Gymnastik- och idrottshögskolan, GIH

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Hoy, S. (2025). Interdisciplinära perspektiv på förändring och ungas fysiskt aktiva liv i skolmiljöer. In: : . Paper presented at SVEBI-konferens 2025 (Svensk Förening för Beteende- och Samhällsvetenskaplig Idrottsforskning), Örebro Universitet, Örebro. 26-27 november..
Open this publication in new window or tab >>Interdisciplinära perspektiv på förändring och ungas fysiskt aktiva liv i skolmiljöer
2025 (Swedish)Conference paper, Oral presentation with published abstract (Refereed)
Abstract [sv]

Skolan lyfts ofta fram i forskning som en ideal plats för att främja fysisk aktivitet bland unga, både i Sverige och internationellt. Men bakom denna till synes självklara idé döljer sig en komplex väv av antaganden, värderingar och normer. Olika forskningsfält närmar sig frågan på olika sätt: vissa fokuserar på att öka elevernas rörelse genom specifika insatser, andra betonar lärande och meningsskapande, medan vissa forskare lyfter fram frågor om makt, rättvisa och inkludering. 

I min avhandling undersöker jag hur skolmiljöer för fysisk aktivitet förstås och formas inom olika akademiska diskurser. Genom ett metaperspektiv – där fyra vetenskapliga artiklar ställts sida vid sida – analyseras hur forskningsfälten påverkas av grundläggande antaganden om verklighet, kunskap och värde. Fokus har särskilt legat på tre forskningsområden: interventionsforskning, pedagogisk forskning och kritisk forskning. 

Analysen visar att skolan som sammanhang kan förstås på tre olika sätt: som en (o)effektiv plats där man försöker påverka elevernas vanor, som en miljö där elever och lärare tillsammans skapar mening, och som en arena där maktstrukturer kan förstärkas eller utmanas. Dessa perspektiv påverkar hur fysisk aktivitet definieras, varför det anses viktig och hur det bör studeras. 

Trots skillnaderna mellan akademiska diskurser och forskningsfält visar avhandlingen att det finns möjligheter till samverkan. Att göra skolmiljöer mer effektiva, meningsfulla och rättvisa behöver inte stå i konflikt – tvärtom kan dessa ambitioner stödja varandra. Avhandlingen lyfter därför fram vikten av reflexivitet och dialog mellan olika discipliner och akademiska diskurser. Den erbjuder inga färdiga svar, utan fungerar som en inbjudan till gemensamt utforskande av hur framtidens forskning om fysisk aktivitet i skolan kan utvecklas, där diskussion kring förändringsprocesser står i fokus. 

Keywords
fysisk aktivitet, skolmiljö, ungdomar, kontext, relationell teori, förändringsprocess
National Category
Public Health, Global Health and Social Medicine Sport and Fitness Sciences Pedagogy Child and Youth Studies Health and Diet Studies in Social Sciences Sociology (Excluding Social Work, Social Anthropology, Demography and Criminology)
Research subject
Social Sciences/Humanities
Identifiers
urn:nbn:se:gih:diva-8910 (URN)
Conference
SVEBI-konferens 2025 (Svensk Förening för Beteende- och Samhällsvetenskaplig Idrottsforskning), Örebro Universitet, Örebro. 26-27 november.
Available from: 2025-12-15 Created: 2025-12-15 Last updated: 2025-12-17Bibliographically approved
Hoy, S., Lunde, C., Larsson, H., Ekblom, Ö., Helgadóttir, B. & Nyberg, G. (2025). Matrices of (dis)advantage - school segregation and social inequities in adolescent physical activity from an intersectionality approach. Sport, Education and Society, 30(9), 1210-1226
Open this publication in new window or tab >>Matrices of (dis)advantage - school segregation and social inequities in adolescent physical activity from an intersectionality approach
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2025 (English)In: Sport, Education and Society, ISSN 1357-3322, E-ISSN 1470-1243, Vol. 30, no 9, p. 1210-1226Article in journal (Refereed) Published
Abstract [en]

Tackling inequities and inequalities related to adolescents' engagement in physical activity and sport is highlighted in recent research. However, rarely addressed are the issues of intersecting hierarchal systems of power that interlocks on both micro and macro levels, affecting how physical activity patterns express social memberships across several contexts. Therefore, this study aimed to explore how adolescents' physical activity during leisure and school hours expressed intersecting social positions and institutional school segregation, using a critical intersectionality approach. Nested in a larger study, a cross-sectional design was applied, including a total of 1139 adolescents in grade 7 (age 13-14) from Swedish school settings. Data was retrieved from surveys, accelerometers, and national registries. Descriptive statistics and stratified analyses were performed to examine levels of moderate-to-vigorous physical activity (MVPA) during school and leisure hours connected to intersecting social positions and school segregation contexts. The statistical analysis indicated that MVPA, to varying extents, expressed both individual social position and school segregation across the sub-groups explored. Inequalities in MVPA were closer connected to intercategorical gendered social positions in school contexts, rather than during leisure hours. However, there were significant intracategorical differences among girls during leisure hours across segregated contexts. Our results suggest that the power structures of school segregation together with educational and sport logics intertwined seem to 'disadvantage' especially girls with a non-ethnically Swedish background. Yet, it also highlights a need to problematize 'the absent minority girl' in equity focused physical activity research. This study emphasizes how an intersectionality approach can shed light on social (dis)advantages connected to adolescents' MVPA from two poles of power, contributing to a more comprehensive and critical understanding of social inequities in physical activity and health research.

