Vern Seefeldt
Michigan State University
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Featured researches published by Vern Seefeldt.
Sports Medicine | 2002
Vern Seefeldt; Robert M. Malina; Michael A. Clark
AbstractA large proportion of adults in Western cultures are physically inactive, despite several decades of warnings about the potentially negative health consequences of a sedentary lifestyle. Efforts to promote physical activity have focused on identifying its determinants and designing interventions that might effectively promote regular physical activity. The multitude of factors that induce adults to initiate and maintain programmes of physical activity have been divided into those that are invariable (age, gender, race, ethnicity) and those that are presumed to be modifiable (behavioural and personality characteristics, environmental circumstances and community settings). The lack of consistency in the design, analysis and reporting of interventions in the lives of inactive or sedentary individuals has produced equivocal results. However, several social and environmental factors have systematically emerged as determinants of physical activity in adults. In ethnic minorities, the removal of barriers such as unaffordable facilities and unavailable childcare, high crime rates, fear for personal safety and culturally inappropriate activities are of primary importance. Social support from family, peers, communities and healthcare providers has resulted in modest improvements across cultures, ages and genders in selected settings, but the definition of specific interventions and their outcomes deserve additional attention. Longitudinal studies indicate that components of physical fitness are relatively transitory, with low to modest correlations between physical activity and measures of physical fitness in childhood and adolescence and in adulthood. Attempts to explain the activity behaviour of adults by applying various theories in programmes of intervention have also produced mixed results. Successful interventions tailor programmes to individual needs, account for personal levels of fitness, allow for personal control of the activity and its outcomes, and provide for social support by family, peers and communities. The initiation and maintenance of regular physical activity in adults depends on a multitude of biological and sociocultural variables that demand attention across the lifespan.
Research Quarterly. American Alliance for Health, Physical Education and Recreation | 1976
Conrad Milne; Vern Seefeldt; Philip Reuschlein
Abstract Black and white children (N = 553) in kindergarten, grade one, and grade two, as part of a total test battery were tested on items of agility, speed, power, flexibility, and endurance. An ANOVA design was employed for both equal and unequal cell frequencies to determine the effects of grade, sex, and race on gross motor performance. Significant (p < .01) improvements were found at each grade for speed, power, and endurance items; males had significantly better performances (p < .01) than females on all items with the exception of flexibility; black children had significantly (p < .01) lower values than white children in the speed item at each grade level.
Journal of Intellectual Disability Research | 2008
G. L. Rarick; Vern Seefeldt
Pediatric Exercise Science | 1989
Vern Seefeldt; Paul Vogel
The Journal of Physical Education, Recreation & Dance | 1984
Vern Seefeldt
Archive | 1986
Vern Seefeldt; Paul Vogel
Journal of Intellectual Disability Research | 1979
Wm. Cameron Chumlea; Robert M. Malina; G. L. Rarick; Vern Seefeldt
Research Quarterly for Exercise and Sport | 1987
Vern Seefeldt; Paul Vogel
The Journal of Physical Education, Recreation & Dance | 1992
Vern Seefeldt
The Journal of Physical Education, Recreation & Dance | 1987
Vern Seefeldt