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A study to examine the validity and reliability of a selected group of physical fitness tests within a primary school setting

Purpose: This study represents an effort to provide an evidence-based approach to selecting field-based fitness measures for children and youth for inclusion in a test battery to be used within the school setting. The approach used by the author considers the following criteria to determine which yo...

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Main Author: Buck, Robin
Other Authors: Lambert, Michael
Format: Thesis
Language:English
English
Published: Department of Human Biology 2025
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access_status_str Open Access
author Buck, Robin
author2 Lambert, Michael
author_browse Buck, Robin
Lambert, Michael
author_facet Lambert, Michael
Buck, Robin
author_sort Buck, Robin
collection Thesis
description Purpose: This study represents an effort to provide an evidence-based approach to selecting field-based fitness measures for children and youth for inclusion in a test battery to be used within the school setting. The approach used by the author considers the following criteria to determine which youth fitness test items would be most appropriate for inclusion: (1) the strength of the fitness tests' association with health markers in youth, (2) the fitness tests integrity (validity and reliability), (3) the relative feasibility of the test administration in the field and (4) the measurement error of the fitness test. This study aims to identify valid and reliable physical fitness tests with low measurement errors for use in South African schools Method: A literature review was performed to determine the predictive and criterion validity of physical fitness tests in children. Tests with strong predictive evidence and good criterion validity were selected for further reliability testing. A group of 290 male and female children aged 6 to 13 years performed a physical fitness testing protocol three times within a 7-day period. The typical error of measurement (TE), coefficient of variation (CVTE) and smallest worthwhile change (SWC) were calculated for each sex and age group (grade). Changes in measurement were categorised as small, medium or large based on effect sizes. Results: The 20m shuttle run (SRT), hand grip strength (HGS), standing long jump (SLJ), body mass index (BMI), and waist circumference (WC) tests demonstrate strong predictive evidence and good criterion validity. Typical error for the 20mSRT was 0.9 stages. Small changes in 20mSRT (0.4 stages) are challenging for the test to detect. Medium (1.0 stages) and large (1.9 stages) changes in the 20mSRT are more interpretable as they exceed the “noise” (TE) of the measurement. Small (0.6 kg/m2), medium (1.6 kg/m2) and large (2.5 kg/m2) changes in BMI are all larger than the TE (0.2 kg/m2). The BMI test has a ‘good' ability to detect small, medium and large changes. TE for HGS was 1.3 kg. Small changes in HGS (1.3kg) are difficult for the HGS test to detect. Medium (3.3kg) and large (5.3kg) changes in HGS are more interpretable as they exceed the “noise” (TE) of the measurement. The WC test has a ‘good' ability to detect small (1.5 cm), medium (3.8 cm) and large (6.1 cm) changes as they are larger than the TE (1.5 cm). TE for SLJ was 8.8 cm. Small changes in SLJ (5.4 cm) are difficult for the SLJ test to detect. Medium (13.5 cm) and large (21.5 cm) changes in SLJ are more interpretable as they exceed the “noise” (TE) of the measurement. Conclusion: The field-based physical fitness tests that demonstrated strong predictive validity and good criterion validity from the literature and low measurement error from the reliability data are HGS, SLJ, BMI, WC and 20mSRT. These fitness tests could be included in a battery of tests for implementation within the school setting. Researchers and practitioners can use the SWC and TE as guidelines to set targets when determining the extent to which performance changes in these fitness tests are practically significant.
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language English
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license_str Not specified — see source repository
provenance_str_mv Harvested via OAI-PMH from UCTD — University of Cape Town Open Access Repository
publishDate 2025
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spelling oai:open.uct.ac.za:11427/42123 A study to examine the validity and reliability of a selected group of physical fitness tests within a primary school setting Buck, Robin Lambert, Michael Medicine Primary school Fitness Purpose: This study represents an effort to provide an evidence-based approach to selecting field-based fitness measures for children and youth for inclusion in a test battery to be used within the school setting. The approach used by the author considers the following criteria to determine which youth fitness test items would be most appropriate for inclusion: (1) the strength of the fitness tests' association with health markers in youth, (2) the fitness tests integrity (validity and reliability), (3) the relative feasibility of the test administration in the field and (4) the measurement error of the fitness test. This study aims to identify valid and reliable physical fitness tests with low measurement errors for use in South African schools Method: A literature review was performed to determine the predictive and criterion validity of physical fitness tests in children. Tests with strong predictive evidence and good criterion validity were selected for further reliability testing. A group of 290 male and female children aged 6 to 13 years performed a physical fitness testing protocol three times within a 7-day period. The typical error of measurement (TE), coefficient of variation (CVTE) and smallest worthwhile change (SWC) were calculated for each sex and age group (grade). Changes in measurement were categorised as small, medium or large based on effect sizes. Results: The 20m shuttle run (SRT), hand grip strength (HGS), standing long jump (SLJ), body mass index (BMI), and waist circumference (WC) tests demonstrate strong predictive evidence and good criterion validity. Typical error for the 20mSRT was 0.9 stages. Small changes in 20mSRT (0.4 stages) are challenging for the test to detect. Medium (1.0 stages) and large (1.9 stages) changes in the 20mSRT are more interpretable as they exceed the “noise” (TE) of the measurement. Small (0.6 kg/m2), medium (1.6 kg/m2) and large (2.5 kg/m2) changes in BMI are all larger than the TE (0.2 kg/m2). The BMI test has a ‘good' ability to detect small, medium and large changes. TE for HGS was 1.3 kg. Small changes in HGS (1.3kg) are difficult for the HGS test to detect. Medium (3.3kg) and large (5.3kg) changes in HGS are more interpretable as they exceed the “noise” (TE) of the measurement. The WC test has a ‘good' ability to detect small (1.5 cm), medium (3.8 cm) and large (6.1 cm) changes as they are larger than the TE (1.5 cm). TE for SLJ was 8.8 cm. Small changes in SLJ (5.4 cm) are difficult for the SLJ test to detect. Medium (13.5 cm) and large (21.5 cm) changes in SLJ are more interpretable as they exceed the “noise” (TE) of the measurement. Conclusion: The field-based physical fitness tests that demonstrated strong predictive validity and good criterion validity from the literature and low measurement error from the reliability data are HGS, SLJ, BMI, WC and 20mSRT. These fitness tests could be included in a battery of tests for implementation within the school setting. Researchers and practitioners can use the SWC and TE as guidelines to set targets when determining the extent to which performance changes in these fitness tests are practically significant. 2025-11-06T09:57:00Z 2025-11-06T09:57:00Z 2025 2025-11-06T09:51:30Z Thesis / Dissertation Masters MSc http://hdl.handle.net/11427/42123 en eng application/pdf Department of Human Biology Faculty of Health Sciences University of Cape Town
spellingShingle Medicine
Primary school
Fitness
Buck, Robin
A study to examine the validity and reliability of a selected group of physical fitness tests within a primary school setting
thesis_degree_str Master's
title A study to examine the validity and reliability of a selected group of physical fitness tests within a primary school setting
title_full A study to examine the validity and reliability of a selected group of physical fitness tests within a primary school setting
title_fullStr A study to examine the validity and reliability of a selected group of physical fitness tests within a primary school setting
title_full_unstemmed A study to examine the validity and reliability of a selected group of physical fitness tests within a primary school setting
title_short A study to examine the validity and reliability of a selected group of physical fitness tests within a primary school setting
title_sort study to examine the validity and reliability of a selected group of physical fitness tests within a primary school setting
topic Medicine
Primary school
Fitness
url http://hdl.handle.net/11427/42123
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