Place, publisher, year, edition, pages
Taylor & Francis, 2025
Keywords
Physical activity, intersectionality, social position, school segregation, gender, adolescents, equity, health inequalities
National Category
Public Health, Global Health and Social Medicine Sport and Fitness Sciences
Research subject
Social Sciences/Humanities; Medicine/Technology
Identifiers
urn:nbn:se:gih:diva-8794 (URN)10.1080/13573322.2025.2531381 (DOI)001542637000001 ()
Funder
Knowledge Foundation, 20180040
Note

This is an Open Access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/), which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited. The terms on which this article has been published allow the posting of the Accepted Manuscript in a repository by the author(s) or with their consent. 

Available from: 2025-08-29 Created: 2025-08-29 Last updated: 2025-11-05
Hoy, S., Thedin Jakobsson, B., Lunde, C. & Larsson, H. (2025). Negotiating adolescents' physically active life during the school day.. Frontiers in Sports and Active Living, 7, Article ID 1505189.
Open this publication in new window or tab >>Negotiating adolescents' physically active life during the school day.
2025 (English)In: Frontiers in Sports and Active Living, E-ISSN 2624-9367, Vol. 7, article id 1505189Article in journal (Refereed) Published
Abstract [en]

INTRODUCTION: School contexts are addressed as important for encouraging adolescents' physically active lives, where whole-school approaches have emerged as globally recognized strategies. Recent research emphasizes the need to further understand the contexts relating to physical activity (PA) and strategies to enhance students' and staff's agency in relation to PA opportunities. In the current study, we explore early adolescent students' daily PA from an ecological perspective, examining the negotiated opportunities and barriers to PA within differing school contexts and how individual agency is expressed in relation to PA.

METHODS: This ethnographic collective case study was conducted in four Swedish middle schools that varied in size, resource denseness, and whether they were independent or public providers. The main empirical material was collected through ∼720 h of fieldwork during a school year, along with 86 interviews involving 50 students and 52 staff members. A comparative reflexive thematic analytical approach was used.

RESULTS AND DISCUSSION: The transition between educational stages brought changes that influenced students and staff's agency related to PA. Against this backdrop, the analytical findings were organized into four themes. Students' PA was negotiated against the logic associated with being a "good" middle school student and teacher. Realizing daily PA also stood in relation to an anything-is-possible spirit, which was pitted against the lack of an organizational structure and high hopes for PA outcomes-creating a tension between vision and practicality, where student voices were overlooked. While all four schools claimed a commitment to providing PA opportunities for all, students negotiated their agency based on gender, age, social status, and previous experiences with traditional sports, which dominated recess activities. Students' PA during and after school was closely interconnected, especially expressed in physical education and health classes. This connection often benefited already active students in resource-rich environments while marginalizing those who were less active, further creating an uneven playing field regarding PA opportunities. Various schools shared challenges connected to students' daily PA, but challenges differed between and within schools. Future school policies, practices, and research should aim at addressing cultural, structural, and material dimensions focusing on sustainability, equity, and pedagogical issues, enabling young people to develop autonomy and ability to shape their PA experiences in ways that are meaningful to them.

Place, publisher, year, edition, pages
Frontiers Media S.A., 2025
Keywords
agency, ethnography, health equity, health promotion, physical activity, school context, whole school approach, youth
National Category
Educational Work Sport and Fitness Sciences
Research subject
Social Sciences/Humanities
Identifiers
urn:nbn:se:gih:diva-8636 (URN)10.3389/fspor.2025.1505189 (DOI)001448732800001 ()40125313 (PubMedID)2-s2.0-105000477259 (Scopus ID)
Note

This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (CC BY). The use, distribution or reproduction in other forums is permitted, provided the original author(s) and the copyright owner(s) are credited and that the original publication in this journal is cited, in accordance with accepted academic practice. No use, distribution or reproduction is permitted which does not comply with these terms.

