Development of the great recess framework – observational tool to measure contextual and behavioral components of elementary school recess

Abstract Background Physical activity (PA) remains the primary behavioral outcome associated with school recess, while many other potentially relevant indicators of recess remain unexamined. Few studies have assessed observations of teacher/student interactions, peer conflict, social interactions, o...

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Main Authors: William V. Massey, Megan B. Stellino, Sean P. Mullen, Jennette Claassen, Megan Wilkison
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: BMC 2018-03-01
Series:BMC Public Health
Subjects:
Online Access:http://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s12889-018-5295-y
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spelling doaj-6f6d39980aee45799929c8949a993d4a2020-11-25T00:14:09ZengBMCBMC Public Health1471-24582018-03-0118111110.1186/s12889-018-5295-yDevelopment of the great recess framework – observational tool to measure contextual and behavioral components of elementary school recessWilliam V. Massey0Megan B. Stellino1Sean P. Mullen2Jennette Claassen3Megan Wilkison4College of Public Health and Human Sciences, School of Biological and Population Health Sciences, Kinesiology Program, Oregon State UniversitySchool of Sport and Exercise Science, University of Northern ColoradoDepartment of Kinesiology and Community Health, University of Illinois at Urbana-ChampaignPlayworks Education EnergizedDepartment of Occupational Therapy, Concordia University WisconsinAbstract Background Physical activity (PA) remains the primary behavioral outcome associated with school recess, while many other potentially relevant indicators of recess remain unexamined. Few studies have assessed observations of teacher/student interactions, peer conflict, social interactions, or safety within the recess environment. Furthermore, a psychometrically-sound instrument does not exist to examine safety, resources, student engagement, adult engagement, pro-social/anti-social behavior, and student empowerment on the playground. The purpose of the current study was to develop a valid, and reliable, assessment tool intended for use in measurement of the contextual factors associated with recess. Methods An iterative and multi-step process was used to develop a tool that measures safety and structure, adult engagement and supervision, student behaviors, and transitions at recess. Exploratory structural equation modeling (Mplus v. 7.4) was used to examine the underlying measurement model with observational data of the recess environment collected at 649 school-based recess periods that spanned across 22 urban/metropolitan areas in the USA. Data were also collected by two researchers at 162 recess sessions across 9 schools to examine reliability. Results A 17-item observation instrument, the Great Recess Framework – Observational Tool (GRF-OT), was created. Findings of exploratory structural equation modeling (ESEM) analyses supported factorial validity for a 4-factor solution and linear regressions established convergent validity where ‘structure and safety’, ‘adult engagement and supervision’, and ‘student behaviors’ were all significantly related to observed activity levels. Each sub-scale of the GRF-OT showed adequate levels of inter-rater reliability and test-retest reliability analysis indicated a higher level of stability for the GRF-OT when using a three-day average across two time points as compared to a two-day average. Conclusions Initial evidence for a valid, and reliable, assessment tool to observationally measure the recess environment with a specific focus on safety, resources, student engagement, adult engagement, pro-social/anti-social behavior, and student empowerment was established in this study. Use of the GRF-OT can inspire evaluation, and subsequent intervention, to strategically create consistent, appropriate, and engaging school recess that impact children’s physical, cognitive, social and emotional development.http://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s12889-018-5295-yRecessEvaluationSchool-based physical activitySocial environment
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author William V. Massey
Megan B. Stellino
Sean P. Mullen
Jennette Claassen
Megan Wilkison
spellingShingle William V. Massey
Megan B. Stellino
Sean P. Mullen
Jennette Claassen
Megan Wilkison
Development of the great recess framework – observational tool to measure contextual and behavioral components of elementary school recess
BMC Public Health
Recess
Evaluation
School-based physical activity
Social environment
author_facet William V. Massey
Megan B. Stellino
Sean P. Mullen
Jennette Claassen
Megan Wilkison
author_sort William V. Massey
title Development of the great recess framework – observational tool to measure contextual and behavioral components of elementary school recess
title_short Development of the great recess framework – observational tool to measure contextual and behavioral components of elementary school recess
title_full Development of the great recess framework – observational tool to measure contextual and behavioral components of elementary school recess
title_fullStr Development of the great recess framework – observational tool to measure contextual and behavioral components of elementary school recess
title_full_unstemmed Development of the great recess framework – observational tool to measure contextual and behavioral components of elementary school recess
title_sort development of the great recess framework – observational tool to measure contextual and behavioral components of elementary school recess
publisher BMC
series BMC Public Health
issn 1471-2458
publishDate 2018-03-01
description Abstract Background Physical activity (PA) remains the primary behavioral outcome associated with school recess, while many other potentially relevant indicators of recess remain unexamined. Few studies have assessed observations of teacher/student interactions, peer conflict, social interactions, or safety within the recess environment. Furthermore, a psychometrically-sound instrument does not exist to examine safety, resources, student engagement, adult engagement, pro-social/anti-social behavior, and student empowerment on the playground. The purpose of the current study was to develop a valid, and reliable, assessment tool intended for use in measurement of the contextual factors associated with recess. Methods An iterative and multi-step process was used to develop a tool that measures safety and structure, adult engagement and supervision, student behaviors, and transitions at recess. Exploratory structural equation modeling (Mplus v. 7.4) was used to examine the underlying measurement model with observational data of the recess environment collected at 649 school-based recess periods that spanned across 22 urban/metropolitan areas in the USA. Data were also collected by two researchers at 162 recess sessions across 9 schools to examine reliability. Results A 17-item observation instrument, the Great Recess Framework – Observational Tool (GRF-OT), was created. Findings of exploratory structural equation modeling (ESEM) analyses supported factorial validity for a 4-factor solution and linear regressions established convergent validity where ‘structure and safety’, ‘adult engagement and supervision’, and ‘student behaviors’ were all significantly related to observed activity levels. Each sub-scale of the GRF-OT showed adequate levels of inter-rater reliability and test-retest reliability analysis indicated a higher level of stability for the GRF-OT when using a three-day average across two time points as compared to a two-day average. Conclusions Initial evidence for a valid, and reliable, assessment tool to observationally measure the recess environment with a specific focus on safety, resources, student engagement, adult engagement, pro-social/anti-social behavior, and student empowerment was established in this study. Use of the GRF-OT can inspire evaluation, and subsequent intervention, to strategically create consistent, appropriate, and engaging school recess that impact children’s physical, cognitive, social and emotional development.
topic Recess
Evaluation
School-based physical activity
Social environment
url http://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s12889-018-5295-y
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