441 A Missing Link? Motor Competence and Children’s Health Trajectories

Friday, April 4, 2014: 11:30 AM-12:30 PM
Convention Center: 127
Research: Physical Activity & Health Promotion
Intended Audience: Early Childhood, Elementary
Presider: David Stodden, University of South Carolina, Columbia, SC
Recent evidence indicates the strength of associations among motor skill competence and physical activity, health-related fitness, body composition status and perceived motor competence increase across childhood into adolescence. This evidence provides a compelling argument for a consistent and focused integration of motor skill development within a comprehensive school physical activity plan. Additional experimental research is needed to address longitudinal trajectories and the integrative associations among these aspects of health across childhood, adolescence and into adulthood.
Relationship Between Motor Competence and Physical Activity: A Systematic Review
Samuel W. Logan1, Leah E. Robinson2, Nancy Getchell1, E. Kipling Webster2, Ling-Yin Liang1 and Daphne Golden1, (1)University of Delaware, Newark, DE, (2)Auburn University, Auburn, AL
Perceived and Actual Motor Competence: Cross-Sectional Associations Across Childhood
Ali S. Brian1, Jacqueline D. Goodway1, David Stodden2 and Emi Tsuda1, (1)The Ohio State University, Columbus, OH, (2)University of South Carolina, Columbia, SC
Relationships Between Motor Competence and Physical Activity Change Across Childhood
Jacqueline D. Goodway1, David Stodden2, Richard Lomax3, Ali S. Brian1, Seung Ho Chang1 and Ruri Famelia1, (1)The Ohio State University, Columbus, OH, (2)University of South Carolina, Columbia, SC, (3)Ohio State University, Columbus, OH
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