecke, Jacob, Nielsen, Glen, Smedegaard, Søren, Henriksen, Anne Husted, Hansen, Rasmus Ahmt, Hillman, Charles H, Tammelin, Tuija H, Resaland, Geir K, Daly-Smith, Andrew, and Bugge, Anna
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- 2024
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3. Unpacking Physically Active Learning in Education: A Movement Didaktikk Approach in Teaching?
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Mathias Brekke Mandelid, Geir Kåre Resaland, Øystein Lerum, Ståle Teslo, Anna Chalkley, Amika Singh, John Bartholomew, Andy Daly-Smith, Miranda Thurston, and Hege Eikeland Tjomsland
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This paper explores teachers' educational values and how they shape their judgements about physically active learning (PAL). Twenty one teachers from four primary schools in Norway participated in focus groups. By conceptualising PAL as a didaktikk approach, the findings indicated that teachers engaged with PAL in a way that reflected their professional identity and previous experiences with the curriculum. Teachers valued PAL as a way of getting to know pupils in educational situations that were different from those when sedentary. These insights illustrate how PAL, as a didaktikk approach to teaching, can shift teachers' perceptions of pupils' knowledge, learning, and identity formation in ways that reflect the wider purposes of education. The paper gives support to a classroom discourse that moves beyond the traditional, sedentary one-way transfer of knowledge towards a more collaborative effort for pupils' development.
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- 2024
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4. Development and evaluation of the Capability, Opportunity, and Motivation to deliver Physical Activity in School Scale (COM-PASS)
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A. Verdonschot, M. R. Beauchamp, T. A. Brusseau, M. J. M. Chinapaw, L. B. Christiansen, A. Daly-Smith, N. Eather, S. J. Fairclough, G. Faulkner, L. Foweather, A. García-Hermoso, A. S. Ha, N. Harris, T. Jaakkola, R. Jago, S. G. Kennedy, N. J. Lander, C. Lonsdale, Y. Manios, E. Mazzoli, E. Murtagh, N. Nathan, P. J. Naylor, M. Noetel, B. O’Keeffe, G. K. Resaland, N. D. Ridgers, K. Ridley, N. Riley, R. R. Rosenkranz, S. K. Rosenkranz, A. Sääkslahti, S. M. Sczygiol, T. Skovgaard, E. M. F. van Sluijs, J. J. Smith, M. Smith, G. Stratton, J. Vidal-Conti, C. A. Webster, E. S. Young, and D. R. Lubans
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Implementation ,Physical activity ,Scale ,Primary and secondary schools ,Nutritional diseases. Deficiency diseases ,RC620-627 ,Public aspects of medicine ,RA1-1270 - Abstract
Abstract Background Teachers are recognized as ‘key agents’ for the delivery of physical activity programs and policies in schools. The aim of our study was to develop and evaluate a tool to assess teachers’ capability, opportunity, and motivation to deliver school-based physical activity interventions. Methods The development and evaluation of the Capability, Opportunity, and Motivation to deliver Physical Activity in School Scale (COM-PASS) involved three phases. In Phase 1, we invited academic experts to participate in a Delphi study to rate, provide recommendations, and achieve consensus on questionnaire items that were based on the Capability, Opportunity, and Motivation Behavior (COM-B) model. Each item was ranked on the degree to which it matched the content of the COM-B model, using a 5-point scale ranging from ‘1 = Poor match’ to ‘5 = Excellent match’. In Phase 2, we interviewed primary and secondary school teachers using a ‘think-aloud’ approach to assess their understanding of the items. In Phase 3, teachers (n = 196) completed the COM-PASS to assess structural validity using confirmatory factor analysis (CFA). Results Thirty-eight academic experts from 14 countries completed three rounds of the Delphi study. In the first round, items had an average rating score of 4.04, in the second round 4.51, and in the third (final) round 4.78. The final tool included 14 items, which related to the six constructs of the COM-B model: physical capability, psychological capability, physical opportunity, social opportunity, reflective motivation, and automatic motivation. In Phase 2, ten teachers shared their interpretation of COM-PASS via a 20-min interview, which resulted in minor changes. In Phase 3, CFA of the 3-factor model (i.e., capability, opportunity, and motivation) revealed an adequate fit to the data (χ2 = 122.6, p
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- 2024
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5. Stakeholder perceptions of physical literacy: results from a national consultation in England
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Michael J. Duncan, Inimfon Essiet, Liezel Hurter, William M. Roberts, Kiara Lewis, Hannah Goss, Jade L. Morris, Daniel D. Bingham, Wesley O’Brien, Lisa M. Barnett, Cara Shearer, Andrew Daly-Smith, and Lawrence Foweather
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active lifestyles ,competence ,confidence ,motivation ,physical activity ,knowledge and understanding ,Sports ,GV557-1198.995 - Abstract
BackgroundThere is a lack of evidence of stakeholder perspective and understanding of physical literacy among relevant stakeholders from England. As part of research commissioned by Sport England to develop a physical literacy consensus statement for England, this study presents findings from the first national consultation with stakeholders in England.MethodsOne hundred and ninety-three individual stakeholders (50.3%) from education, community sport, national governing bodies of sport, physical activity and sport coaching sectors completed an online survey consisting of fixed item and open ended questions designed to examine their knowledge, understanding, perceptions and practices relating to physical literacy.ResultsResponses from stakeholders suggested there was confusion in use of the term physical literacy in practice and confusion regarding the definition of physical literacy. Most respondents suggested they were involved in physical literacy related activity and understood the term. However, when probed the physical literacy related activity they referred to was likely not actually physical literacy related. Understanding of the term physical literacy was inconsistent in general. Stakeholders considered the affective, social, physical and cognitive areas (domains) of learning to be most important for developing a positive relationship with movement, sport and physical activity for life.ConclusionsWhile stakeholders are aware of the term “physical literacy” and hold value of it within their practice, there remain key misconceptions relating to what physical literacy is, and debate as to whether any existing definitions truly capture the construct of physical literacy.
