new fitnessgram standards
DESCRIPTION
New FITNESSGRAM Standards. Charles B. Corbin, Ph.D. Kirk J. Cureton, Ph.D. Scott Going, Ph.D. Dolly Lambdin, Ed.D. Matthew T. Mahar, Ed.D. James R. Morrow, Jr., Ph.D. Robert P. Pangrazi, Ph.D. Russell R. Pate, Ph.D. Scientific Advisors. Sharon A. Plowman, Ph.D. Jodi Prochaska, Ph.D. - PowerPoint PPT PresentationTRANSCRIPT
NewNewFITNESSGRAM FITNESSGRAM
StandardsStandards
Scientific AdvisorsScientific Advisors
Charles B. Corbin, Ph.D.Kirk J. Cureton, Ph.D.Scott Going, Ph.D.Dolly Lambdin, Ed.D.Matthew T. Mahar, Ed.D.James R. Morrow, Jr., Ph.D.Robert P. Pangrazi, Ph.D.Russell R. Pate, Ph.D.
Sharon A. Plowman, Ph.D.Jodi Prochaska, Ph.D.Georgi Roberts, M.S.Weimo Zhu, Ph.D.
StaffCharles L. Sterling, Ed.D.Marilu D. Meredith, Ed.D.Gregory J. Welk, Ph.D.
Need for New StandardsNeed for New Standards
Aerobic CapacityExcessively high passing rates for young girlsClassification disagreement between PACER
and One Mile Run
Body CompositionStandards for very young children not
discriminatoryMuch more data for children is now available
upon which to base standards
Basis for New StandardsBasis for New Standards
Nationally representative data on children from National Health and Nutrition Survey (NHANES)
Analyses were conducted to find levels of body fatness and aerobic capacity that are associated with increased risk of metabolic syndrome
Age and Gender specific taking into account normal changes during growth and maturation
What is Metabolic Syndrome?What is Metabolic Syndrome?
Considered to have Metabolic Syndrome if you have three of the five conditions.
High blood pressureHigh fasting glucoseHigh waist circumferenceHigh triglyceridesLow HDL cholesterol
Characteristics ofCharacteristics of New Standards New Standards
Young boys and girls do not differ substantially but follow different patterns as age increases
New standards will classify children into three zones:Healthy Fitness ZoneNeeds Improvement – Some RiskNeeds Improvement – High Risk
Three zones allow messaging to be much more specific
Unique to New Body Unique to New Body Composition StandardsComposition Standards
These are not the CDC percentile standards, they are criterion standards
There will still be a Very Lean zoneBody Composition standards were
established based on levels of body fatness associated with increased risk of health problems
Levels of Body Mass Index were equated with these levels of body fatness
Body Composition for FemalesBody Composition for Females
Female Body Fat Standards
05
1015202530354045
5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 >17Age in Years
% B
ody
Fat
HFZ NI-Some Risk NI-High Risk Current
HFZ
NI-Some Risk
NI-High Risk
Very Lean
Body Composition for FemalesBody Composition for Females
Female BMI Standards
1012141618202224262830
5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 >17Age in Years
BM
I
Healthy Fitness Zone NI-Some Risk NI-High Risk Current
HFZ
NI-High Risk
NI-Some Risk
Very Lean
Body Composition for MalesBody Composition for Males
Male Body Fat Standards
05
1015202530354045
5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 >17Age in Years
% B
od
y F
at
HFZ NI-Some Risk NI-High Risk Current
HFZ
NI-High Risk
Very Lean
NI-Some Risk
Body Composition for MalesBody Composition for Males
Male BMI Standards
10
12
14
16
18
20
22
24
26
28
30
5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 >17
Age
BM
I
Healthy Fitness Zone NI-Some Risk NI-High Risk Current
NI-High Risk
NI-Some Risk
HFZ
Very Lean
Unique to New Aerobic Unique to New Aerobic Capacity StandardsCapacity Standards
All output will be expressed as Aerobic Capacity (VO2max) rather than as PACER laps or One Mile Run time.
Calculation of Aerobic Capacity requires the input of height and weight – Body Mass Index is a very critical factor in one’s ability to perform aerobically. Without BMI many students may be classified incorrectly.
Aerobic Capacity (VOAerobic Capacity (VO2max2max))
for Females for Females
Female Aerobic Capacity
3032343638404244464850
10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 >17
Age in Years
Aer
ob
ic C
apac
ity
NI- Some Risk Healthy Fitness Zone Previous Standards
HFZ
NI-High Risk
NI-Some Risk
Aerobic Capacity (VOAerobic Capacity (VO2max2max) )
for Males for Males
Male Aerobic Capacity
3032343638404244464850
10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17
Age in Years
Aer
ob
ic C
apac
ity
NI-Some Risk Healthy Fitness Zone Previous Standards
HFZ
NI-Some Risk
NI-High Risk
Aerobic Capacity (VOAerobic Capacity (VO2max2max) )
Males vs. FemalesMales vs. Females
30
32
34
36
38
40
42
44
46
48
50
Girl's NI 37.3 37.3 37 36.6 36.3 36 35.8 35.7 35.3
Girl's HFZ 40.2 40.2 40.1 39.7 39.4 39.1 38.9 38.8 38.6
Boy's NI 37.3 37.3 37.6 38.6 39.6 40.6 41.1 41.2 41.2
Boy's HFZ 40.2 40.2 40.3 41.4 42.5 43.6 44.1 44.2 44.3
10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 >17
How Will the New Standards How Will the New Standards Change Test AdministrationChange Test Administration
Test administration does not changeThe test items are still the sameThe data that is entered in the computer
is the same
The one thing that will be different is that motivation for children on the aerobic test cannot be based on how much they have to do. Children will have to “do their best”
Changes will show up when you print reports – group and individual
How Do I Get the New StandardsHow Do I Get the New Standards
Posted at www.fitnessgram.netIn version 8.6 and 9.1 of the
FITNESSGRAM software