Outdoor physical activity in traditional and newly designed preschools: a cross-sectional study
Andreas Fröberg, Therese Eskilsson, Annika Manni, Jonas Markström

TL;DR
This study compares physical activity levels in preschool children at traditional and newly designed schools in Sweden, finding that newer schools and those with better outdoor spaces promote more total activity, though traditional schools encourage more moderate movement.
Contribution
The study provides empirical evidence on how preschool design and outdoor environment quality influence children's physical activity levels.
Findings
Children in newly designed preschools and those with higher-quality outdoor environments had higher total outdoor physical activity.
Children in traditional preschools had higher proportions of moderate movements compared to those in newly designed preschools.
The study highlights the need to balance design and unstructured play for diverse outdoor activity opportunities.
Abstract
Outdoor time and play are crucial for children’s learning and development, impacting various physical, cognitive, and social aspects of their well-being and socio-emotional growth. In Sweden, new preschools are increasingly built as multi-story facilities, accommodating larger cohorts of children while often reducing outdoor space. This trend raises concerns about the quality of outdoor environments and their impact on physical activity (PA) opportunities. This study aims to explore outdoor total PA and PA levels among children in traditionally and newly designed preschools across varied outdoor play environments. The primary research question was: How does total outdoor PA differ among children attending traditionally designed versus newly designed preschools, and across different types of outdoor play environments? The hypothesis was that children’s total outdoor PA is higher in…
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Taxonomy
TopicsUrban Green Space and Health · Obesity, Physical Activity, Diet · Urban Transport and Accessibility