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- 2024
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6. Finding the sweet spot of physically active learning: A need for co-ownership by public health and education
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Chalkley, Anna E., Mandelid, Mathias Brekke, Thurston, Miranda, Tjomsland, Hege Eikeland, Morris, Jade Lynne, Kallio, Jouni, Archbold, Victoria S.J., Resaland, Geir Kåre, and Daly-Smith, Andrew
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- 2024
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7. Study protocol for the ACTIVE SCHOOL study investigating two different strategies of physical activity to improve academic performance in Schoolchildren
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Lise Sohl Jeppesen, Linn Damsgaard, Malene Norup Stolpe, Jesper Ninn Sandfeld Melcher, Jacob Wienecke, Glen Nielsen, Søren Smedegaard, Anne Husted Henriksen, Rasmus Ahmt Hansen, Charles H Hillman, Tuija H Tammelin, Geir K Resaland, Andrew Daly-Smith, and Anna Bugge
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Physical activity ,School-based interventions ,Implementation ,Embodied learning ,Academic performance ,Cognitive function ,Pediatrics ,RJ1-570 - Abstract
Abstract Background Previous research has suggested that school-based physical activity (PA) interventions may have a positive impact on academic performance. However, existing literature on school-based interventions encompasses various forms of PA, spanning from vigorous intensity PA outside the academic classes to light intensity PA and movement integrated into academic learning tasks, and results on academic performance are inconclusive. ACTIVE SCHOOL will implement two different PA interventions for one school year and assess the effects on the pupils’ academic performance, with math performance as the primary outcome. Methods/design The ACTIVE SCHOOL project consists of two phases: 1) Development phase and 2) Randomized Controlled Trial (RCT). In phase one, two interventions were developed in collaboration with school staff. The two interventions were tested in an 8-weeks feasibility study. In phase two, a RCT-study with three arms will be conducted in 9-10-year-old children for one school year. The RCT-study will be carried out in two intervention rounds during the school years 2023/2024 and 2024/2025. Schools will be randomized to one of two interventions or control;1) Run, Jump & Fun intervention (4 × 30 min/week of moderate-to-vigorous physical activity; 2) Move & Learn intervention (4 × 30 min/week focusing on embodied learning in math and Danish lessons); or 3) a control condition, consisting of normal teaching practices. Outcome measures include academic performance, PA level, cognitive functions, cardiorespiratory fitness, anthropometry, well-being and school motivation (collected before, during and after the intervention period). A process evaluation will be conducted to assess implementation. Discussion The ACTIVE SCHOOL study will expand knowledge regarding the impact of PA on academic performance. The study will have the potential to significantly contribute to future research, as well as the scientific and educational debate on the best way to implement PA to support education and learning. Trial registration The study was registered on the 25th of October 2022 in ClinicalTrials.gov, NCT05602948.
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- 2024
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8. The effects of acute exercise on long-term episodic memory: a systematic review and meta-analysis
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Ahmed S. Qazi, Daphne Schmid, Nicole Gridley, Kate Lambourne, Andrew J. Daly-Smith, and Phillip D. Tomporowski
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episodic memory ,memory encoding ,long-term memory ,acute exercise ,free-recall ,recognition ,Consciousness. Cognition ,BF309-499 - Abstract
Research findings reveal a relationship between acute bouts of exercise and procedural/declarative memory. Prior systematic reviews report small/moderate effects of acute exercise on episodic long-term declarative memory. A somewhat overlooked issue is the influence of exercise on specific types of episodic memory processing. The primary focus of this systematic review and meta-analysis was to evaluate the effects of acute bouts of exercise prior to, during, and following encoding on free-, cued-recall, and recognition episodic memory. PubMed, Scopus, and EBSCO databases were entered, and 42 experiments were subject to meta-analysis. Exercise prior to encoding improved memory (d = 0.23) and affected free-recall (d = 0.40) tests of memory more than cued-recall (d = 0.08) or recognition (d = −0.06) memory. Exercise following encoding improved memory (d = 0.33) and affected recognition (d = 0.62) memory more than free- (d = 0.19) or cued-recall (d = 0.14) memory. Exercise during encoding did not influence memory (d = −0.04). Moderator analyses revealed that exercise before encoding impacted memory differentially on the basis of age, exercise type, and test-timing. When exercise occurred after encoding, age and exercise type, but not timing of the test influenced memory performance. Exercise before and after encoding has selective effects on episodic memory. Additional experiments that evaluate how bouts of exercise influence memory encoding are warranted.Systematic review registrationPROSPERO, identifier CRD42020202784.
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- 2024
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9. Reframing physically active learning as movement-centred pedagogy: a European priority action framework
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Anna Chalkley, Mathias Brekke Mandelid, Amika Singh, Geir Kare Resaland, and Andrew Daly-Smith
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Physically active learning ,School-based physical activity ,Policy ,Co-development ,Teachers ,Movement-centred pedagogy ,Nutritional diseases. Deficiency diseases ,RC620-627 ,Public aspects of medicine ,RA1-1270 - Abstract
Abstract Background Physically active learning (PAL) has emerged as a promising way of eliciting health and education-based outcomes for pupils. Concurrently, research suggests large variability in how PAL is perceived, operationalized, and prioritized in practice across Europe. Therefore, this study aimed to co-develop a framework for action to support the adoption and implementation of PAL. Methods Adopting a design thinking approach, 40 international stakeholders representing 13 countries engaged in an idea generation workshop during a two-day PAL international conference. Participants included professionals from research (n = 20), practice (n = 4) and policy (n = 1) or a combination (n = 15). Their experience with PAL ranged from none to 19 years (with an average of 3.9 years). Participants were allocated into one of six heterogeneous and multidisciplinary groups and led through interactive tasks to identify: the landscape for PAL across Europe, barriers to the adoption and implementation of PAL, and key objectives for research, policy and practice to improve the adoption and implementation of PAL. All discussions were audio recorded and prioritized objectives were transcribed verbatim and analysed using inductive qualitative content analysis. Results Five interlinked and mutually reinforcing themes were identified: (1) Integration of the health and education paradigms (2) Coherent national policy and decision making (3) Building confident and competent teachers (4) Adopting a whole school approach for PAL (5) Strengthening the evidence base for PAL. Conclusions The priority action framework identifies five key areas for action to facilitate PAL adoption and implementation across Europe. Central to the success of border uptake of PAL is the integration of the health and education paradigms. To achieve this aim, reframing PAL as movement-centered pedagogy would provide a more holistic and inclusive perspective.
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- 2023
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10. Initial insights into the impact and implementation of Creating Active Schools in Bradford, UK
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Jade L. Morris, Anna E. Chalkley, Zoe E. Helme, Oliver Timms, Emma Young, Gabriella M. McLoughlin, John B. Bartholomew, and Andy Daly-Smith
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Creating Active Schools ,Implementation science ,Whole-school physical activity ,Physical activity promotion ,Children ,Implementation outcomes ,Nutritional diseases. Deficiency diseases ,RC620-627 ,Public aspects of medicine ,RA1-1270 - Abstract
Abstract Background Few whole-school physical activity programmes integrate implementation science frameworks within the design, delivery, and evaluation. As a result, knowledge of the key factors that support implementation at scale is lacking. The Creating Active Schools (CAS) programme was co-designed and is underpinned by the Capability, Opportunity, Motivation and Behaviour (COM-B) model and the Consolidated Framework for Implementation Research (CFIR). The study aims to understand the initial impact and implementation of CAS in Bradford over 9 months using McKay’s et al.’s (2019) implementation evaluation roadmap. Methods Focus groups and interviews were conducted with school staff (n = 30, schools = 25), CAS Champions (n = 9), and the CAS strategic lead (n = 1). Qualitative data were analysed both inductively and deductively. The deductive analysis involved coding data into a priori themes based on McKay et al’s implementation evaluation roadmap, using a codebook approach to thematic analysis. The inductive analysis included producing initial codes and reviewing themes before finalising. Results Identified themes aligned into three categories: (i) key ingredients for successful adoption and implementation of CAS, (ii) CAS implementation: challenges and solutions, and (iv) the perceived effectiveness of CAS at the school level. This included the willingness of schools to adopt and implement whole-school approaches when they are perceived as high quality and aligned with current school values. The programme implementation processes were seen as supportive; schools identified and valued the step-change approach to implementing CAS long-term. Formal and informal communities of practice provided “safe spaces” for cross-school support. Conversely, challenges persisted with gaining broader reach within schools, school staff’s self-competence and shifting school culture around physical activity. This resulted in varied uptake between and within schools. Conclusions This study provides novel insights into the implementation of CAS, with outcomes aligning to the adoption, reach, and sustainability. Successful implementation of CAS was underpinned by determinants including acceptability, intervention complexity, school culture and school stakeholders’ perceived self-efficacy. The combination of McKay’s evaluation roadmap and CFIR establishes a rigorous approach for evaluating activity promotion programmes underpinned by behavioural and implementation science. Resultantly this study offers originality and progression in understanding the implementation and effectiveness of whole-school approaches to physical activity.