Available from: 2025-04-04 Created: 2025-04-04 Last updated: 2025-09-17
Hoy, S. (2025). Physical Activity Put Into Context: Interdisciplinary Perspectives on Youth’s Physically Active Lives in School. (Doctoral dissertation). Stockholm: Gymnastik- och idrottshögskolan, GIH
Open this publication in new window or tab >>Physical Activity Put Into Context: Interdisciplinary Perspectives on Youth’s Physically Active Lives in School
2025 (English)Doctoral thesis, comprehensive summary (Other academic)
Abstract [en]

Numerous scholars within sport and health sciences have emphasized the critical role of the school environment in shaping young people’s physically active lives. While this PhD project addresses this specific dimension, the inquiry is also situated within wider academic discourses (ways of thinking, speaking, and producing knowledge within scholarly communities) concerning adolescents’ physical activity in school settings. School contexts are often narrated as ‘ideal’ for promoting young people’s physically active lives, with physical activity research carrying broader assumptions where the goal often is to prescribe movement, to get students to be more active. However, such assumptions rest on a set of foundational commitments: ontological (concerning the nature of reality), epistemological (concerning how we come to know things), and axiological (concerning values). Together, these shape our understanding of what physical activity is, how it should be studied, and why it matters. Similarly, the ways in which school contexts are portrayed – including the roles of students and staff within these spaces – are shaped differently across academic discourses, depending on the underlying commitments of interventionist, pedagogical, and critical research traditions.  As the school context emerges not merely as a backdrop but as a lived and negotiated space, whole-school and comprehensive strategies have gained traction among global agencies and physical activity scholars. These strategies emphasize holistic initiatives that span from individual to systemic levels, integrating curriculum, school culture, policies, student and staff sub-groups, and community engagement. Ecological frameworks and theories are often advocated to guide such strategies, highlighting the interplay between individual actions and broader social and environmental influences. However, the way ecological frameworks are applied varies depending on the academic discourse in which the research is situated, as different discourses engage with them from distinct perspectives. In particular, engagement with the concept of agency varies significantly. Despite their widespread use, the frameworks often lack critical perspectives, with issues such as power dynamics and equity rarely being foregrounded. These differences and omissions need to be critically examined for current and future research initiatives, particularly as scholars and agencies increasingly advocate for inter- and transdisciplinary collaborations.

The current PhD project adopts a meta-perspective, analyzing patterns in how school contexts are articulated across academic discourses. Four individual articles – each situated within different research paradigms, perspectives, or discourses – serve as illustrations of what can be learned from their juxtaposition, building on prior research. The individual articles are founded on three sub-studies: an ethnographic study combined with a social network survey, a cross-sectional study using data from surveys, accelerometers, and national registries, and a systematic review assessing school context measurements. This methodological combination is both novel and cross-paradigmatic when studying physical activity during the school day for young people in secondary school.

An analysis was conducted to explore how school contexts are constructed in relation to adolescents’ physical activity, using the included articles as the basis for inquiry. Through an examination using three analytical components – diverse goals, multiple strategies, and varied interest groups – three rhetorical patterns were generated. The patterns frame school contexts as (in)effective backdrops, as spaces of student and teacher meaning-making, and as oppressive and empowering environments. The articles were further mapped against four complex elements that shape school environments: organizational subgroups, formal structures, sociocultural aspects, and broader networks. The findings suggest that these elements are deeply intertwined across the articles, with varying degrees of emphasis and integration, providing a more nuanced understanding of the rhetorical constructions and contextual dynamics that inform physical activity research within school settings. The three patterns and how the elements are addressed adhere in different ways to interventionist, pedagogical, and critical research.

Concluding with a discussion on the potential spaces for rethinking physical activity research in school contexts, the exploration focused on where boundaries between academic discourses become more permeable – sites where interventionist, pedagogical, and critical research can coexist not through resolution, but in productive tension. Rather than seeking synthesis, the aim was to hold the perspectives in juxtaposition, allowing their distinct logics and values to interact and inform one another. This opens up opportunities for multidimensional thinking, addressing effectiveness, meaningfulness, and equity. The conceptualization of agency and participatory methodologies is central, which are well-established yet increasingly relevant concepts that offer spirited passageways for advancing physical activity research in school contexts. By attending to the relational and spatiotemporal dimensions of agency, and foregrounding the voices of students, staff, and school communities, the thesis is not thought of as a solution. Rather, it is positioned as a strategic entry point for inter- and transdisciplinary collaboration – an invitation to play with and imagine futures shaped through dialogue, reflexivity, and shared inquiry.

Place, publisher, year, edition, pages
Stockholm: Gymnastik- och idrottshögskolan, GIH, 2025. p. 171 s.
Series
Avhandlingsserie för Gymnastik- och idrottshögskolan ; 39
National Category
Educational Sciences Sport and Fitness Sciences Public Health, Global Health and Social Medicine
Research subject
Social Sciences/Humanities
Identifiers
urn:nbn:se:gih:diva-8810 (URN)978-91-990254-0-7 (ISBN)
Public defence
2025-10-17, Aulan, GIH, Lidingövägen 1, Stockholm, 09:00 (English)
Opponent
Supervisors
Funder
Knowledge Foundation, 20180040
Note

The current PhD project is part of the larger project “Physical Activity for Healthy Brain Functions in School Youth,” which ran from 2018 to 2023 at the Swedish School of Sport and Health Sciences (GIH), funded by the Knowledge Foundation (grant 20180040).

