Y Kids Academy Program Increases Knowledge of Healthy Living in Young Adolescents

OBJECTIVES It is well established that physical activity levels decline during adolescence. To address this problem, a program called the Y Kids Academy was developed to improve young adolescents’ knowledge of healthy lifestyles. The primary goal was to evaluate whether the program would attract par...

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Main Authors: Jacqueline Lee, Anastasia Alpous, Warsame Yusuf, Sam Cardarelli, Tosha Rhodenizer, Kelly Shaw-Swettenham, Rob Adams, Patricia E. Longmuir
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Sapientia Publishing Group 2018-06-01
Series:Exercise Medicine
Subjects:
Online Access:http://exercmed.org/upload/pdf/em-2018-010.pdf
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spelling doaj-592d17c343d545ea81aee1cc1e7c8a372020-11-25T00:57:51ZengSapientia Publishing GroupExercise Medicine2508-90562018-06-01210.26644/em.2018.01015Y Kids Academy Program Increases Knowledge of Healthy Living in Young AdolescentsJacqueline Lee0Anastasia Alpous1Warsame Yusuf2Sam Cardarelli3Tosha Rhodenizer4Kelly Shaw-Swettenham5Rob Adams6Patricia E. Longmuir7 Children’s Hospital of Eastern Ontario Research Institute, Ottawa, Ontario, Canada Children’s Hospital of Eastern Ontario Research Institute, Ottawa, Ontario, Canada Children’s Hospital of Eastern Ontario Research Institute, Ottawa, Ontario, Canada Children’s Hospital of Eastern Ontario Research Institute, Ottawa, Ontario, Canada YMCA-YWCA of the National Capital Region, Ottawa, Ontario, Canada YMCA-YWCA of the National Capital Region, Ottawa, Ontario, Canada YMCA-YWCA of the National Capital Region, Ottawa, Ontario, Canada Children’s Hospital of Eastern Ontario Research Institute, Ottawa, Ontario, CanadaOBJECTIVES It is well established that physical activity levels decline during adolescence. To address this problem, a program called the Y Kids Academy was developed to improve young adolescents’ knowledge of healthy lifestyles. The primary goal was to evaluate whether the program would attract participants with both high and low levels of physical literacy and to evaluate whether baseline knowledge scores were associated with physical literacy knowledge. The secondary goals were to determine whether baseline knowledge scores would increase after Y Kids Academy participation or were associated with a standardized assessment of physical literacy knowledge. METHODS Parent perceptions of their adolescent’s healthy living behaviours were measured to assess the impact of Y Kids Academy participation on the family. The Canadian Assessment of Physical Literacy (CAPL) was completed pre-Academy to measure participants’ physical literacy. Participants and parents also completed questionnaires pre- and post-Academy to assess change in healthy living knowledge and perception of the child’s healthy living behaviours, respectively. 163 children (mean age of 11.1 ± 0.8) consented to participate (73 female, 45%). RESULTS The mean total CAPL score of participants was not significantly different (p=.07) from the mean total CAPL score measured among 3000 Canadian children. The largest proportion of participants (53.3%) were categorized as progressing, similar to the Canadian population (53.2%). Knowledge scores for the Y Kids Academy evaluation were significantly associated with physical literacy knowledge (r = 0.40, p < 0.001). Mean knowledge scores increased significantly (p<0.001) from pre-Academy (10.4 ± 5.4) to post-academy (12.7±6.5). There was no change in parent reported healthy living behaviours (p=0.41). CONCLUSIONS The Y Kids Academy program was successful at attracting youth with lower physical literacy in a proportion similar to the Canadian population. These findings support the suitability of the Y Kids Academy for improving and evaluating knowledge of healthy living in young adolescents.http://exercmed.org/upload/pdf/em-2018-010.pdfEducationExercise trainingHealthy eatingKnowledgePhysical literacy
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Jacqueline Lee
Anastasia Alpous
Warsame Yusuf
Sam Cardarelli
Tosha Rhodenizer
Kelly Shaw-Swettenham
Rob Adams
Patricia E. Longmuir
spellingShingle Jacqueline Lee
Anastasia Alpous
Warsame Yusuf
Sam Cardarelli
Tosha Rhodenizer
Kelly Shaw-Swettenham
Rob Adams
Patricia E. Longmuir
Y Kids Academy Program Increases Knowledge of Healthy Living in Young Adolescents
Exercise Medicine
Education
Exercise training
Healthy eating
Knowledge
Physical literacy
author_facet Jacqueline Lee
Anastasia Alpous
Warsame Yusuf
Sam Cardarelli
Tosha Rhodenizer
Kelly Shaw-Swettenham
Rob Adams
Patricia E. Longmuir
author_sort Jacqueline Lee
title Y Kids Academy Program Increases Knowledge of Healthy Living in Young Adolescents
title_short Y Kids Academy Program Increases Knowledge of Healthy Living in Young Adolescents
title_full Y Kids Academy Program Increases Knowledge of Healthy Living in Young Adolescents
title_fullStr Y Kids Academy Program Increases Knowledge of Healthy Living in Young Adolescents
title_full_unstemmed Y Kids Academy Program Increases Knowledge of Healthy Living in Young Adolescents
title_sort y kids academy program increases knowledge of healthy living in young adolescents
publisher Sapientia Publishing Group
series Exercise Medicine
issn 2508-9056
publishDate 2018-06-01
description OBJECTIVES It is well established that physical activity levels decline during adolescence. To address this problem, a program called the Y Kids Academy was developed to improve young adolescents’ knowledge of healthy lifestyles. The primary goal was to evaluate whether the program would attract participants with both high and low levels of physical literacy and to evaluate whether baseline knowledge scores were associated with physical literacy knowledge. The secondary goals were to determine whether baseline knowledge scores would increase after Y Kids Academy participation or were associated with a standardized assessment of physical literacy knowledge. METHODS Parent perceptions of their adolescent’s healthy living behaviours were measured to assess the impact of Y Kids Academy participation on the family. The Canadian Assessment of Physical Literacy (CAPL) was completed pre-Academy to measure participants’ physical literacy. Participants and parents also completed questionnaires pre- and post-Academy to assess change in healthy living knowledge and perception of the child’s healthy living behaviours, respectively. 163 children (mean age of 11.1 ± 0.8) consented to participate (73 female, 45%). RESULTS The mean total CAPL score of participants was not significantly different (p=.07) from the mean total CAPL score measured among 3000 Canadian children. The largest proportion of participants (53.3%) were categorized as progressing, similar to the Canadian population (53.2%). Knowledge scores for the Y Kids Academy evaluation were significantly associated with physical literacy knowledge (r = 0.40, p < 0.001). Mean knowledge scores increased significantly (p<0.001) from pre-Academy (10.4 ± 5.4) to post-academy (12.7±6.5). There was no change in parent reported healthy living behaviours (p=0.41). CONCLUSIONS The Y Kids Academy program was successful at attracting youth with lower physical literacy in a proportion similar to the Canadian population. These findings support the suitability of the Y Kids Academy for improving and evaluating knowledge of healthy living in young adolescents.
topic Education
Exercise training
Healthy eating
Knowledge
Physical literacy
url http://exercmed.org/upload/pdf/em-2018-010.pdf
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