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- 2023
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11. Exploring children and young people's experience of participating in citizen science-A qualitative evidence synthesis.
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Marie T Frazer, Amy Creaser, Michael J Tatterton, Andy Daly-Smith, and Jen Hall
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Medicine ,Science - Abstract
ObjectiveCitizen science with young people is becoming increasingly popular, and understanding their experience is valuable as it can improve research through improved participant motivation/ retention, alongside greater insight. The participants can benefit through opportunities to improve self-efficacy, learning, communication, and relationships. However, studies that explore young people's experience of participating in citizen science have not been synthesised.MethodsThis qualitative thematic synthesis aimed to combine the literature on young citizen scientists' experience of participating in citizen science research studies. Seven databases, Google Scholar and The Journal of Citizen Science Theory and Practice were searched from 2012 to January 2022 and updated in May 2023. The screening included identifying articles by scanning titles and abstracts and, finally, full texts and selecting the articles using inclusion and exclusion criteria. The study findings were synthesised using inductive thematic synthesis (Prospero registration CRD42022299973).ResultsOut of 3856 identified articles, 33 studies focusing on the participant experience were included in the synthesis. These papers were coded inductively. The resulting analytical structures were discussed and finalised. The researchers identified three main themes representing aspects of participant experience: relationships, power and personal growth, and three interwoven connecting themes: communication, self-efficacy and decision-making. An illustration of this would be communication bridging relationships and personal growth. As the citizen scientists' communication skills developed through personal growth, their relationships changed both with the project, with the researchers and with wider stakeholders outside the project such as school staff.ConclusionThese findings provide a comprehensive understanding of participant experience and how this can be used to inform future citizen science projects to facilitate a positive participant experience.
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- 2024
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12. Reframing physically active learning as movement-centred pedagogy: a European priority action framework
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Chalkley, Anna, Mandelid, Mathias Brekke, Singh, Amika, Resaland, Geir Kare, and Daly-Smith, Andrew
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- 2023
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13. Initial insights into the impact and implementation of Creating Active Schools in Bradford, UK
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Morris, Jade L., Chalkley, Anna E., Helme, Zoe E., Timms, Oliver, Young, Emma, McLoughlin, Gabriella M., Bartholomew, John B., and Daly-Smith, Andy
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- 2023
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14. Introduction: Walking the Talk: Implementing Physically Active Learning and Whole School Physical Activity
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Daly-Smith, Andy, Brekke Mandelid, Mathias, and Chalkley, Anna
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- 2024
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15. “I’m Doing Something Fun…”: Primary School Pupils’ Perceptions of Physically Active Lessons
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Quarmby, Thomas, Powell, Danielle, and Daly-Smith, Andy
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- 2024
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16. Opening the Black Box of Implementation: Developing the Creating Active Schools Logic Model
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Helme, Zoe E., Chalkley, Anna, Walker, Timothy J., Bartholomew, John B., Morris, Jade L., McLoughlin, Gabriella M., Bingham, Daniel D., and Daly-Smith, Andy
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- 2024
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17. Portuguese School Teachers’ Perceptions of Physically Active Learning
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Martins, Clarice, Mota, Jorge, Santos, José, Daly-Smith, Andrew, Chalkley, Anna E., Singh, Amika, Ottesen, Claus, Tammelin, Tuija, Archbold, Victoria S. J., and Silva, Maria Paula
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- 2024
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18. “Go beyond your own comfort zone and challenge yourself”: A comparison on the use of physically active learning in Norway, the Netherlands and the UK
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Chalkley, Anna E., Mandelid, Mathias B., Thurston, Miranda, Daly-Smith, Andrew, Singh, Amika, Huiberts, Irma, Archbold, Victoria S.J., Resaland, Geir K., and Tjomsland, Hege E.
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- 2022
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19. Fundamental Movement Skills and Their Assessment in Primary Schools from the Perspective of Teachers
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Eddy, Lucy, Hill, Liam J. B., Mon-Williams, Mark, Preston, Nick, Daly-Smith, Andy, Medd, Gareth, and Bingham, Daniel D.
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Evidence suggests that children struggle to acquire age-appropriate fundamental movement skills (FMS), despite their importance for facilitating physical activity. This has led to calls for routine school-based screening of children's FMS. However, there is limited research exploring schools' capacity to conduct such assessments. This study investigated what factors might affect the adoption and implementation of FMS assessments in primary schools. School staff (n = 853) completed an online questionnaire developed using the Capability, Opportunity, Motivation and Behavior (COM-B) model. A majority reported that knowledge of pupils' FMS ability would be beneficial (65.3%), and 71.8% would assess FMS if support was provided. Barriers included: Capability -- few possessed knowledge of FMS (15%); Opportunity -- teachers reported 30-60 minutes as acceptable for assessing a class, a substantially shorter period than current assessments require; Motivation -- 57.2% stated FMS assessments would increase workload stress. Solutions to these issues are discussed using the COM-B theoretical framework.
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- 2021
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20. Stakeholder perceptions of physical literacy: results from a national consultation in England.
