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Revista Andaluza de Medicina del Deporte

versión On-line ISSN 2172-5063versión impresa ISSN 1888-7546

Rev Andal Med Deporte vol.8 no.1 Sevilla mar. 2015

https://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.ramd.2014.10.040 

COMUNICACIONES

 

SYMPOSIUM EXERNET. Investigación en Ejercicio y Salud: Presente y Futuro en España.
Granada, 7-8 de Noviembre de 2014

 

Is active commuting to school associated to academic achievement in youth?

 

 

J. Mora-Gonzáleza, C. Rodríguez-Lópeza, C. Cadenas-Sáncheza, M. Herrador-Colmeneroa, M. Ávila-Garcíab, F.J. Huertas-Delgadoc, D.N. Ardoya,d, F.B. Ortegaa and P. Chillóna

aPROFITH "PROmoting FITness and Health through physical activity" research group. Department of Physical Education and Sport, Faculty of Sport Sciences, University of Granada, Granada, Spain
bDepartment of Physical Education and Sport, Faculty of Sport Sciences, University of Granada, Granada, Spain
cFaculty of Education Sciences La Inmaculada, University of Granada, Granada, Spain
dDepartment of Educational Quality, Innovation and Attention to Diversity. Counselling of Education, Culture and Universities, Region of Murcia, Spain
Correo electrónico: joramor@correo.ugr.es (J. Mora-González).

 

Key words: Active transport. Active travel. Commuting to school. School. Primary school. Secondary school. Grades. High grades.

 

Objective. To determine whether active commuting to school (ACS) is associated with academic achievement in scholars of two different school levels: Primary school (PR) and Secondary school (SC).
Method. A total of 2138 students from primary schools (N = 489; 49.1% boys; 9.96 ± 1.23) and secondary schools (N = 1649; 49.7% boys; 14.24 ± 1.26 years) participated in the study. A self-reported questionnaire was used to assess the mode of commuting to and from school. Academic achievement was determined by the school grades obtained in the core subjects (Mathematics and Spanish Language) and others subjects (English Language, Natural Science and Social Science) and the grade point average (GPA) score of the selected subjects. Social Science was not assessed in PR because it is not taught at this school level. Academic achievement was also dichotomized by having a grade ≥ 5, 7 and 9 score.
Results. Passive commuters to school had better grades for Mathematics (P = 0.009), Language (P = 0.001), English (P = 0.002), Natural Science (P = 0.003) and GPA (P = 0.001) than active commuters to school in PR after adjusting for sex, age and school, whereas no differences were found in SC. Passive commuters to school had higher odds of having high grades compared with active commuters to school in PR after adjusting for sex, age and school, whereas no significant associations were found in SC.
Conclusion. The present study shows that ACS is negatively associated with academic achievement in children of PR, but not in adolescents of SC. These findings should be interpreted cautiously, since information about socioeconomic status was not available in this study and it has been shown in previous studies that children from lower socioeconomic families were more prone to commute actively to school, which could have confounded these findings.

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