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Test-retest reliability of student-administered health-related fitness tests in school settings

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posted on 2020-06-18, 10:50 authored by Brendan T. O'Keeffe, Alan Edward Donnelly, CIARAN MAC DONNCHACIARAN MAC DONNCHA
Purpose: To examine the test-retest reliability of student-administered (SA) health-related fitness tests in school settings and to compare indices of reliability with those taken by trained research-assistants. Methods: Participants (n = 86; age: 13.43 [0.33] y) were divided into 2 groups, SA (n = 45, girls = 26) or research-assistant administered (RA; n = 41, girls = 21). The SA group had their measures taken by 8 students (age: 15.59 [0.56] y, girls = 4), and the RA group had their measures taken by 8 research-assistants (age: 21.21 [1.38], girls = 5). Tests were administered twice by both groups, 1 week apart. Tests included body mass index, handgrip strength, standing broad jump, isometric plank hold, 90° push-up, 4 × 10-m shuttle run, back-saver sit and reach, and blood pressure. Results: Intraclass correlation coefficients for SA (≥.797) and RA (≥.866) groups were high, and the observed systematic error (Bland-Altman plot) between test 1 and test 2 was close to 0 for all tests. The coefficient of variation was less than 10% for all tests in the SA group, aside from the 90° push-up (24.3%). The SA group had a marginally lower combined mean coefficient of variation across all tests (6.5%) in comparison with the RA group (6.8%). Conclusion: This study demonstrates that, following familiarization training, SA health-related fitness tests in school-based physical education programs can be considered reliable

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History

Publication

Pediatric Exercise Science;32 (1), pp. 48-57

Publisher

Human Kinetics

Note

peer-reviewed

Other Funding information

IRC

Rights

Accepted author manuscript version reprinted, by permission, from Pediatric Exercise Science 2020 https://doi.org/10.1123/pes.2019-0166. © Human Kinetics, Inc.

Language

English

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