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Duncan, Michael J., Essiet, Inimfon, Hurter, Liezel, Roberts, William M., Lewis, Kiara, Goss, Hannah, Morris, Jade L., Bingham, Daniel D., O’Brien, Wesley, Barnett, Lisa M., Shearer, Cara, Daly-Smith, Andrew, and Foweather, Lawrence
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PHYSICAL activity ,COACHES (Athletics) ,INTERNET surveys ,OPEN-ended questions ,LITERACY ,COACH-athlete relationships - Abstract
Background: There is a lack of evidence of stakeholder perspective and understanding of physical literacy among relevant stakeholders from England. As part of research commissioned by Sport England to develop a physical literacy consensus statement for England, this study presents findings from the first national consultation with stakeholders in England. Methods: One hundred and ninety-three individual stakeholders (50.3%) from education, community sport, national governing bodies of sport, physical activity and sport coaching sectors completed an online survey consisting of fixed item and open ended questions designed to examine their knowledge, understanding, perceptions and practices relating to physical literacy. Results: Responses from stakeholders suggested there was confusion in use of the term physical literacy in practice and confusion regarding the definition of physical literacy. Most respondents suggested they were involved in physical literacy related activity and understood the term. However, when probed the physical literacy related activity they referred to was likely not actually physical literacy related. Understanding of the term physical literacy was inconsistent in general. Stakeholders considered the affective, social, physical and cognitive areas (domains) of learning to be most important for developing a positive relationship with movement, sport and physical activity for life. Conclusions: While stakeholders are aware of the term “physical literacy” and hold value of it within their practice, there remain key misconceptions relating to what physical literacy is, and debate as to whether any existing definitions truly capture the construct of physical literacy. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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21. Evaluation of the Effectiveness of a Whole-System Intervention to Increase the Physical Activity of Children Aged 5 to 11 Years (Join Us: Move Play, JU:MP): Protocol for a Quasiexperimental Trial
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Daniel D Bingham, Andy Daly-Smith, Amanda Seims, Jennifer Hall, Lucy Eddy, Zoe Helme, and Sally E Barber
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Medicine ,Computer applications to medicine. Medical informatics ,R858-859.7 - Abstract
BackgroundDaily physical activity is vital for the health and development of children. However, many children are inactive. Previous attempts to achieve sustained increases in daily physical activity in children have been ineffective. Join Us: Move Play (JU:MP) is a whole-system, complex, community-based intervention aiming to increase the physical activity levels of children aged 7 to 11 years who live in areas of Bradford, England, which are multicultural and have high levels of deprivation. ObjectiveThe purpose of this quasiexperimental controlled trial is to assess whether the JU:MP program increases primary school children’s physical activity. MethodsThe study has a 2-arm, quasiexperimental, nonblinded, nonequivalent group design and will be conducted with primary school children aged 5 to 11 years at 3 timepoints, including baseline (before intervention), 24 months (during intervention), and 36 months (after intervention). Children attending primary schools within the intervention area will be invited to participate. Children attending similar schools within similar neighborhoods based on school and community census demographics (deprivation, free school meals, and ethnicity) outside of the JU:MP geographical area will be invited to participate in the control condition. At each timepoint, consenting participants will wear an accelerometer for 7 consecutive days (24 hours a day) to measure the primary outcome (average daily moderate-to-vigorous physical activity). Multivariable mixed effects linear regression will be applied to estimate differences in the primary outcome between the 2 arms at 24 months and 36 months on an intention-to-treat basis. The secondary outcome analysis will explore changes in socioemotional well-being (teacher reported), quality of life (parental/carer reported), and other contextual factors (parents/carer reported), as well as segments of the day activity, sleep, sedentary screen time, frequency of places to be active, parent practices (nondirective support and autonomy support), social cohesion, and neighborhood walking/exercise environment. ResultsRecruitment occurred from July 2021 to March 2022, and baseline data were collected from September 2021 to March 2022. As of March 2022 (end of baseline data collection), a total of 1454 children from 37 schools (17 intervention schools and 20 control schools) have been recruited. The first follow-up data collection will occur from September 2023 to March 2024, and the second and final follow-up data collection will occur from September 2024 to March 2025. Data analysis has not begun, and the final results will be published in December 2025. ConclusionsThis article describes the protocol for a quasiexperimental controlled trial examining a novel whole-system intervention. Trial RegistrationISRCTN ISRCTN14332797; https://www.isrctn.com/ISRCTN14332797 International Registered Report Identifier (IRRID)DERR1-10.2196/43619
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- 2023
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22. Child and family experiences of a whole-systems approach to physical activity in a multiethnic UK city: a citizen science evaluation protocol
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Andy Daly-Smith, Sally Barber, Michael J Tatterton, Jennifer Hall, Bridget Lockyer, Marie Frazer, Amanda Seims, and Daniel Bingham
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Medicine - Abstract
Introduction Whole-systems approaches are being adopted to tackle physical inactivity. The mechanisms contributing to changes resulting from whole-systems approaches are not fully understood. The voices of children and families that these approaches are designed for need to be heard to understand what is working, for whom, where and in what context. This paper describes the protocol for the children and families’ citizen science evaluation of the Join Us: Move, Play (JU:MP) programme, a whole-systems approach to increasing physical activity in children and young people aged 5–14 years in Bradford, UK.Methods and analysis The evaluation aims to understand the lived experiences of children and families’ relationship with physical activity and participation in the JU:MP programme. The study takes a collaborative and contributory citizen science approach, including focus groups, parent–child dyad interviews and participatory research. Feedback and data will guide changes within this study and the JU:MP programme. We also aim to examine participant experience of citizen science and the suitability of a citizen science approach to evaluate a whole-systems approach. Data will be analysed using framework approach alongside iterative analysis with and by citizen scientists in the collaborative citizen science study.Ethics and dissemination Ethical approval has been granted by the University of Bradford: study one (E891—focus groups as part of the control trial, E982—parent–child dyad interviews) and study two (E992). Results will be published in peer-reviewed journals and summaries will be provided to the participants, through schools or directly. The citizen scientists will provide input to create further dissemination opportunities.
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- 2023
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23. Interventions targeting children and young people's physical activity behavior at home: A systematic review.
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Amanda L Seims, Jennifer Hall, Daniel D Bingham, Amy Creaser, Anastasia Christoforou, Sally Barber, and Andy Daly-Smith
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Medicine ,Science - Abstract
Background and purposeIncreased time at home during the COVID-19 pandemic significantly decreased children's physical activity. This systematic review aimed to evaluate the effectiveness of children's home-based physical activity interventions, and identify 'active ingredients' underpinning these.MethodsDatabases searched-AMED, PsychINFO, CINAHL, Cochrane, EMBASE, PubMed/Medline, Scopus, SPORTDiscus and Web of Science, from inception until June 2022. Eligibility criteria-children aged 2-16 years, targeting home-based physical activity, a control group, and physical activity measured pre- and post- intervention. Studies were excluded if it was not possible to identify change in physical activity at home. The review was written following the Preferred Reporting Items for Systematic Reviews and Meta-Analyses (PRISMA) guidance. Study quality was evaluated using the quality assessment tool for quantitative studies. Study design, intervention characteristics, outcome data, behavior change theory, Behavior Change Techniques (BCTs) and process evaluation data were extracted and discussed using narrative syntheses.Results13 studies (including 1,182 participants) from 25,967 were included. Interventions primarily involved active video games, with the addition of coaching or telehealth support (n = 5). Three of the 13 studies significantly increased children's physical activity (1 = Moderate to vigorous physical activity, 2 = total volume, PConclusionCOVID-19 emphasized the importance of the home for physical activity. Whilst effectiveness of interventions was limited, building social support and self-efficacy are mechanisms that should be explored further. The review provides recommendations to improve the design and evaluation of future interventions.Trial registrationProspero registration number: CRD42020193110.