Available from: 2025-09-17 Created: 2025-09-17 Last updated: 2025-10-21Bibliographically approved
Hoy, S. (2025). School contexts’ promotion of adolescents' physical activity as a means of responding to the intensified well-being agenda: A critical cross-paradigmatic analysis. In: ISBNPA 2025 Program and abstract book: . Paper presented at The International Society of Behavioral Nutrition and Physical Activity (ISBNPA), 11-14 June 20025, Auckland, New Zealand.
Open this publication in new window or tab >>School contexts’ promotion of adolescents' physical activity as a means of responding to the intensified well-being agenda: A critical cross-paradigmatic analysis
2025 (English)In: ISBNPA 2025 Program and abstract book, 2025Conference paper, Poster (with or without abstract) (Refereed)
Abstract [en]

Recent research has urged us to rethink how we promote ‘more’ physical activity in school settings. However, schools are also arenas of competing paradigmatic interests among scientific communities. This raises the question: how are school contexts for adolescents’ physical activity conceptualized and articulated as a response to the well-being agenda across interventionist, pedagogical, and critical research perspectives?

How Physical Activity and School Settings Are Framed – School contexts are often narrated as ‘ideal’ for promoting young people’s physically active lives, with physical activity research often carrying broader assumptions where (often) the goal is to prescribe movement, to get students to be more active. However, such assumptions are underpinned by a set of onto- episteme-axiological commitments – about what physical activity is, how it should be studied, and why it matters. ​​​Schools are increasingly seen as dynamic spaces for promoting physical activity through whole-school and comprehensive strategies that integrate curriculum, culture, policy, and community. While ecological frameworks are commonly used to guide these efforts, their application varies across academic discourses and often overlooks critical issues like power and equity. Addressing these gaps is vital as the field moves toward more interdisciplinary and inclusive approaches. ​

Ways of Knowing, Ways of Doing – ​This project adopts a meta-perspective, and methodologically, it combines ethnography, social network analysis, cross-sectional data, and systematic review – offering a novel, cross-paradigmatic approach to studying adolescents’ physical activity in Swedish secondary schools.​​Three rhetorical patterns were identified in how school contexts are constructed in relation to adolescents’ physical activity: (i) as an (in)effective backdrop focused on behavior change, (ii) as meaning-centered spaces shaped by student-teacher interactions, and (iii) as sites of either oppression or empowerment. These patterns reflect differing priorities – highlighting the complex and contested nature of promoting physical activity in schools.

Future Pathways Forward?​ – This project identifies spaces and offer pathways for collaborative, multidimensional research grounded in effectiveness, meaningfulness, and equity – foregrounding agency and co-creation through participatory methodologies, in reframing of physical activity research.

Keywords
physical activity, school context, theory, paradigms
National Category
Pedagogy Sociology (Excluding Social Work, Social Anthropology, Demography and Criminology) Public Health, Global Health and Social Medicine
Research subject
Social Sciences/Humanities
Identifiers
urn:nbn:se:gih:diva-8909 (URN)
Conference
The International Society of Behavioral Nutrition and Physical Activity (ISBNPA), 11-14 June 20025, Auckland, New Zealand
Funder
Knowledge Foundation, 20180040
Available from: 2025-12-15 Created: 2025-12-15 Last updated: 2025-12-17Bibliographically approved
Hoy, S., Norman, Å., Larsson, H. & de la Haye, K. (2024). Agents of change? Exploring relations among school staff connected to daily physical activity promotion in a Swedish secondary school from a social network perspective. In: : . Paper presented at AIESEP - The International Organization for Physical Education in Higher Education - International Conference, Jyväskylä, Finland, May 13-17th 2024.
Open this publication in new window or tab >>Agents of change? Exploring relations among school staff connected to daily physical activity promotion in a Swedish secondary school from a social network perspective
2024 (English)Conference paper, Oral presentation with published abstract (Refereed)
Abstract [en]

Earlier research proposes that a school’s social environment among staff functions as an important facilitator for physical activity policy/curriculum dissemination, such as support among colleagues, physical activity ideas shared between teachers, as well as having individuals as ‘agents of change’. It is often proclaimed that physical education teachers inhabit these ‘agentic’ roles concerning physical activity and health promotion targeting youth during the school day. Despite this, little seems to have been researched concerning the agentic roles of physical educators and other school staff and their social networks within the school organization. Consequently, this study aims to explore relations among school staff regarding daily physical activity promotion in a Swedish secondary school from a social network perspective.  

