Kuopio (Finland): Teenagers who engage in physical activity during their free time and while travelling to and from school perform better academically than their inactive peers in secondary school, finds a study.
A lower risk of school burnout was also associated with regular leisure-time physical activity, even in small amounts. The results of the study were released in the European Journal of Public Health.
Health News: Mild Cognitive Impairment Is Predicted By Low Protein Levels In Spinal Fluid: Study
Academic success and physical activity have a complicated relationship. Prior research has discovered that, however, particularly school-based physical activity, such as physical education, can enhance academic performance, especially in mathematics.
Despite this, only a small number of studies have looked at the connection between active school transport and academic results. The majority of the prior research on physical activity and academic well-being has been conducted with university-level students.
Researchers found that active school transport was linked to higher odds of high perceived academic performance and self-reported competency in academic skills in a recently published study of more than 34,000 teenagers.
For moderate to vigorous physical activity during leisure time, the association was even stronger. The link between recreational physical activity and mathematical abilities stood out, as in earlier studies.
"The results regarding active school transport were particularly intriguing as researchers are increasingly interested in the health benefits of travel-related walking and cycling. Being physically active before school could, for example, enhance concentration in the classroom, explaining our observations. However, due to the cross-sectional design, our study cannot establish causality," says Juuso Jussila, a Doctoral Researcher at the University of Eastern Finland.