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- 2023
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24. How to develop young physical activity leaders? A Delphi study.
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Isobel P Steward, Emma S Young, Sufyan Abid Dogra, Elizabeth Stamp, Andy Daly-Smith, Kammy Siddique, Kelly Morgan, Jamie Crowther, Jennifer Hall, and JU:MP research & development team
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Medicine ,Science - Abstract
The International Society for Physical Activity and Health advocates for increased capability of the physical activity workforce as a key ingredient to a system-based approach. Young leader programmes are gaining traction globally as peers are a primary influence on young people and positive role models are important for increasing or maintaining physical activity. Yet, there is limited understanding of 'what works' for training young physical activity leaders. This study aims to develop a consensus on how to identify and support young people to become physical activity leaders. An iterative three-phased mixed methods Delphi consensus approach. A rapid review focused on the feasibility, acceptability and impact of existing young leader physical activity training (phase one); focus groups (n = 3) and interviews (n = 6) with 15 practitioners and young leaders to examine young physical activity leader training needs (phase two); and a three-round questionnaire process (phase three). Stakeholders (n = 43) from across the public, voluntary and education sectors, academics and young leaders completed all questionnaires. A consensus was reached for 75 statements related to: young leader traits prior to and following training, recruitment methods, training content, delivery format and context, relationships, incentives, and skill development. The Delphi process, combining insight from multi-sectoral stakeholders, identified a range of factors that underpin young leader training programmes. These factors should be applied to develop a curriculum and comprehensive training programme to provide young leaders with the required capability to be effective within their roles, and ultimately support an increase in physical activity amongst children and young people.
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- 2023
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25. Correction to: A whole system approach to increasing children’s physical activity in a multi-ethnic UK city: a process evaluation protocol
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Hall, Jennifer, Bingham, Daniel D., Seims, Amanda, Dogra, Sufyan Abid, Burkhardt, Jan, Nobles, James, McKenna, Jim, Bryant, Maria, Barber, Sally E., and Daly-Smith, Andy
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- 2022
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26. A whole system approach to increasing children’s physical activity in a multi-ethnic UK city: a process evaluation protocol
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Jennifer Hall, Daniel D. Bingham, Amanda Seims, Sufyan Abid Dogra, Jan Burkhardt, James Nobles, Jim McKenna, Maria Bryant, Sally E. Barber, and Andy Daly-Smith
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Physical activity ,Process evaluation ,Realist ,Systems thinking ,Children ,Behaviour change ,Public aspects of medicine ,RA1-1270 - Abstract
Abstract Background Engaging in regular physical activity requires continued complex decision-making in varied and dynamic individual, social and structural contexts. Widespread shortfalls of physical activity interventions suggests the complex underlying mechanisms of change are not yet fully understood. More insightful process evaluations are needed to design and implement more effective approaches. This paper describes the protocol for a process evaluation of the JU:MP programme, a whole systems approach to increasing physical activity in children and young people aged 5–14 years in North Bradford, UK. Methods This process evaluation, underpinned by realist philosophy, aims to understand the development and implementation of the JU:MP programme and the mechanisms by which JU:MP influences physical activity in children and young people. It also aims to explore behaviour change across wider policy, strategy and neighbourhood systems. A mixed method data collection approach will include semi-structured interview, observation, documentary analysis, surveys, and participatory evaluation methods including reflections and ripple effect mapping. Discussion This protocol offers an innovative approach on the use of process evaluation feeding into an iterative programme intended to generate evidence-based practice and deliver practice-based evidence. This paper advances knowledge regarding the development of process evaluations for evaluating systems interventions, and emphasises the importance of process evaluation.
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- 2021
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27. Behaviours that prompt primary school teachers to adopt and implement physically active learning: a meta synthesis of qualitative evidence
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Andrew Daly-Smith, Jade L. Morris, Emma Norris, Toni L. Williams, Victoria Archbold, Jouni Kallio, Tuija H. Tammelin, Amika Singh, Jorge Mota, Jesper von Seelen, Caterina Pesce, Jo Salmon, Heather McKay, John Bartholomew, and Geir Kare Resaland
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Systematic review ,meta synthesis ,Thematic synthesis ,Physically active learning ,School ,Physical activity ,Nutritional diseases. Deficiency diseases ,RC620-627 ,Public aspects of medicine ,RA1-1270 - Abstract
Abstract Background Physically active learning (PAL) - integration of movement within delivery of academic content - is a core component of many whole-of-school physical activity approaches. Yet, PAL intervention methods and strategies vary and frequently are not sustained beyond formal programmes. To improve PAL training, a more comprehensive understanding of the behavioural and psychological processes that influence teachers’ adoption and implementation of PAL is required. To address this, we conducted a meta-synthesis to synthesise key stakeholders’ knowledge of facilitators and barriers to teachers’ implementing PAL in schools to improve teacher-focussed PAL interventions in primary (elementary) schools. Methodology We conducted a meta-synthesis using a five-stage thematic synthesis approach to; develop a research purpose and aim, identify relevant articles, appraise studies for quality, develop descriptive themes and interpret and synthesise the literature. In the final stage, 14 domains from the Theoretical Domain Framework (TDF) were then aligned to the final analytical themes and subthemes. Results We identified seven themes and 31 sub-themes from 25 eligible papers. Four themes summarised teacher-level factors: PAL benefits, teachers’ beliefs about own capabilities, PAL teacher training, PAL delivery. One theme encompassed teacher and school-level factors: resources. Two themes reflected school and external factors that influence teachers’ PAL behaviour: whole-school approach, external factors. Ten (of 14) TDF domains aligned with main themes and sub-themes: Knowledge, Skills, Social/Professional Role and Identity, Beliefs about Capabilities, Beliefs about Consequences, Reinforcement, Goals, Environmental Context and Resources, Social influences and Emotion. Conclusions Our synthesis illustrates the inherent complexity required to change and sustain teachers’ PAL behaviours. Initially, teachers must receive the training, resources and support to develop the capability to implement and adapt PAL. The PAL training programme should progress as teachers’ build their experience and capability; content should be ‘refreshed’ and become more challenging over time. Subsequently, it is imperative to engage all levels of the school community for PAL to be fully integrated into a broader school system. Adequate resources, strong leadership and governance, an engaged activated community and political will are necessary to achieve this, and may not currently exist in most schools.