This case study applied a convergent mixed method design with an emergent approach, where the qualitative ethnographic data and quantitative survey data were collected around the same time. Data was collected during one full school year from school staff at one secondary school (students aged 12-16 years, grades 7-9) in a larger urban area in Sweden. The sample included all staff within the school that interacts with secondary students, which involves school management, staff and teachers who are responsible for secondary students at some point during the school day, involved in student health or are engaged in physical activity, as well as physical education and health teachers. Our empirical material consists of field notes (180 hours of fieldwork), transcriptions from interviews (12 staff), as well as survey nomination data (23 participants). Qualitative data has been analyzed through a reflexive thematic analysis, and survey data through a social network analysis, and then further combined in an integrated analysis.  

Preliminary results of the current study show that the school staff’s social networks are characterized in different ways within close everyday-discussion colleague networks, peer networks concerning physical activity, and advisory networks regarding physical activity. In the everyday discussions among staff on topics regarding secondary students, physical education teachers are positioned as isolated islands in the networks. While physical education teachers hold a somewhat key role relating to discussions about physical activity, these discussions also go through other, and sometimes more influential, agents. Conflictingly, the physical education teachers still picture themselves as physical activity ambassadors for students’ daily physical activity. This picture is also shared by other school staff. At this school, the results shed light on important issues concerning how the social (network) context among school staff helps promote and inhibit physical activities for the students. 

Keywords
social networks, valuing physical activity, school organisation, health promotion
National Category
Peace and Conflict Studies Other Social Sciences not elsewhere specified Sport and Fitness Sciences
Research subject
Social Sciences/Humanities
Identifiers
urn:nbn:se:gih:diva-8212 (URN)
Conference
AIESEP - The International Organization for Physical Education in Higher Education - International Conference, Jyväskylä, Finland, May 13-17th 2024
Funder
Knowledge Foundation
Available from: 2024-05-16 Created: 2024-05-16 Last updated: 2025-09-16Bibliographically approved
Hoy, S., Larsson, H., Kjellenberg, K., Nyberg, G., Ekblom, Ö. & Helgadóttir, B. (2024). Gendered relations? Associations between Swedish parents, siblings, and adolescents' time spent sedentary and physically active. Frontiers in Sports and Active Living, 6, Article ID 1236848.
Open this publication in new window or tab >>Gendered relations? Associations between Swedish parents, siblings, and adolescents' time spent sedentary and physically active
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2024 (English)In: Frontiers in Sports and Active Living, E-ISSN 2624-9367, Vol. 6, article id 1236848Article in journal (Refereed) Published
Abstract [en]

Introduction

The family is assumed to be fundamental in youth socialization processes and development, connected to social and cultural practices such as healthy lifestyles and physical activity. However, gender patterns in physical activity among adolescents and the structural drivers of gender inequality (e.g., parentage and siblingship) are poorly understood. The aim of this study was to explore further how gender structures relate to adolescents' time spent being sedentary and physically active, using contemporary gender theory.

Methods

This cross-sectional study involved 1,139 adolescents aged 13-14 and their parents, including 815 mothers and 572 fathers. Physical activity and time spent sedentary were assessed through accelerometry among adolescents and through a self-report questionnaire for parents validated against accelerometry.

Results

The results showed significant relationships between mothers' moderate-to-vigorous physical activity (MVPA) and girls' MVPA on weekdays and weekends, and fathers' MVPA was significantly related to girls' MVPA on weekdays. Our results imply that the relationship between Swedish parents' and adolescent girls' physical activity in higher intensities are to some extent gendered practices. However, time spent sedentary does not seem to show any patterns of being performed according to binary ideas of gender. Further, our exploratory analyses suggest that these results somewhat intersect with parents' educational level and relate to intra-categorical aspects of doing gender. The results also indicate slight gendered patterns in the “doing” of brotherhood for time spent sedentary, however, for boys only on weekends.

Discussion 

The study contributes to the understanding of gender norms as constraints and enablers for adolescents' participation in physical activity. The results can spur public health and physical activity research to apply a contemporary gender theory approach, and to expand the research agenda connected to what relates to gender inequalities in physical activity practices.

Place, publisher, year, edition, pages
Frontiers Media S.A., 2024
Keywords
E-PABS, EPABS, hjärnhälsa, brain health
National Category
Public Health, Global Health and Social Medicine Sport and Fitness Sciences
Research subject
Medicine/Technology
Identifiers
urn:nbn:se:gih:diva-8126 (URN)10.3389/fspor.2024.1236848 (DOI)001176893700001 ()38455967 (PubMedID)
Note

Finansierad av COOP, Skandia, Skanska, IKEA, Generation PEP samt Konsumentföreningen i Stockholm.

