Background: Active learning is designed to pair physical activity with the teaching of academic content. This has been shown to be a successful strategy to increase physical activity and improve academic performance. The existing designs have confounded academic lessons with physical activity. As a result, it is impossible to determine if the subsequent improvement in academic performance is due to: (1) physical activity, (2) the academic content of the active learning, or (3) the combination of academic material taught through physical activity. Methods / Design: The Texas I-CAN project is a 3-arm, cluster randomized control trial in which 28 elementary schools were assigned to either control, math intervention, or spelling intervention. As a result, each intervention condition serves as an unrelated content control for the other arm of the trial, allowing the impact of physical activity to be separated from the content. That is, schools that perform only active math lessons provide a content control for the spelling schools on spelling outcomes. This also calculated direct observations of attention and behavior control following periods of active learning. Discussion: This design is unique in its ability to separate the impact of physical activity, in general, from the combination of physical activity and specific academic content. This, in combination with the ability to examine both proximal and distal outcomes along with measures of time on task will do much to guide the design of future, school-based interventions.
Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Allocation
RANDOMIZED
Purpose
OTHER
Masking
NONE
Enrollment
2,716
physically active, academic lessons in the elementary school classroom
Physical activity level
time in moderate to vigorous physical activity
Time frame: one school week
Time on task
student attentional focus in the classroom 15 minutes prior to and 15 minutes post active lesson implemented in the classroom on one school day
Time frame: change in time on task from baseline to 15 minutes post academic lesson
Acute academic achievement
acute academic scores on math and language arts test developed by fourth grade teacher
Time frame: change in math and language arts scores from Baseline to 2 weeks
Long-term math achievement
Academic scores on math sub tests (Calculation, Fluency) of the Woodcock Johnson III
Time frame: Change in math achievement scores from Baseline to 7 months
Long-term language arts achievement
Academic scores on spelling sub test of the Woodcock Johnson III and comprehension section of Gates MacGinitie test
Time frame: Change in language arts achievement from Baseline to 7 months
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