Method: This study analyzed 844 activity diaries recorded by elementary and middle school students aged 11 to 14 from Seoul and Kyonggi in Korea. The data were collected using a Ko-MARCA (Korean version of the multimedia activity recall for children and adolescent), which were tested reliability and validity.
Analysis/Results: The data were analyzed using SPSS version 18.0 program. Frequency analysis and one-way ANOVA were used to examine differences. Alpha was set at .05. Overall, boys reported higher hard (boys: 22.05±12.02, girls: 10.24±9.66, p=.036), very hard (boys: 12.05±15.34, girls: 4.49±9.39, p=.012), moderate-to-vigorous physical activity (MVPA, boys: 106.09±93.57, girls: 63±35.12, p=.041) in minute, and physical activity level (PALs, boys: 1.62±0.21, girls: 1.49±0.16, p=.037) than girls. All time of intensity-related activity decreased with age. Sleeping time also decreased with age and there was no significantly difference between genders.
Conclusions: These findings suggest that age- and gender-related activity patterns on school days vary within middle school students. This may relate biological, social, or/and school curriculum factors.