are parental perceptions of risk and attitudes towards risk-taking during play associated with preschoolers' physical activity and physical literacy?
abstract
purpose: to explore whether parental perceptions of risk and attitudes towards risk-taking during play are associated with preschoolers' physical activity (pa) and physical literacy (pl). methods: nova scotia preschoolers (35 boys, 17 girls; mean age = 3.8 years) and parents (n=52 pairs) provided data. linear regressions assessed associations of risk perceptions and attitudes with children's pa and pl, controlling for children's age (p<0.05). results: perceptions of risk were significantly associated with preschoolers' pa (r=0.24, p=0.05), and predicted 11.6% of the variance in pa. findings revealed a significant positive relationship between attitudes towards risky-play and pl (r=0.21, p=0.05), explaining 14.7% of the variance in pl. conclusion: this evidence supports growing literature around the value of risky-play to children's development and parents' influence in risk-taking behaviour.downloads
published
2020-10-16
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