Authors
David McMinn, University of Aberdeen
David A. Rowe, University of Strathclyde
Shemane Murtagh, University of Strathclyde
Norah M. Nelson, University of Derby
Ivan Čuk, University of Ljubljana
Almir Atiković, University of Tuzla
Mojca Peček, University of Ljubljana
Gavin Breslin, University of Ulster
Elaine M. Murtagh, University of Limerick
Marie H. Murphy, University of Ulster
International Journal of Exercise Science 7(1) : 75-86, 2014.
DOI: 10.70252/OVTR6856
Abstract
Inequalities in health-behaviors exist between regions of Europe, along a North West/South East axis. This study investigated whether prevalence of walking to school and associated psychosocial antecedents differed between these two European regions. Participants were 1,263 children aged 7-11 years, from five countries. Children from North West Europe (n = 641) and South East Europe (n = 622) completed a school travel questionnaire that measured demographics, school commuting mode, travel companion, feelings about their local area, and Theory of Planned Behavior (TPB) variables related to walking to school. Multivariate analysis of variance was used to investigate differences in TBP variables between children from the two regions of Europe. More children from South East Europe walked to school (70.8%) compared to those in the North West (47%). For the TPB variables, a significant multivariate main effect for region was found (Wilks’ λ=.94, F (4, 1201)=20.55, pp. Inequalities in walking to school exist between European regions. Children from South East Europe walk to school more than their counterparts from the North West. However children from North West Europe display higher scores on TPB variables, suggesting that psychosocial constructs related to walking to school may not explain rates of engagement in this behaviour.
Recommended Citation
McMinn, David; Rowe, David A.; Murtagh, Shemane; Nelson, Norah M.; Čuk, Ivan; Atiković, Almir; Peček, Mojca; Breslin, Gavin; Murtagh, Elaine M.; and Murphy, Marie H. (2014) “Psychosocial factors related to children’s active school travel: A comparison of two European regions,” International Journal of Exercise Science: Vol. 7 : Iss. 1, Pages 75 – 85.
DOI: https://doi.org/10.70252/OVTR6856