Views of parents, teachers and children on health promotion in kindergarten – first results from formative focus groups and observations

Research output: Contribution to journalJournal articleResearch

Standard

Views of parents, teachers and children on health promotion in kindergarten – first results from formative focus groups and observations. / Sansolios, Sanne; Mikkelsen, Bent Egberg.

In: International Journal of Pediatric Obesity, Vol. 6, No. S2, 04.10.2011, p. 28-32.

Research output: Contribution to journalJournal articleResearch

Harvard

Sansolios, S & Mikkelsen, BE 2011, 'Views of parents, teachers and children on health promotion in kindergarten – first results from formative focus groups and observations', International Journal of Pediatric Obesity, vol. 6, no. S2, pp. 28-32. <https://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/full/10.3109/17477166.2011.613659>

APA

Sansolios, S., & Mikkelsen, B. E. (2011). Views of parents, teachers and children on health promotion in kindergarten – first results from formative focus groups and observations. International Journal of Pediatric Obesity, 6(S2), 28-32. https://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/full/10.3109/17477166.2011.613659

Vancouver

Sansolios S, Mikkelsen BE. Views of parents, teachers and children on health promotion in kindergarten – first results from formative focus groups and observations. International Journal of Pediatric Obesity. 2011 Oct 4;6(S2):28-32.

Author

Sansolios, Sanne ; Mikkelsen, Bent Egberg. / Views of parents, teachers and children on health promotion in kindergarten – first results from formative focus groups and observations. In: International Journal of Pediatric Obesity. 2011 ; Vol. 6, No. S2. pp. 28-32.

Bibtex

@article{0df4e5140fdc45f79bab0f40b17f63a7,
title = "Views of parents, teachers and children on health promotion in kindergarten – first results from formative focus groups and observations",
abstract = "The aim of the study was to capture the views of children, parents and teachers on the topic of physical activity in kindergarten through observation and focus group interviews. The study was conducted in the kindergartens from the sampling group in the Danish part of PERISCOPE. 1st methodology: Children interviewed inside by the researcher on preferable movements and settings and then observed outside during their playtime. 2nd methodology: Children asked to draw themselves playing their most preferred physical activity. Parents and kindergarten teachers interviewed in two different groups, using an identical guide. Children are skilled in taking advantage of the space and facilities available for physical activity; girls need more support than boys to initiate physical activity; children are happy with the facilities and the toys available in the kindergarten. Teachers feel an increasing pressure to take more responsibility and initiatives for the children's health habits. Parents state that if more physical activity is initiated in the kindergarten, it could make children request domestic activity. Physical activity and movement concept are too abstract for children of this age to talk about: they quickly lose their focus and concentration. The new methodology of videotaping gives the researcher the chance to interpret facial expressions to capture movement, talk and actions, and to make a distinction among children, as they tend to interrupt each other. However, this method contains a weakness, if used alone, by the fact that the shooting is only a reflection of what the video camera has recorded.",
author = "Sanne Sansolios and Mikkelsen, {Bent Egberg}",
year = "2011",
month = oct,
day = "4",
language = "English",
volume = "6",
pages = "28--32",
journal = "Pediatric obesity",
issn = "2047-6302",
publisher = "Wiley-Blackwell",
number = "S2",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Views of parents, teachers and children on health promotion in kindergarten – first results from formative focus groups and observations

AU - Sansolios, Sanne

AU - Mikkelsen, Bent Egberg

PY - 2011/10/4

Y1 - 2011/10/4

N2 - The aim of the study was to capture the views of children, parents and teachers on the topic of physical activity in kindergarten through observation and focus group interviews. The study was conducted in the kindergartens from the sampling group in the Danish part of PERISCOPE. 1st methodology: Children interviewed inside by the researcher on preferable movements and settings and then observed outside during their playtime. 2nd methodology: Children asked to draw themselves playing their most preferred physical activity. Parents and kindergarten teachers interviewed in two different groups, using an identical guide. Children are skilled in taking advantage of the space and facilities available for physical activity; girls need more support than boys to initiate physical activity; children are happy with the facilities and the toys available in the kindergarten. Teachers feel an increasing pressure to take more responsibility and initiatives for the children's health habits. Parents state that if more physical activity is initiated in the kindergarten, it could make children request domestic activity. Physical activity and movement concept are too abstract for children of this age to talk about: they quickly lose their focus and concentration. The new methodology of videotaping gives the researcher the chance to interpret facial expressions to capture movement, talk and actions, and to make a distinction among children, as they tend to interrupt each other. However, this method contains a weakness, if used alone, by the fact that the shooting is only a reflection of what the video camera has recorded.

AB - The aim of the study was to capture the views of children, parents and teachers on the topic of physical activity in kindergarten through observation and focus group interviews. The study was conducted in the kindergartens from the sampling group in the Danish part of PERISCOPE. 1st methodology: Children interviewed inside by the researcher on preferable movements and settings and then observed outside during their playtime. 2nd methodology: Children asked to draw themselves playing their most preferred physical activity. Parents and kindergarten teachers interviewed in two different groups, using an identical guide. Children are skilled in taking advantage of the space and facilities available for physical activity; girls need more support than boys to initiate physical activity; children are happy with the facilities and the toys available in the kindergarten. Teachers feel an increasing pressure to take more responsibility and initiatives for the children's health habits. Parents state that if more physical activity is initiated in the kindergarten, it could make children request domestic activity. Physical activity and movement concept are too abstract for children of this age to talk about: they quickly lose their focus and concentration. The new methodology of videotaping gives the researcher the chance to interpret facial expressions to capture movement, talk and actions, and to make a distinction among children, as they tend to interrupt each other. However, this method contains a weakness, if used alone, by the fact that the shooting is only a reflection of what the video camera has recorded.

M3 - Journal article

VL - 6

SP - 28

EP - 32

JO - Pediatric obesity

JF - Pediatric obesity

SN - 2047-6302

IS - S2

ER -

ID: 325451723