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- 2021
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28. Covid-19 lockdown: Ethnic differences in children’s self-reported physical activity and the importance of leaving the home environment; a longitudinal and cross-sectional study from the Born in Bradford birth cohort study
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Daniel D. Bingham, Andy Daly-Smith, Jennifer Hall, Amanda Seims, Sufyan A. Dogra, Stuart J. Fairclough, Mildred Ajebon, Brian Kelly, Bo Hou, Katy A. Shire, Kirsty L. Crossley, Mark Mon-Williams, John Wright, Kate Pickett, Rosemary McEachan, Josie Dickerson, Sally E. Barber, and the Bradford Institute for Health Research COVID-19 Scientific Advisory Group
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COVID-19 ,Lockdown ,Physical activity ,Children ,Ethnicity ,Moderate-to-vigorous ,Nutritional diseases. Deficiency diseases ,RC620-627 ,Public aspects of medicine ,RA1-1270 - Abstract
Abstract Background In England, the onset of COVID-19 and a rapidly increasing infection rate resulted in a lockdown (March-June 2020) which placed strict restrictions on movement of the public, including children. Using data collected from children living in a multi-ethnic city with high levels of deprivation, this study aimed to: (1) report children’s self-reported physical activity (PA) during the first COVID-19 UK lockdown and identify associated factors; (2) examine changes of children’s self-reported PA prior to and during the first UK lockdown. Methods This study is part of the Born in Bradford (BiB) COVID-19 Research Study. PA (amended Youth Activity Profile), sleep, sedentary behaviours, daily frequency/time/destination/activity when leaving the home, were self-reported by 949 children (9–13 years). A sub-sample (n = 634) also self-reported PA (Physical Activity Questionnaire for Children) pre-pandemic (2017-February 2020). Univariate analysis assessed differences in PA between sex and ethnicity groups; multivariable logistic regression identified factors associated with children’s PA. Differences in children's levels of being sufficiently active prior to and during the lockdown were examined using the McNemar test; and multivariable logistic regression was used to identify factors explaining change. Results During the pandemic, White British (WB) children were more sufficiently active (34.1%) compared to Pakistani Heritage children (PH) (22.8%) or ‘Other’ ethnicity children (O) (22.8%). WB children reported leaving the home more frequently and for longer periods than PH and O children. Modifiable variables related to being sufficiently active were frequency, duration, type of activity, and destination away from the home environment. There was a large reduction in children being sufficiently active during the first COVID-19 lockdown (28.9%) compared to pre-pandemic (69.4%). Conclusions Promoting safe extended periods of PA everyday outdoors is important for all children, in particular for children from ethnic minority groups. Children’s PA during the first COVID-19 UK lockdown has drastically reduced from before. Policy and decision makers, and practitioners should consider the findings in order to begin to understand the impact and consequences that COVID-19 has had upon children’s PA which is a key and vital behaviour for health and development.
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- 2021
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29. A country that works for all children and young people : An evidence-based plan for supporting physical activity and healthy nutrition with and through education settings
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Eddy, Lucy, Bryant, Eleanor, Daly-Smith, Andy, Bryant, Maria, Chalkley, Anna, Simpson, Amelia, Chawner, Samuel, Copley, Clare, Defeyter, Greta, Fildes, Alison, Foweather, Lawrence, Greatwood, Hannah, Kininmonth, Alice, King, Rosie, Kolehmainen, Niina, Mahdi, Sundus, Quarmby, Thomas, Round, Emily, Quirk, Helen, Staniforth, Cara, van den Bree, Marianne, Eddy, Lucy, Bryant, Eleanor, Daly-Smith, Andy, Bryant, Maria, Chalkley, Anna, Simpson, Amelia, Chawner, Samuel, Copley, Clare, Defeyter, Greta, Fildes, Alison, Foweather, Lawrence, Greatwood, Hannah, Kininmonth, Alice, King, Rosie, Kolehmainen, Niina, Mahdi, Sundus, Quarmby, Thomas, Round, Emily, Quirk, Helen, Staniforth, Cara, and van den Bree, Marianne
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- 2024
30. Effects of Maths on the Move on Children’s Perspectives, Physical Activity, and Math Performance
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Morris, Jade Lynne, Archbold, Victoria S. J., Bond, Suzanne J., and Daly-Smith, Andy
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- 2022
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31. 'You Get Some Very Archaic Ideas of What Teaching Is … ': Primary School Teachers' Perceptions of the Barriers to Physically Active Lessons
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Quarmby, Thomas, Daly-Smith, Andy, and Kime, Nicky
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Physically active lessons present a key paradigm shift in educational practice. However, little is known about the barriers to implementing physically active lessons. To address this, 31 practising primary teachers (23 = female) from 9 primary schools across West Yorkshire, England, were engaged in focus group interviews. Drawing on the socio-ecological model, findings revealed that barriers influencing the implementation of physically active lessons are multifaceted. Teacher's confidence and competence, concerns over classroom space, preparation time and resources, coupled with the wider school culture that is influenced by governors and parents, reinforce a didactic approach and act as barriers to physically active lessons.
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- 2019
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32. Exploring children and young people's experience of participating in citizen science–A qualitative evidence synthesis.
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Frazer, Marie T., Creaser, Amy, Tatterton, Michael J., Daly-Smith, Andy, and Hall, Jen
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YOUNG adults ,CITIZENS ,MATURATION (Psychology) ,CITIZEN science ,RESEARCH personnel - Abstract
Objective: Citizen science with young people is becoming increasingly popular, and understanding their experience is valuable as it can improve research through improved participant motivation/ retention, alongside greater insight. The participants can benefit through opportunities to improve self-efficacy, learning, communication, and relationships. However, studies that explore young people's experience of participating in citizen science have not been synthesised. Methods: This qualitative thematic synthesis aimed to combine the literature on young citizen scientists' experience of participating in citizen science research studies. Seven databases, Google Scholar and The Journal of Citizen Science Theory and Practice were searched from 2012 to January 2022 and updated in May 2023. The screening included identifying articles by scanning titles and abstracts and, finally, full texts and selecting the articles using inclusion and exclusion criteria. The study findings were synthesised using inductive thematic synthesis (Prospero registration CRD42022299973). Results: Out of 3856 identified articles, 33 studies focusing on the participant experience were included in the synthesis. These papers were coded inductively. The resulting analytical structures were discussed and finalised. The researchers identified three main themes representing aspects of participant experience: relationships, power and personal growth, and three interwoven connecting themes: communication, self-efficacy and decision-making. An illustration of this would be communication bridging relationships and personal growth. As the citizen scientists' communication skills developed through personal growth, their relationships changed both with the project, with the researchers and with wider stakeholders outside the project such as school staff. Conclusion: These findings provide a comprehensive understanding of participant experience and how this can be used to inform future citizen science projects to facilitate a positive participant experience. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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33. Implementing physically active learning: Future directions for research, policy, and practice
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Daly-Smith, Andy, Quarmby, Thomas, Archbold, Victoria S.J., Routen, Ash C., Morris, Jade L., Gammon, Catherine, Bartholomew, John B., Resaland, Geir Kåre, Llewellyn, Bryn, Allman, Richard, and Dorling, Henry