Available from: 2024-02-22 Created: 2024-02-22 Last updated: 2025-09-16
Hoy, S., Norman, Å., Larsson, H. & de la Haye, K. (2024). Implementing physical activity in secondary school: a case study of school staffs’ networks, knowledge, self-perceived competence and confidence in one's own capability. In: : . Paper presented at SUNBELT Conference, International Network for Social Network Analysis (INSNA). Heriot-Watt University, Edinburgh
Open this publication in new window or tab >>Implementing physical activity in secondary school: a case study of school staffs’ networks, knowledge, self-perceived competence and confidence in one's own capability
2024 (English)Conference paper, Oral presentation with published abstract (Refereed)
Abstract [en]

Increased possibilities for physical activity among students during the school day is advocated for by many. Especially secondary schools seem to struggle with this task, with adolescence being a period of declining levels of physical activity and increased demands at school. School-based physical activity policies and programs often relies on school staff and teachers to deliver these innovations/initiatives. Earlier research shows that teachers’ and other staffs’ confidence to deliver physical activities for students are important for the adoption and implementation of physical activity programs outside of ordinary physical education class. However, to our knowledge, there are no earlier attempts to investigate how this relates to intraorganizational networks among school staff. Consequently, this study aims to explore school staff and teachers’ networks, knowledge, self-perceived competence and confidence in one's own capability regarding implementing daily physical activity for students in a Swedish secondary school. This case study applied a convergent mixed method design with an emergent approach, where the qualitative ethnographic data and quantitative survey data were collected around the same time. Data was collected during one full school year from teachers and other school staff at one secondary school (students aged 12-16 years, grades 7-9) in a larger urban area in Sweden. The sample included all staff within the school that interacts with secondary students, which involves school management, teachers and others who are responsible for secondary students at some point during the school day, involved in student health or are engaged in physical activity, as well as physical education and health teachers. Our empirical material consists of field notes (180 hours of fieldwork), transcriptions from interviews (12 staff), as well as survey questions and nomination data (23 participants). Analysis is ongoing; where qualitative data is being analyzed through a reflexive thematic analysis, and survey data through a social network analysis, combined in an integrated analysis. Our study contributes with insights on how school staff and teacher-level knowledge and capabilities may contribute to implementation success within school-based physical activity initiatives and policies. Given the unique mixed-method network design of our study, the study also provides important knowledge on how network characteristics and relations contribute further as facilitating or hindering factors for implementation of physical activities in school contexts. Considering the long-term sustainability and quality of school-based physical activity initiatives; teachers and staff networks and their capabilities are important aspects to contemplate.

Place, publisher, year, edition, pages
Heriot-Watt University, Edinburgh: , 2024
Keywords
social networks, school organisation, physical activity, youth, implementation, capabilities
National Category
Educational Sciences Sociology Health Sciences Sport and Fitness Sciences
Research subject
Social Sciences/Humanities
Identifiers
urn:nbn:se:gih:diva-8299 (URN)
Conference
SUNBELT Conference, International Network for Social Network Analysis (INSNA)
Funder
Knowledge Foundation
Available from: 2024-08-06 Created: 2024-08-06 Last updated: 2025-09-16Bibliographically approved
Welford, P., Östh, J., Hoy, S., Rossell, S. L., Pascoe, M., Diwan, V. & Hallgren, M. (2023). Effects of Yoga and Aerobic Exercise on Verbal Fluency in Physically Inactive Older Adults: Randomized Controlled Trial (FitForAge).. Clinical Interventions in Aging, 18, 533-545
Open this publication in new window or tab >>Effects of Yoga and Aerobic Exercise on Verbal Fluency in Physically Inactive Older Adults: Randomized Controlled Trial (FitForAge).
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2023 (English)In: Clinical Interventions in Aging, ISSN 1176-9092, E-ISSN 1178-1998, Vol. 18, p. 533-545Article in journal (Refereed) Published
Abstract [en]

PURPOSE: To compare the effects on verbal fluency of a supported yoga-based exercise intervention to an aerobic exercise intervention and a wait-list control group.

PARTICIPANTS AND METHODS: Eighty-two physically-inactive but otherwise healthy adults (mean age 72.5 years, range 65-85, 77% female) were recruited into a 12-week, three-group, parallel randomized controlled trial. Participants were supported to complete ≥3 Hatha yoga classes per/week or ≥3 structured aerobic exercise sessions/week. A wait-list control group continued usual daily activities only. Verbal fluency, including total-FAS, animals, and verbs, was assessed before and after interventions. Group effects were assessed using analysis of covariance (ANCOVA).

RESULTS: Twenty-seven participants were randomized to yoga, 29 to aerobic exercise and 26 to a waitlist. At 12-week follow-up, compared to baseline, there were increases in mean total-FAS in the yoga (+5.0 words, p=0.002) and aerobic exercise groups (+6.6 words, p=0.004). Mean total-FAS in the wait-list control group remained stable (-0.5 words, p=0.838). There were medium-magnitude estimated treatment effects on total-FAS for yoga versus wait-list control and aerobic exercise versus wait-list control: Hedges' g=0.51 (p=0.213) and 0.57 (p=0.098) respectively. In addition, small-to-medium magnitude estimated treatment effects were seen on animals and verbs for yoga versus wait-list control and aerobic exercise versus wait-list control: g=0.28 (p=0.155), 0.19 (p=0.766) and 0.50 (p=0.085), 0.59 (p=0.233) respectively.

