| Literature DB >> 27976699 |
Sari Aaltonen1,2, Antti Latvala1, Richard J Rose3, Urho M Kujala4, Jaakko Kaprio5, Karri Silventoinen2.
Abstract
Physical activity and academic performance are positively associated, but the direction of the association is poorly understood. This longitudinal study examined the direction and magnitude of the associations between leisure-time physical activity and academic performance throughout adolescence and young adulthood. The participants were Finnish twins (from 2,859 to 4,190 individuals/study wave) and their families. In a cross-lagged path model, higher academic performance at ages 12, 14 and 17 predicted higher leisure-time physical activity at subsequent time-points (standardized path coefficient at age 14: 0.07 (p < 0.001), age 17: 0.12 (p < 0.001) and age 24: 0.06 (p < 0.05)), whereas physical activity did not predict future academic performance. A cross-lagged model of co-twin differences suggested that academic performance and subsequent physical activity were not associated due to the environmental factors shared by co-twins. Our findings suggest that better academic performance in adolescence modestly predicts more frequent leisure-time physical activity in late adolescence and young adulthood.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2016 PMID: 27976699 PMCID: PMC5156951 DOI: 10.1038/srep39215
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Sci Rep ISSN: 2045-2322 Impact factor: 4.379
Descriptive statistics for the frequency of leisure-time physical activity and academic performance.
| Characteristics | Number of participants (percentage) | Characteristics | Number of participants (percentage) |
|---|---|---|---|
| Leisure-time physical activity at age 12 | N = 5,105 | School performance at age 14 | N = 2,923 |
| just about every day | 670 (13.1%) | grade point average better than 9 | 299 (10.2%) |
| two to three times a week | 2,524 (49.4%) | grade point average 8–9 | 1,273 (43.6%) |
| two to three times a month | 366 (7.2%) | grade point average 7–8 | 979 (33.5%) |
| two to three times in six months | 222 (4.4%) | grade point average 6–7 | 346 (11.8%) |
| not at all | 1,323 (25.9%) | under 6 | 26 (0.9%) |
| Leisure-time physical activity at age 14 | N = 4,715 | Student status at age 17 | N = 4,207 |
| just about every day | 949 (20.1%) | not studying currently | 182 (4.3%) |
| four to five times a week | 814 (17.3%) | in vocational school | 1,426 (33.9%) |
| two to three times a week | 1,418 (30.1%) | in upper secondary school | 2,599 (61.8%) |
| about once a week | 818 (17.4%) | Educational attainment at age 24 | N = 3,218 |
| one to two times a month | 364 (7.7%) | compulsory education | 128 (4.0%) |
| less than once a month | 207 (4.4%) | vocational secondary education | 917 (28.5%) |
| not at all | 145 (3.1%) | upper secondary education | 457 (14.2%) |
| Leisure-time physical activity at age 17 | N = 4,218 | tertiary education | 1,716 (53.3%) |
| just about every day | 800 (19.0%) | Sex | N = 5,398 |
| four to five times a week | 717 (17.0%) | male | 2,724 (50.5%) |
| two to three times a week | 1,266 (30.0%) | female | 2,674 (49.5%) |
| about once a week | 686 (16.3%) | Parental education | N = 4,927 |
| one to two times a month | 326 (7.7%) | compulsory education | 1,479 (30.0%) |
| less than once a month | 196 (4.7%) | vocational secondary education | 1,417 (28.8%) |
| not at all | 227 (5.4%) | academic secondary education | 1,329 (27.0%) |
| Leisure-time physical activity at age 24 | N = 3,377 | tertiary education | 702 (14.3%) |
| several times every day | 83 (2.5%) | Maternal leisure-time physical activity | N = 5,100 |
| just about every day | 390 (11.6%) | over 20 times a month | 875 (17.2%) |
| four to five times a week | 556 (16.5%) | 11–20 times a month | 1,046 (20.5%) |
| two to three times a week | 1,114 (33.0%) | 6–10 times a month | 1,310 (25.7%) |
| about once a week | 641 (19.0%) | 3–5 times a month | 825 (16.2%) |
| one to two times a month | 314 (9.3%) | 1–2 times a month | 550 (10.8%) |
| less than once a month | 208 (6.2%) | less than once a month | 494 (6.7%) |
| not at all | 71 (2.1%) | Paternal leisure-time physical activity | N = 4,583 |
| School performance at age 12 | N = 4,372 | over 20 times a month | 557 (12.2%) |
| grade point average better than 9 | 154 (3.5%) | 11–20 times a month | 768 (16.8%) |
| grade point average 8–9 | 2,067 (47.3%) | 6–10 times a month | 1,133 (24.7%) |
| grade point average 7–8 | 1,816 (41.5%) | 3–5 times a month | 834 (18.2%) |
| grade point average 6–7 | 323 (7.4%) | 1–2 times a month | 624 13.6%) |
| under 6 | 12 (0.3%) | less than once a month | 667 (14.6%) |
Polychoric correlations for leisure-time physical activity and academic performance from age 12 to age 24 years (four time points).
| School performance at age 12 | School performance at age 14 | Student status at age 17 | Educational attainment at age 24 | Leisure-time physical activity at age 12 | Leisure-time physical activity at age 14 | Leisure-time physical activity at age 17 | Leisure-time physical activity at age 24 | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| School performance at age 12 | 1 (N = 4,372) | |||||||
| School performance at age 14 | 0.70 | 1 (N = 2,923) | ||||||
| Student status at age 17 | 0.56 | 0.63 | 1 (N = 4,207) | |||||
| Educational attainment at age 24 | 0.55 | 0.67 | 0.84 | 1 (N = 3,218) | ||||
| Leisure-time physical activity at age 12 | 0.10 | 0.07 | 0.10 | 0.12 | 1 (N = 5,105) | |||
| Leisure-time physical activity at age 14 | 0.12 | 0.13 | 0.12 | 0.08 | 0.34 | 1 (N = 4,715) | ||
| Leisure-time physical activity at age 17 | 0.12 | 0.17 | 0.19 | 0.21 | 0.26 | 0.43 | 1 (N = 4,218) | |
| Leisure-time physical activity at age 24 | 0.08 | 0.10 | 0.14 | 0.15 | 0.18 | 0.29 | 0.43 | 1 (N = 3,377) |
The number of participants is given in brackets. **p < 0.01, ***p < 0.001.
Figure 1Cross-lagged path model for leisure-time physical activity and academic performance.
Only participants’ sex was included in the model as a covariate and only statistically significant associations are presented in the figure. d = residual variance, ***p < 0.001.
Figure 2Cross-lagged path model for leisure-time physical activity and academic performance.
The covariates of sex, parental education and parental leisure-time physical activity were included in the model. Only statistically significant associations are presented in the figure. d = residual variance, *p < 0.05, ***p < 0.001.
Figure 3Cross-lagged path model for leisure-time physical activity and academic performance.
a = auto-regressive path, c = cross-lagged path, d = residual variance.