In an effort to address health disparities linked to low socioeconomic environments, a University of Massachusetts Amherst kinesiologist is partnering with Western Massachusetts preschools to implement a physical activity program for young children.
Sofiya Alhassan, professor of kinesiology in the School of Public Health and Health Sciences, will measure the impact of a gross motor skills-based physical activity program on the cognitive development of 3- to 5-year-olds enrolled in preschools in communities with low socioeconomic status (SES) in the Greater Springfield area.
“Given that most U.S. preschool-aged children spend the majority of their day in preschool centers, these
centers are uniquely positioned to help children establish healthy lifestyles,” Alhassan says.
If the pilot study proves feasible, Alhassan plans to use the findings to support a subsequent large-scale
randomized controlled trial to see if the intervention can effect sustained improvement in preschoolers’
cognitive health and gross motor skills.
Sofiya Alhassan
The end goal is to establish a proven intervention that can be easily integrated into preschool early
education learning standards and help us to level the playing field.
Sofiya Alhassan, professor of kinesiology
“The end goal,” Alhassan says, “is to establish a proven intervention that can be easily integrated into
preschool early education learning standards and help us to level the playing field.”
Social determinants of health have a major impact on people’s health, well-being and quality of life. In a
broad sense, the conditions where people are born, live, learn, work, play, worship and age affect a wide
range of health, functioning and quality-of-life outcomes and risks, contributing to wide health disparities and inequities.
This is particularly evident in preschool-age children. Research has shown that being raised in a low
socioeconomic environment contributes to higher-than-average levels of inattention and lower self-
regulation in preschoolers, as well as lower performance in gross motor skills and cognition, such as
executive function and memory.
These environmental disadvantages place young children at an increased risk for poor academic
achievement and low physical activity levels, Alhassan explains.
“We know that low SES preschoolers also show slower gross motor skill development,” she says. “Gross
motor skills form the building blocks for a healthy and active lifestyle since these skills must be mastered
before the development of more complex motor skills. Physical activity, including gross motor skills
learning, enhance neural development, particularly the development of areas associated with cognitive
functions, including the frontal cortex and hippocampus.”
Alhassan will carry out the pilot project with funding from a two-year, $429,744 grant from the Eunice
Kennedy Shriver National Institute of Child Health and Human Development.
Participants at the preschools will be randomly assigned to either a movement and cognition (MAC) or a
control group. Intervention activities will be embedded into the Massachusetts early learning standard
and implemented by trained classroom teachers.
Alhassan will collect data on executive function and memory, gross motor skills and physical activity
levels at baseline, three-month and six-month intervals. She’ll also examine the preliminary efficacy of the intervention by evaluating study fidelity and factors such as intervention dosage.