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- 2020
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34. Using a multi-stakeholder experience-based design process to co-develop the Creating Active Schools Framework
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Andy Daly-Smith, Thomas Quarmby, Victoria S. J. Archbold, Nicola Corrigan, Dan Wilson, Geir K. Resaland, John B. Bartholomew, Amika Singh, Hege E. Tjomsland, Lauren B. Sherar, Anna Chalkley, Ash C. Routen, Darren Shickle, Daniel D. Bingham, Sally E. Barber, Esther van Sluijs, Stuart J. Fairclough, and Jim McKenna
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Whole-school ,Children ,Whole-system ,Double diamond ,Co-development ,Physical activity ,Nutritional diseases. Deficiency diseases ,RC620-627 ,Public aspects of medicine ,RA1-1270 - Abstract
Abstract Background UK and global policies recommend whole-school approaches to improve childrens’ inadequate physical activity (PA) levels. Yet, recent meta-analyses establish current interventions as ineffective due to suboptimal implementation rates and poor sustainability. To create effective interventions, which recognise schools as complex adaptive sub-systems, multi-stakeholder input is necessary. Further, to ensure ‘systems’ change, a framework is required that identifies all components of a whole-school PA approach. The study’s aim was to co-develop a whole-school PA framework using the double diamond design approach (DDDA). Methodology Fifty stakeholders engaged in a six-phase DDDA workshop undertaking tasks within same stakeholder (n = 9; UK researchers, public health specialists, active schools coordinators, headteachers, teachers, active partner schools specialists, national organisations, Sport England local delivery pilot representatives and international researchers) and mixed (n = 6) stakeholder groupings. Six draft frameworks were created before stakeholders voted for one ‘initial’ framework. Next, stakeholders reviewed the ‘initial’ framework, proposing modifications. Following the workshop, stakeholders voted on eight modifications using an online questionnaire. Results Following voting, the Creating Active Schools Framework (CAS) was designed. At the centre, ethos and practice drive school policy and vision, creating the physical and social environments in which five key stakeholder groups operate to deliver PA through seven opportunities both within and beyond school. At the top of the model, initial and in-service teacher training foster teachers’ capability, opportunity and motivation (COM-B) to deliver whole-school PA. National policy and organisations drive top-down initiatives that support or hinder whole-school PA. Summary To the authors’ knowledge, this is the first time practitioners, policymakers and researchers have co-designed a whole-school PA framework from initial conception. The novelty of CAS resides in identifying the multitude of interconnecting components of a whole-school adaptive sub-system; exposing the complexity required to create systems change. The framework can be used to shape future policy, research and practice to embed sustainable PA interventions within schools. To enact such change, CAS presents a potential paradigm shift, providing a map and method to guide future co-production by multiple experts of PA initiatives ‘with’ schools, while abandoning outdated traditional approaches of implementing interventions ‘on’ schools.
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- 2020
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35. Introduction
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Bailey, Richard, primary, Agans, Jennifer P., additional, Côté, Jean, additional, Daly-Smith, Andy, additional, and Tomporowski, Phillip D., additional
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- 2021
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36. Teachers' Perspectives on the Acceptability and Feasibility of Wearable Technology to Inform School-Based Physical Activity Practices
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Georgina K. Wort, Gareth Wiltshire, Oliver Peacock, Simon Sebire, Andy Daly-Smith, and Dylan Thompson
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physical activity ,wearable technologies ,data ,teachers' views ,primary school ,school-based practice ,Sports ,GV557-1198.995 - Abstract
Background: Many children are not engaging in sufficient physical activity and there are substantial between-children physical activity inequalities. In addition to their primary role as educators, teachers are often regarded as being well-placed to make vital contributions to inclusive visions of physical activity promotion. With the dramatic increase in popularity of wearable technologies for physical activity promotion in recent years, there is a need to better understand teachers' perspectives about using such devices, and the data they produce, to support physical activity promotion in schools.Method: Semi-structured interviews were conducted with 26 UK-based primary school teachers, exploring their responses to children's physical activity data and their views about using wearable technologies during the school day. Interview discussions were facilitated by an elicitation technique whereby participants were presented with graphs illustrating children's in-school physical activity obtained from secondary wearable technology data. Interview transcripts were thematically analyzed.Results: Most teachers spoke positively about the use of wearable technologies specifically designed for school use, highlighting potential benefits and considerations. Many teachers were able to understand and critically interpret data showing unequal physical activity patterns both within-and between-schools. Being presented with the data prompted teachers to provide explanations about observable patterns, emotional reactions—particularly about inequalities—and express motivations to change the current situations in schools.Conclusion: These findings suggest that primary school teachers in the UK are open to integrating wearable technology for measuring children's physical activity into their practices and can interpret the data produced by such devices. Visual representations of physical activity elicited strong responses and thus could be used when working with teachers as an effective trigger to inform school practices and policies seeking to address in-school physical inactivity and inequalities.
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- 2021
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37. Behaviours that prompt primary school teachers to adopt and implement physically active learning: a meta synthesis of qualitative evidence
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Daly-Smith, Andrew, Morris, Jade L., Norris, Emma, Williams, Toni L., Archbold, Victoria, Kallio, Jouni, Tammelin, Tuija H., Singh, Amika, Mota, Jorge, von Seelen, Jesper, Pesce, Caterina, Salmon, Jo, McKay, Heather, Bartholomew, John, and Resaland, Geir Kare
- Published
- 2021
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38. A whole system approach to increasing children’s physical activity in a multi-ethnic UK city: a process evaluation protocol
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Hall, Jennifer, Bingham, Daniel D., Seims, Amanda, Dogra, Sufyan Abid, Burkhardt, Jan, Nobles, James, McKenna, Jim, Bryant, Maria, Barber, Sally E., and Daly-Smith, Andy
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- 2021
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39. The Daily Mile™ initiative: Exploring physical activity and the acute effects on executive function and academic performance in primary school children
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Morris, Jade L., Daly-Smith, Andy, Archbold, Victoria SJ., Wilkins, Emma L., and McKenna, Jim
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- 2019
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40. Correction to: A whole system approach to increasing children’s physical activity in a multi-ethnic UK city: a process evaluation protocol
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Jennifer Hall, Daniel D. Bingham, Amanda Seims, Sufyan Abid Dogra, Jan Burkhardt, James Nobles, Jim McKenna, Maria Bryant, Sally E. Barber, and Andy Daly-Smith
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Public aspects of medicine ,RA1-1270 - Published
- 2022
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41. The effects of acute exercise on long-term episodic memory: a systematic review and meta-analysis.
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Qazi, Ahmed S., Schmid, Daphne, Gridley, Nicole, Lambourne, Kate, Daly-Smith, Andrew J., and Tomporowski, Phillip D.
