Ability of the Sport Education Model to Promote Healthy Lifestyles in University Students: A Randomized Controlled Trial

Author:

Liao Chun-Chin1,Hsu Chien-Huei2,Kuo Kuei-Pin3,Luo Yu-Jy1,Kao Chun-Chieh1ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Office of Physical Education, Ming Chuan University, 5 De Ming Road, Gui Shan District, Taoyuan 333321, Taiwan

2. Department of Child and Family Studies, Fu Jen Catholic University, 510, Zhongzheng Road, Xinzhuang Dist., New Taipei 242062, Taiwan

3. Office of Physical Education, National Ping-Tung University of Science and Technology, 1 Shuefu Road, Neipu, Pingtung 91201, Taiwan

Abstract

Although studies on sports performance, leadership abilities, group cohesion, and learning motivation have revealed that the sport education model contributes considerably to the development of healthy lifestyles, few studies have explored the development of healthy lifestyles from an educational intervention perspective. This study fills this gap in the literature. In addition, studies have mostly recruited elementary or middle school students; few have explored the effectiveness of sport education for college students. To fill this gap, this study conducted quasi-experimental research on university students by using different teaching strategies, with healthy lifestyles as the dependent variable. The research participants consisted of 95 students from Ming Chuang University distributed to an experimental group or control group. The experimental group was taught using the sport education model; the control group was taught using direct instruction. The results indicate that the sport education model has a stronger ability to promote healthy lifestyles than conventional teaching. Additionally, the results suggest that teachers should apply specific teaching strategies to cultivate and reinforce exercise habits and healthy behaviors among students. On the basis of the results, the researchers suggest that physical education teachers establish effective teaching strategies and promote healthy lifestyles to students.

Funder

MOE Teaching Practice Research Program in Taiwan

Publisher

MDPI AG

Subject

Health, Toxicology and Mutagenesis,Public Health, Environmental and Occupational Health

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