| Literature DB >> 35634024 |
Richard Bailey1, Claude Scheuer2.
Abstract
Measures devised to contain the COVID-19, including isolation, social distancing, and quarantine, have profoundly affected people's lives around the world. One of the consequences of these actions has been a general reduction in the habitual daily physical activity among children and young people for whom schools represent the major setting for the promotion of sports, physically active play, movement skills learning, and other activity supportive of healthy, active lifestyles. Whilst acknowledging the seriousness of these changes, and their concomitant health risks, we suggest that COVID-19 offers an opportunity to think again about important features of school-based activity promotion in light of new lessons learnt during lockdown, emerging technologies, and adapted pedagogies. In these specific cases, COVID-19 could be judged a "fortuitous disruptor" to the extent that it has opened a window of opportunity to schools and teachers to reflect on their assumptions about the scope, content, and delivery of their curricula, and on the new professional knowledge that has emerged. Active Homework, or physical activity-related tasks assigned to students by teachers that are meant to be carried out before, after and away from school, that students can do on their own or with family members, is not a new idea, but the enforced changes to school provision have made it considerably more common since the pandemic. Perhaps Active Homework is a concept worth retaining as schools start to return to "normal"? We offer a typology of Active Homework, and examine opportunities to expand, extend, and enhance physical education and physical activity opportunities by breaking down the presumed boundary between school and home. In conclusion, we suggest that Active Homework is worth exploring as a potentially valuable approach to enhancing the quantity and quality of students' school-based health-related physical activity. If so, considerably more research and curriculum development is needed.Entities:
Keywords: COVID-19; health-enhancing physical activity; homework; lockdown; online; schools
Year: 2022 PMID: 35634024 PMCID: PMC9114789 DOI: 10.3934/publichealth.2022029
Source DB: PubMed Journal: AIMS Public Health ISSN: 2327-8994
Figure 1.COVID-19's impact of educational domains.
Figure 2.The active school concept [49] (p. 174).
Categories and examples of AH.
| Relation to school subjects | Categories of AH | Examples of AH |
| AH related to PE classes | Skill learning and practice | Learning new skills; practising and/or adapting skills already learnt in PE classes; learning new skills in the context of other clubs (e.g., martial arts skills). |
| HEPA – being more active | Active travel around the environment; increasing steps using a pedometer; hill walking with the family. | |
| PE knowledge – studying theoretical and conceptual knowledge | A basic exercise physiology and anatomy; history of sport; planning, evaluating and reflecting tasks or performance. | |
| AH related to other classes or school-level activities | Practice of physically active breaks during other homework tasks | During other homework tasks, students have an active break after each work sequence of 20'. They practice one of the active breaks they practice regularly during classroom lessons. |
| Practice of relaxation techniques during other homework tasks | During other homework tasks, students have a relaxation break, implementation a technique they practice regularly during classroom lessons once they start to feel unconcentrated (e.g., stretching, yoga, ...). | |
| Practice of physically active learning during other homework tasks | During other homework tasks like e.g., reading, students are not sitting at a desk or a table, but are standing, walking or balancing in their room. |