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LONG-term memory ,EPISODIC memory ,RECOGNITION (Psychology) ,EXPLICIT memory ,RECOLLECTION (Psychology) ,MEMORY testing - Abstract
Research findings reveal a relationship between acute bouts of exercise and procedural/declarative memory. Prior systematic reviews report small/moderate effects of acute exercise on episodic long-term declarative memory. A somewhat overlooked issue is the influence of exercise on specific types of episodic memory processing. The primary focus of this systematic review and meta-analysis was to evaluate the effects of acute bouts of exercise prior to, during, and following encoding on free-, cued-recall, and recognition episodic memory. PubMed, Scopus, and EBSCO databases were entered, and 42 experiments were subject tometa-analysis. Exercise prior to encoding improved memory (d = 0.23) and affected free-recall (d = 0.40) tests of memory more than cued-recall (d = 0.08) or recognition (d = -0.06) memory. Exercise following encoding improved memory (d = 0.33) and affected recognition (d = 0.62) memory more than free- (d = 0.19) or cued-recall (d = 0.14) memory. Exercise during encoding did not influence memory (d = -0.04). Moderator analyses revealed that exercise before encoding impacted memory differentially on the basis of age, exercise type, and test-timing. When exercise occurred after encoding, age and exercise type, but not timing of the test influenced memory performance. Exercise before and after encoding has selective effects on episodicmemory. Additional experiments that evaluate how bouts of exercise influence memory encoding are warranted. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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42. Unpacking physically active learning in education: a movement didaktikk approach in teaching?
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Mandelid, Mathias Brekke, Resaland, Geir Kåre, Lerum, Øystein, Teslo, Ståle, Chalkley, Anna, Singh, Amika, Bartholomew, John, Daly-Smith, Andy, Thurston, Miranda, and Tjomsland, Hege Eikeland
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ACTIVE learning ,TEACHING ,PHYSICAL activity ,CLASSROOMS ,TEACHERS - Abstract
This paper explores teachers' educational values and how they shape their judgements about physically active learning (PAL). Twenty one teachers from four primary schools in Norway participated in focus groups. By conceptualising PAL as a didaktikk approach, the findings indicated that teachers engaged with PAL in a way that reflected their professional identity and previous experiences with the curriculum. Teachers valued PAL as a way of getting to know pupils in educational situations that were different from those when sedentary. These insights illustrate how PAL, as a didaktikk approach to teaching, can shift teachers' perceptions of pupils' knowledge, learning, and identity formation in ways that reflect the wider purposes of education. The paper gives support to a classroom discourse that moves beyond the traditional, sedentary one-way transfer of knowledge towards a more collaborative effort for pupils' development. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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43. Commentary on a recent article on the effects of the ‘Daily Mile’ on physical activity, fitness and body composition: addressing key limitations
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Andy Daly-Smith, Jade L. Morris, Matthew Hobbs, and Jim McKenna
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The Daily Mile™ ,Physical activity ,Primary schools ,Children ,Physically active learning ,Classroom movement breaks ,Medicine - Abstract
Abstract A recent pilot study by Chesham et al. in BMC Medicine established some initial effects of the Daily Mile™ using a quasi-experimental repeated measures design, with valid and reliable outcome assessments for moderate-to-vigorous physical activity, fitness and body composition. Their contribution is important and welcome, yet, alone, it is insufficient to justify the recent UK-wide adoption of the Daily Mile within the Childhood Obesity Plan. The study concluded that the Daily Mile had positive effects on moderate-to-vigorous physical activity, fitness and body composition, suggesting that intervention effectiveness was confirmed. However, only some of the significant limitations of the work were addressed. Herein, we identify and discuss six key limitations, which, combined, suggest a more tentative conclusion. In summary, evidence supporting the effectiveness of the Daily Mile is in its infancy and requires refinement to fully justify its widespread adoption. Further, we need to be cautious considering that the full range of its impacts, both positive and negative, remain to be fully established.
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- 2019
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44. S1-3 Creating Active Schools
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Daly-Smith, Andy, primary
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- 2023
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45. Interventions targeting children and young people’s physical activity behavior at home: A systematic review
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Seims, Amanda L., primary, Hall, Jennifer, additional, Bingham, Daniel D., additional, Creaser, Amy, additional, Christoforou, Anastasia, additional, Barber, Sally, additional, and Daly-Smith, Andy, additional
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
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46. Using a multi-stakeholder experience-based design process to co-develop the Creating Active Schools Framework
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Daly-Smith, Andy, Quarmby, Thomas, Archbold, Victoria S. J., Corrigan, Nicola, Wilson, Dan, Resaland, Geir K., Bartholomew, John B., Singh, Amika, Tjomsland, Hege E., Sherar, Lauren B., Chalkley, Anna, Routen, Ash C., Shickle, Darren, Bingham, Daniel D., Barber, Sally E., van Sluijs, Esther, Fairclough, Stuart J., and McKenna, Jim
- Published
- 2020
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47. A Case Study Objectively Assessing Female Physical Activity Levels within the National Curriculum for Physical Education
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Hobbs, Matthew, Daly-Smith, Andrew, Morley, David, and McKenna, James
- Abstract
The purpose of this study was to assess the impact of the National Curriculum for Physical Education (NCPE) lesson themes and contexts on the profile of moderate-to-vigorous physical activity (MVPA). Fifteen, Year 9 Physical Education (PE) lessons were assessed within the lesson themes of Outwitting Opponents (OO) (delivered through field hockey and netball) and Accurate Replication (AR) (delivered through gymnastics) using the System for Observing the Teaching of Games in Physical Education. Accelerometry identified MVPA within PE lessons (Actigraph-GTM1, 10-second epoch, MVPA =2296 counts/min). Among 112 females MVPA averaged 20.8% of available learning time. Significantly more MVPA was facilitated during OO than AR (22.7 vs. 15.9%, p < 0.001, d = 0.88). Within both lesson themes, warm-up was the most active lesson context while pre- and post-lesson general management were the least active. Contrary to expectations, neither small-sided nor modified games, versus full-sided games, increased MVPA within OO. During AR technical and applied-skill practice resulted in low MVPA. Objective evidence has justified concerns about female adolescent MVPA within PE. At current levels an additional 17.5 minutes of MVPA per 60 minute PE lesson would be needed to meet the minimum 50% guideline.
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- 2015
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48. Introducing Physically Active Lessons in a UK Secondary School: A Pilot Cluster-Randomised Controlled Trial: 1975 Board #131 May 30 3:30 PM - 5:00 PM
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Gammon, Catherine, Morton, Katie, Atkin, Andrew J., Corder, Kirsten, Daly-Smith, Andy, Quarmby, Thomas, Suhrcke, Marc, Turner, David, and van Sluijs, Esther
- Published
- 2019
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49. Commentary on a recent article on the effects of the ‘Daily Mile’ on physical activity, fitness and body composition: addressing key limitations
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Daly-Smith, Andy, Morris, Jade L., Hobbs, Matthew, and McKenna, Jim
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- 2019
- Full Text
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50. Initial insights into the impact and implementation of Creating Active Schools in Bradford, UK
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Morris, Jade Lynne, primary, Chalkley, Anna E, additional, Helme, Zoe E, additional, Timms, Oliver, additional, Young, Emma, additional, McLoughlin, Gabriella M, additional, Bartholomew, John, additional, and Daly-Smith, Andy, additional
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
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