Missed opportunities for middle childhood: Less sport predicts increased risk for shyness in millennial girls with preschool access to bedroom television
Référence
Necsa B, Fitzpatrick C, Dubow EF, Pagani LS. (2024). Missed opportunities for middle childhood: Less sport predicts increased risk for shyness in millennial girls with preschool access to bedroom television. Global Sport Science, 3(1).
Résumé
Background and Purpose : Childhood bedroom screens represent a risk factor for negative behavioral outcomes. Childhood sport participation might be a protective factor for potential negative associations with having a bedroom screen in early childhood.
Methods : This study examines whether extracurricular sport participation in middle childhood reduces developmental risks associated with bedroom screens in boys and girls. We use a millennial birth cohort from the QLSCD. Children reported having a bedroom television at age 4 years. Parents reported child participation in sport from ages 6 to 10 years. We examine subsequent teacher-reported depressive symptoms and shyness outcomes by the end of sixth grade. We used linear regression to examine the interaction between child-reported bedroom television placement (age 4 years) and parent-reported childhood sport participation trajectories (ages 6 to 10 years) in predicting behavioral outcomes at age 12 years.
Key Results : For girls, inconsistent extracurricular sport amplified the relationship between having a preschool bedroom television and subsequent shyness (b = 0.6212, SE = 0.3245, p < 0.05), beyond individual and family characteristics.
Conclusions : Less consistent sport participation was associated with increased risk of shyness in girls having grown up with a bedroom television. These findings corroborate that extracurricular activity can be a suitable candidate for enhancing skills and social interactions.
DOI
https://doi.org/10.62836/gss.v3i1.166