CONCLUSION: Participation in yoga or aerobic exercise was associated with estimated improvements in verbal fluency compared to a non-active control group. Yoga and aerobic exercise may be promising approaches by which to promote cognitive function among older adults.

TRIAL REGISTRATION: DRKS00015093, U1111-1217-4248.

Place, publisher, year, edition, pages
Dove Press, 2023
Keywords
cognitive aging, executive function, healthy aging, physical activity, verbal fluency test, E-PABS, EPABS, hjärnhälsa, brain health
National Category
Physiotherapy Geriatrics
Research subject
Medicine/Technology
Identifiers
urn:nbn:se:gih:diva-7585 (URN)10.2147/CIA.S359185 (DOI)000961670200001 ()37021083 (PubMedID)
Funder
Forte, Swedish Research Council for Health, Working Life and Welfare, 2017-00024
Available from: 2023-04-21 Created: 2023-04-21 Last updated: 2025-09-16
Hoy, S., Thedin Jakobsson, B., Lunde, C. & Larsson, H. (2023). Ett fysiskt aktivt liv? En etnografisk komparativ flerfallsstudie av förhandlingar och handlingsutrymmen under skoldagen. In: Program Svensk förening för beteende- och samhällsvetenskaplig idrottsforskning (SVEBI) årliga idrottsvetenskapliga konferens: . Paper presented at SVEBI 2023, 23-24 november, Göteborg (pp. 18).
Open this publication in new window or tab >>Ett fysiskt aktivt liv? En etnografisk komparativ flerfallsstudie av förhandlingar och handlingsutrymmen under skoldagen
2023 (Swedish)In: Program Svensk förening för beteende- och samhällsvetenskaplig idrottsforskning (SVEBI) årliga idrottsvetenskapliga konferens, 2023, p. 18-Conference paper, Oral presentation with published abstract (Other academic)
Abstract [sv]

Introduktion

Skolmiljöer presenteras ofta som en stor del av ’lösningen’ på att få unga att engagera sig i rörelse, eftersom i princip alla unga befinner sig i skolan under en tredjedel av dagen. Även om hälsofördelarna med fysisk aktivitet är väl dokumenterade, är anledningarna till att vara fysiskt aktiv eller inte relaterade till både individuella och kontextuella strukturer hos skolan som institution och de som befinner sig där under en skoldag. I den svenska läroplanen för grundskolan står det framskrivet i den allmänna delen att ”skolan ska också sträva efter att ge alla elever daglig fysisk aktivitet inom ramen för hela skoldagen” (Läroplan för grundskolan, förskoleklassen och fritidshemmet [Lgr22], 2022). Trots detta verkar många skolor ha utmaningar med att ta sig an denna uppgift, och strävan efter att ge alla elever daglig fysisk aktivitet i skolmiljöer är mycket mer komplex än vid en första anblick.  Denna studie avser att studera hinder och möjligheter för ungas fysiskt aktiva liv under skoldagen, genom att undersöka skolans vardagsliv i relation till rörelse under ett läsår i fyra högstadieskolor.

Syfte och teoretisk ram

Syftet med denna etnografiska studie är att utforska de olika skolornas uppfattningar och praktiker kopplat till fysisk aktivitet under skoldagen, och hur elever och skolpersonal förhåller sig till möjligheter och hinder för att engagera sig i fysisk aktivitet i skolan.  I den här studien använder vi ett ekologiskt perspektiv, inspirerad av arbetet av Priestley, Biesta och Robinson (2015). Teorin betonar vikten av både individuella kapaciteter och kontextuella dimensioner, men framförallt mötet däremellan, där handlingsutrymme som ett fenomen uppnås i detta samspel.  Handlandet förankras i tidigare erfarenheter och aspirerar mot framtida mål, värderingar och strävanden. På detta sätt rymmer teorin aspekter som är både relationella och temporala.

Metod

Det här en etnografisk komparativ flerfallsstudie som har utförts av ett team på fyra forskare under tre två-veckorsperioder över ett års tid i fyra svenska högstadieskolor i Storstockholms området. Fältarbetet har involverat deltagande observationer, informella samtal och semistrukturerade intervjuer med skolledning, lärare, elevhälsoteam och annan personal, samt högstadieelever (13-14 år). Främst består materialet av fältanteckningar från omkring 700 timmar av fältarbete och 86 intervjuer med 102 respondenter (50 elever och 52 personal) över de fyra skolorna. Analys av det empiriska materialet utfördes med hjälp av reflexiv tematisk analys.

