2024, Vol. 11, Issue 2, Part E
Performance-based motor fitness differences between rural and urban school children: A study in Uttar Pradesh
Author(s): Jitendra Bahadur Singh and Chandrabhan Singh
Abstract:Motor fitness is an essential component of a child’s comprehensive physical development, encompassing speed, agility, balance, coordination, and endurance. Disparities in motor-fitness levels between rural and urban children may be shaped by differences in physical-activity patterns, environmental circumstances, and lifestyle behaviours.This study assessed the motor-fitness levels of schoolchildren from rural and urban backgrounds in Uttar Pradesh and examined the influence of environmental variables on performance. A total of 50 schoolchildren (25 rural, 25 urban), aged 10-14 years, were selected through stratified random sampling. Standardised tests evaluated speed (50 m sprint), agility (shuttle-run test), balance (stork-stand test), and endurance (600 m run/walk). Descriptive statistics summarised the data, and independent-samples t-tests compared groups.Results showed that rural children outperformed their urban peers in speed (p = 0.037), agility (p = 0.029), and endurance (p = 0.0002). Conversely, urban children demonstrated better balance (p = 0.017). These findings suggest that greater engagement in unstructured outdoor activities may enhance rural children’s speed, agility, and endurance, while structured training programmes available to urban children may contribute to their superior balance.
DOI: 10.22271/kheljournal.2024.v11.i6e.3815Pages: 340-342 | 107 Views 63 DownloadsDownload Full Article: Click Here
How to cite this article:
Jitendra Bahadur Singh, Chandrabhan Singh.
Performance-based motor fitness differences between rural and urban school children: A study in Uttar Pradesh. Int J Phys Educ Sports Health 2024;11(2):340-342. DOI:
https://doi.org/10.22271/kheljournal.2024.v11.i6e.3815