Exercise is brainfood for teens
Regular
exercise boosts teenagers' school grades -- and particularly helps girls in
science, a British study said Tuesday.
The more physically active they were,
the better children performed in school, according to findings published
online in the British Journal of Sports Medicine.
And "girls' science results seemed to benefit the
most", said a press statement.
Physical
activity has long been suspected to boost brainpower, but little scientific
evidence has existed until now.
For
the study, researchers from
Their
academic performance in English, maths and science was then assessed at the
ages of 11, 13, and 16.
Children
who had been more physically active at 11 performed better in all three
phases and all three subjects.
Every
17 minutes of exercise per day at the age of 11 led to an additional
improvement in marks for boys, and 12 minutes per day for girls by the age of
16, said the findings.
The
effect was noticeably large for girls in science classes.
"This
is an important finding, especially in light of the current
Worryingly,
the researchers observed that aged 11, boys averaged 29 minutes of moderate-to-vigorous
exercise per day and girls about 18 -- far lower than the recommended 60
minutes.
"Their
findings prompt the authors to speculate on what might happen to academic
performance if children increased the amount of moderate-to-vigorous physical
activity they did to the recommended 60 minutes," said the statement.
The
children had been recruited from a large-scale ongoing project called the
Avon Longitudinal Study of Parents and Children (ALSPAC) in southwest
The
scientists adjusted the results for factors that could influence the
findings, like a child's birthweight, whether their mothers had smoked during
pregnancy, weight and socioeconomic background.
Further
research was needed to better understand how exercise results in improved marks,
said the researchers.
"The
findings have implications for public health and education policy by
providing schools and parents with a potentially important stake in
meaningful and sustained increases in physical activity," they wrote.
AFP
|
Thứ Hai, 21 tháng 10, 2013
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