Resultat och diskussion

Preliminära resultat visar att skolans struktur, logiker och miljöer tydligt påverkar möjligheterna för fysisk aktivitet under en skoldag. Ungdomsåldern under högstadiet är en period i livet där självständigheten ofta ökar. Elevers eget inflytande och delaktighet i hur de kan vara aktiva eller inte tilltar med deras utveckling i autonomi, och där fungerar fysiska aktivitetsbeteenden också som en social markör som informeras av könsrelaterade och sociokulturella strukturer. Skolans organisation förändras under högstadiet mot högre krav, större ämnesfokus och bedömning av elever, där utbildningsuppdraget och dess logiker starkt påverkar vad som värderas och prioriteras under en skoldag. Där blir rörelse, lek och (till viss del) svett ofta nedprioriterat och något oseriöst. Detta gör även att ansvarsfrågan kring ungas fysiskt aktiva liv hamnar ’mellan stolarna’ – i skolan som institution, mellan hemmet och skolan, och hos individen själv.  Framtida forskning bör vidare undersöka detta gränsland, där rörelse, hälsopromotion och skolans logiker möts, där (skol)strukturella och pedagogiska perspektiv inom folkhälsoforskning kan lyftas. Det skulle bidra till ett mer hållbart angreppssätt av rörelsefrågan i skolans miljöer.

National Category
Educational Sciences
Research subject
Social Sciences/Humanities
Identifiers
urn:nbn:se:gih:diva-8039 (URN)
Conference
SVEBI 2023, 23-24 november, Göteborg
Available from: 2024-01-09 Created: 2024-01-09 Last updated: 2025-09-16Bibliographically approved
Projects
Physical Activity for Healthy Brain Functions in School Youth [KK 20180040]; Swedish School of Sport and Health Sciences, GIH; Publications
Pensa, M., Kjellenberg, K., Heiland, E. G., Ekblom, Ö., Nyberg, G. & Helgadóttir, B. (2025). Associations between antioxidant vitamin intake and mental health in Swedish adolescents: a cross-sectional study.. European Journal of Nutrition, 64(5), Article ID 185. Kjellenberg, K., Helgadóttir, B., Ekblom, Ö. & Nyberg, G. (2025). Fitness and Screen Time at Age 13 Relates to Academic Performance at Age 16.. Acta Paediatrica, 114(7), 1691-1701Hoy, S., Lunde, C., Larsson, H., Ekblom, Ö., Helgadóttir, B. & Nyberg, G. (2025). Matrices of (dis)advantage - school segregation and social inequities in adolescent physical activity from an intersectionality approach. Sport, Education and Society, 30(9), 1210-1226Fors, E., Helgadóttir, B., Ekblom, M. M., Nyberg, G. & Noren Selinus, E. (2025). Physical activity is linked to fewer psychosomatic problems in adolescents with ADHD symptoms. Mental Health and Physical Activity, 28, Article ID 100683. Hoy, S. (2025). Physical Activity Put Into Context: Interdisciplinary Perspectives on Youth’s Physically Active Lives in School. (Doctoral dissertation). Stockholm: Gymnastik- och idrottshögskolan, GIHHoy, S. (2025). School contexts’ promotion of adolescents' physical activity as a means of responding to the intensified well-being agenda: A critical cross-paradigmatic analysis. In: ISBNPA 2025 Program and abstract book: . Paper presented at The International Society of Behavioral Nutrition and Physical Activity (ISBNPA), 11-14 June 20025, Auckland, New Zealand. Kjellenberg, K., Ng, K., Bjerkefors, A., Lund Ohlsson, M., Ekblom, Ö., Nyberg, G. & Helgadóttir, B. (2025). Swedish Adolescents With Impairments Showed Lower Levels of Physical Activity, Fitness and Sports Participation.. Acta PaediatricaHeiland, E. G., Lindh, F., Regan, C., Ekblom, Ö., Kjellenberg, K., Larsen, F. J., . . . Helgadóttir, B. (2024). A randomised crossover trial of nitrate and breakfast on prefrontal cognitive and haemodynamic response functions.. NPJ science of food, 8(1), Article ID 64. Hoy, S., Norman, Å., Larsson, H. & de la Haye, K. (2024). Agents of change? Exploring relations among school staff connected to daily physical activity promotion in a Swedish secondary school from a social network perspective. In: : . Paper presented at AIESEP - The International Organization for Physical Education in Higher Education - International Conference, Jyväskylä, Finland, May 13-17th 2024. Projektet Fysisk aktivetet för hälsosamma hjärnfunktioner bland skolungdomar, ., Helgadóttir, B. & Kjellenberg, K. (2024). Balansen mellan skärmtid, rörelse och hjärnhälsa hos unga. Stockholm: Gymnastik- och idrottshögskolan, GIH
ADT-Train: Individualized, high-intensity training for men with prostate cancer undergoing androgen deprivation therapy; Swedish School of Sport and Health Sciences, GIH
Organisations
Identifiers
ORCID iD: ORCID iD iconorcid.org/0000-0003-3676-8612

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