This article is from the archives of the UB Reporter.
News

Kids more active when given
more toy choices, studies show

A UB study has found that giving children more toy choices increases their physical play, especially in girls.

  • “Focus on finding three to five active games that your children like and make them easily accessible around the home.”

    James Roemmich
    Associate Professor, Department of Pediatrics
By ELLEN GOLDBAUM
Published: April 26, 2012

In an age when even preschoolers have electronic toys and devices, many parents wonder how to get their children to be more physically active. Now, two studies published by UB researchers provide some answers.

The studies are among the few laboratory-controlled studies of how the choice and type of toys given to children affects their physical activity. Study subjects were 8-12 years old.

The goal of the research, led by James Roemmich, associate professor of pediatrics, School of Medicine and Biomedical Sciences, was to identify basic factors that make children more physically active.

“We wanted to see if providing children with choices or autonomy—the ability for the individual to decide how he or she wanted to be physically active—increased their intrinsic motivation to be physically active,” Roemmich says.

The results showed that giving children more toy choices markedly increases their physical play, especially in girls. And giving children the opportunity to master games—including exergames, such as Wii games—also increases their physical play.

The first UB study, published in the Journal of Science and Medicine in Sports, found that when there was only one toy to play with, boys engaged in 1.3 times longer active play than girls.

But when children were provided access to a choice of active toys, physically active play time increased by nearly 200 percent for girls, compared to an increase of just 42 percent for boys.

“We were quite surprised to find such a significant difference between boys and girls,” Roemmich says.

Previous studies in the field have revealed consistently that girls are less active than boys.

“But giving girls a choice of physical activities made their level of physical play equal to that of boys,” notes Denise M. Feda, co-author on both studies and UB postdoctoral associate in the Division of Behavioral Medicine, Department of Pediatrics, where the studies were conducted.

“Girls may enjoy the cognitive task of choosing toys, evaluating them and selecting which to play with, whereas the selection process and thinking about the toys may be less appealing to boys,” the paper states.

In the same study, average exercise intensity increased for both genders when children were provided with a choice of toys. Active toys involved in the study included mini hockey, bean-bag toss combined with tic-tac-toe, mini indoor basketball and jump rope.

In a second UB study published in the International Journal of Behavioral Nutrition and Physical Activity, researchers looked more closely at how autonomy and mastery—a force that motivates the child to develop proficiency—increased a child’s intrinsic motivation for physical activity.

That study revealed that a combination of autonomy and mastery were most powerful in increasing children’s physical activity time.

The researchers wanted to know if the mastery component of exergames or Wii games would motivate children to increase play time, reducing the need for choice to motivate activity, explains Roemmich.

“Indeed, we found that the combination of autonomy—choosing from several different games—and mastery—playing exergames—produced the greatest increases in physical activity time,” he says.

However, increasing physical activity time isn’t the whole story. Roemmich adds that while children played Wii games for twice as long as they played traditional versions of the same games, such as basketball, boxing, golf and hockey, they expended only half the energy during Wii games.

“In traditional games, children expend a lot of energy chasing after balls and pucks, while with exergames, they are just waiting for the game to reset,” he says.

So, what should parents do?

“Focus on finding three to five active games that your children like and make them easily accessible around the home,” Roemmich says. These can be dance or yoga DVDs, exergames or mini versions of basketball and hockey for in-home use.

And, he says, exergames do have their place. “If an exergame displaces watching TV or playing a videogame, then even the lighter intensity physical activity is preferable.”

Outside the home, seek a variety of activities ranging from formal to aerobic dance, to zoomba, basketball or martial arts. And he suggests that parents look for fitness and youth centers that promote autonomy and choice by not charging extra for such choice of programming.

Roemmich led the research and co-authored the papers with Feda; Jacob Barkley, of Kent State University; and Karl F. Kozlowski, clinical assistant professor, and former graduate students Maya Lambiase and Thomas F. McCarthy, all of the Department of Exercise and Nutrition Sciences, UB School of Public Health and Health Professions.

The studies were funded by the National Institutes of Health.