4.6 Article

A Causal Pathway of Physical Activity to Motor Competence in Childhood:Evidence from a School-based Intervention

Journal

JOURNAL OF SPORTS SCIENCES
Volume 39, Issue 4, Pages 460-468

Publisher

TAYLOR & FRANCIS LTD
DOI: 10.1080/02640414.2020.1826666

Keywords

Motor skills; physical activity; perceived competence; children

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This study indicated that changes in PA may lead to changes in competence beliefs towards PE, thereby influencing motor competence in children. Gender did not significantly impact this relationship.
This study aimed to examine whether changes in physical activity (PA) after an 8-week pedometer-based intervention would result in changes on motor competence through competence beliefs towards physical education (PE). The study also evaluated whether the hypothesized causal pathway differed by gender. Participants were 259 children (Mean(age) = 10.88,SD =.78), randomly allocated to three intervention groups. Children's PA, competence beliefs towards PE, and motor competence were measured at pre- and post-tests. Significant relationships between PA and competence beliefs towards PE were found at pre- and post-tests. The magnitude of the relationship between competence beliefs towards PE and motor competence was larger at post-test than at pre-test (.33 vs.20). The structural invariance test suggested that the differences between boys and girls for the hypothesized models were insignificant (CMIN = 15.97, df = 12;p=.193). In general, the results suggest that changes on PA may cause changes in competence beliefs towards PE, which could result in changes on motor competence in middle to later childhood, regardless of gender. These data offer the possibility of using competence beliefs towards PE as a mediator in PA interventions designed to increase motor competence in childhood.

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