The purpose of the research study is to investigate if daily motor activities, including fitness activities, gross motor skills, fine motor skills, and motor coordination activities result in physiological, cognitive, and behavioral benefits to children at Odyssey Academy. The study will compare students' performance after intervention by comparing an intervention period to a standard care period, and comparing intervention students to students engaged in standard school activities in the area of academic performance.
The objective of this study is to track if daily participation in motor lab activities for school age children improves their academic performance. Academic performance is associated with motor skills, coordination, and executive function. Our objectives are to determine if daily participation in motor lab activities changes these skills, to better understand these relationships, track outcomes of children participating in motor lab intervention compared to non-intervention and children receiving standard level of care in the school, and to be able to follow the intervention students over time. The specific aims of the study are: 1. To investigate whether gross motor skills, fine motor skills, and physical fitness, predict executive function skills. 2. To determine the relationship between these variables and academic performance. 3. To examine the relationship between participation in motor lab activities and measures of change in fitness, gross motor skills, fine motor skills, executive function, and academic performance. 4. To evaluate if participation in daily motor lab activities predicts fitness level, gross motor skills, fine motor skills, executive function, and academic success at the end of the school year and in the next school year.
Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Allocation
RANDOMIZED
Purpose
TREATMENT
Masking
NONE
fitness, gross motor, fine motor, and motor coordination activities
Change in Movement Assessment Battery for Children-2 (MABC-2) between 3 time points (baseline, 10 weeks, 20 weeks)
Motor skills test which provides standard scores from 1-19 where higher scores represent better performance.
Time frame: Baseline, 10 weeks, 20 weeks
Change in Wechsler Intelligence Scale for Children-5 (WISC-5) between 3 time points (baseline, 10 weeks, 20 weeks)
Measures of executive function which provides scale scores from 1-19 where higher scores represent better performance.
Time frame: Baseline, 10 weeks, 20 weeks
Change in Test of Visual Motor Integration (VMI) between 3 time points (baseline, 10 weeks, 20 weeks)
Measures of visual perception and visual motor skills providing scores from 45-155 where higher scores represent better performance.
Time frame: Baseline, 10 weeks, 20 weeks
Change in Behavior Rating Inventory of Executive Function - Parent and Teacher Forms between 3 time points (baseline, 10 weeks, 20 weeks)
Measure of behavioral executive function with score within the range of 30-90 where scores \>60 represent poorer performance.
Time frame: Baseline, 10 weeks, 20 weeks
Change in Renaissance Star Reading Assessment between 3 time points (baseline, 10 weeks, 20 weeks)
Reading assessment with domain scores ranging from 0-99 where higher scores represent stronger performance.
Time frame: Baseline, 10 weeks, 20 weeks
Change in Fitness Gram between 3 time points (baseline, 10 weeks, 20 weeks)
fitness assessment with scores falling within either healthy fitness zone, needs improvement zone, or health risk zone.
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Time frame: Baseline, 10 weeks, 20 weeks