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Cross-sectional and longitudinal associations of screen time and physical activity with school performance at different types of secondary school

机译:屏幕时间和体育锻炼与不同类型中学的学校成绩的横断面和纵向联系

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Previous studies have already reported associations of media consumption and/or physical activity with school achievement. However, longitudinal studies investigating independent effects of physical activity and media consumption on school performance are sparse. The present study fills this research gap and, furthermore, assesses relationships of the type of secondary school with media consumption and physical activity. The consumption of screen-based media (TV/video, game console, PC/internet, and mobile phone) and leisure physical activity (organized and non-organized) of 10 – to 17-year old adolescents participating in the LIFE Child study in Germany were related to their school grades in two major school subjects (Mathematics and German) and in Physical Education. In addition to a cross-sectional analysis at baseline (N = 850), a longitudinal analysis (N = 512) investigated the independent effects of these activities on the school grades achieved 12 months later. All associations were adjusted for age, gender, socio-economic status, year of data assessment, body-mass-index, and school grades at baseline. A further analysis investigated differences in the consumption of screen-based media and physical activity as a function of the type of secondary school (highest vs. lower secondary school). Adolescents of lower secondary schools reported a significantly higher consumption of TV/video and game consoles than adolescents attending the highest secondary school. Independently of the type of school, a better school performance in Mathematics was predicted by a lower consumption of computers/internet, and a better performance in Physical Education was predicted by a lower consumption of TV/video and a higher frequency of non-organized physical activity. However, the association between non-organized physical activity and subsequent grades in Physical Education was significant in girls only. The present results suggest that media consumption has a negative effect on school achievement, whereas physical activity has a positive effect, which, however, is restricted to the subject Physical Education. Future studies might explore the relationship between media consumption and school career, for example, the choice or change of the secondary school type, in more detail. LIFE Child study: ClinicalTrials.gov, clinical trial number NCT02550236
机译:先前的研究已经报道了媒体消费和/或体育锻炼与学业成绩的关联。但是,有关体育活动和媒体消费对学校成绩的独立影响的纵向研究很少。本研究填补了这一研究空白,并且进一步评估了中学类型与媒体消费和体育锻炼之间的关系。参加“ LIFE儿童研究”的10至17岁青少年基于屏幕的媒体(电视/视频,游戏机,PC /互联网和手机)和休闲体育活动(有组织和无组织)的消费德国在两个主要学校科目(数学和德语)和体育教育方面都与他们的学校成绩有关。除了在基线时进行横断面分析(N = 850)之外,纵向分析(N = 512)还研究了这些活动对12个月后达到的学校成绩的独立影响。对所有协会进行了年龄,性别,社会经济地位,数据评估年,身体质量指数和基线学校成绩的调整。进一步的分析调查了屏幕媒体的消耗和体育锻炼随中学类型(最高中学与初中)的函数的差异。与上高中的青少年相比,初中的青少年报告的电视/视频和游戏机消费量明显更高。与学校类型无关,较低的计算机/互联网消耗可预测数学的学校成绩会更好,而较低的电视/视频消耗和较高频率的无组织体育活动可预测体育教育的成绩会更好活动。但是,非组织的体育活动与体育课后级之间的关联仅对女孩有意义。目前的结果表明,媒体消费对学校成绩有负面影响,而体育活动则有正面影响,但是仅限于体育学科。未来的研究可能会更详细地探讨媒体消费与学校职业之间的关系,例如,中学类型的选择或改变。 LIFE儿童研究:ClinicalTrials.gov,临床试验编号NCT02550236

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