The purpose of this study was to assess PA levels and physical condition (PC) related to perceived barriers (PB) and limiting factors for PA practice in a randomised sample of adolescents in Barcelona (Spain) considering overweight status and gender. Focuses on the interrelationships of behavioral, physical, and psychosocial factors in the understanding of healthful living and the treatment of illness, disease, and disability. Stress and AIDS Exercise and pregnant women.
Abstract
Many adolescents, both rural and urban, are not meeting the recommended levels for physical activity (PA). This investigation was designed to elicit socioecologic barriers and facilitators for PA in rural and urban middle school youth and their parents. Thirteen focus groups were conducted with 41 youth and 50 parents from eastern North Carolina. Distance, cost, crime/danger and television were mentioned as the primary barriers among parents. Youth mentioned school policies related to PA and crime/danger as the main PA barriers. The most salient facilitators discussed by parents were social/peer facilitators, facilities available and parental role modeling of PA. The primary facilitators mentioned by youth were social outlets and facilities available. Results indicate that intrapersonal, interpersonal, environmental and policy factors related to PA resonated with both youth and parents. Since rural and urban residents often perceive and interact differently with PA environments, more research is needed to properly adapt interventions.
Introduction
Youth of today are part of what is considered the most inactive generation in US history [1]. Associated with this inactivity is the prevalence of overweight in youth that has steadily increased in the last four decades [2]. The prevalence of overweight (body mass index >85th percentile for sex and age) and obesity (body mass index >95th percentile for sex and age) in youth is emerging as a major global health concern [3, 4]. The prevalence of obesity in youth in the United States aged 6–11 years has increased from 5% in 1970 to over 15% in 2002 [2]. In addition, recent literature has suggested that rural residency might increase the risk of overweight and obesity in youth [5]. In turn, low levels of physical activity (PA) have been observed in rural youth compared with their urban counterparts, which might contribute to this increased overweight/obesity risk [6].
Recent studies in adults have demonstrated the importance of the social, physical and community environments in shaping PA. These include studies of community socioeconomic status [7, 8], social protective factors [9], urban sprawl [10, 11] and environmental support for and accessibility to PA [12–16]. Much of this work has been driven by a socioecologic framework [17] that identifies factors at the intrapersonal, interpersonal and community levels [18]. The intra- and interpersonal levels involve constructs such as perceived importance of PA, peer participation or parental modeling [19], while the community level includes environmental factors such as aesthetics, safety or social norms [18]. Numerous health disparities exist in PA levels between rural and urban residents in the United States [20]; these differences might be partially explained by differences in presence of environmental supports for PA [6, 21].
Compared with adults, youth are limited in deciding their daily routines and even more restricted in gaining access to PA facilities without transportation and guidance from a parent, school, or youth organization (e.g. YMCA, Boys and Girls Club, community recreation center) [16, 22]. Therefore, community and physical environments may be even more important determinants of PA among youth compared with adults. It is important to focus on modifiable correlates of PA for youth since such correlates can be used to guide the dissemination and implementation of evidence-based PA interventions in community and school settings [23].
Despite a large body of literature concerning correlates of PA in urban youth, there is a paucity of information concerning barriers and opportunities for PA at the intrapersonal, interpersonal and community level in rural youth [16, 19, 24]. Pate et al. [25] examined differences in PA in fifth grade boys and girls in the rural south and observed higher levels of PA in boys compared with girls. A major finding of the study was that self-efficacy for overcoming barriers and participation in community sports each explained significant portions of the difference in PA levels. In a follow-up study, Trost et al. [26] confirmed these initial findings, demonstrating prospectively that self-efficacy and community sport participation were important determinants of PA in rural youth, along with maternal PA participation for girls. While these preliminary studies might suggest that determinants of PA in rural youth are similar to those described for urban youth [27], other studies suggest that levels of PA are lower while obesity and related comorbidities are higher in rural youth [6, 28–31]. This indicates that more research is needed to identify modifiable determinants of PA particularly in rural youth.
Examinations of the built environment have largely occurred in urban settings, with rural settings only recently garnering researchers’ attention [24, 32, 33]. Urban and rural physical environments are extremely different and these differences often make findings obtained in urban settings invalid in rural settings [13]. For example, many of the environmental determinants identified as supports for PA such as sidewalks, street connectivity, population density and diversity of land use [24, 34] in urban settings are not applicable to rural residents. While trails, parks and recreation areas may be a viable location for PA in urban and rural youth [35], distance from walking trails has been identified as a potential barrier in adults [36], while the relationship is unknown in youth. Since rural areas have low population density, there is higher likelihood that rural residents will live further from activity areas compared with urban residents. Although a recent study concluded that rural youth encounter unique barriers and facilitators for PA [37], few studies have examined how these differences are perceived by youth and their parents across rural and urban environments.
The present investigation employed a qualitative approach using focus group discussions to achieve four goals, which were to: (i) examine PA barriers reported by middle school youth and their parents, (ii) examine PA facilitators reported by middle school youth and their parents, (iii) explore rural/urban differences in reported PA barriers/facilitators and (iv) examine suggestions for increasing PA of youth in the future. Qualitative methods were deemed most appropriate due to the paucity of literature described above regarding the PA environments of rural youth and the desire for the present study to contribute to the foundation of a future community participatory intervention project.
Methods
Participants
Participants were recruited through three middle schools located in adjacent counties (two urban schools and one rural school) in eastern North Carolina. Schools were chosen due to their geographic proximity and their respective service area diversity, detailed below. Parents were contacted through letters sent home with students via their homeroom teacher. Letters were distributed only once to minimize the burden on the homeroom teachers. Recruitment letters were made available in English and Spanish in both counties and the version sent home was selected based upon the preference of the student. Interested parents were instructed to contact the project director via phone or email to arrange a convenient time for the focus group session. An incentive of $20 per person was offered for participation.
For the purposes of this study, rural was defined as having less than 1000 persons per square mile and lacking an urbanized area of 50 000 persons or more (2000 US census definition). The participating rural school serves the entire county in which it is located, with its 2008 population estimated at 20 667. In 2000, the county had 72 individuals per square mile. The racial breakdown of the county is approximately 58% White and 41% African-American with 12% of the population of Hispanic/Latino ethnicity. A large proportion of working adults commute to the adjacent metropolitan area as indicated by the 28-min average commute time reported in 2000. For the county, 65% of residents held a high school diploma in 2000 and 71.3% of middle school students qualified for free/reduced lunch.
There are seven public middle schools in the urban county, but the two schools recruited exclusively serve the main metropolitan area whose 2008 population is estimated at 72 052. The urban schools are located in a county, with its 2008 population estimated at 156 081. The racial breakdown of the city is approximately 61% White and 34% African-American with 2% of the population of Hispanic/Latino ethnicity. In 2000, the city had 2364 individuals per square mile and working adults reported an average commute time of 18 min. For the city, 86% of residents held a high school diploma in 2000 and 51.1 and 57.9% of middle school students qualified for free/reduced lunch in the two schools.
Procedure
For the present study, 13 focus groups (seven rural and six urban) were assembled from parents and their child/children who indicated interest via a phone call or an email. Fifty parents initially indicated interest, but only forty-one parents participated. For the nine parents/guardians who were not included in the focus groups, most did not attend due to scheduling conflicts (n = 8) and one due to lack of interest after being informed about the study. Fifty children were included as some parents had multiple eligible children. Six parent groups and six student groups were conducted in English while one additional group of parents who preferred to converse in Spanish were assembled to increase the diversity of opinions presented. Additionally, Spanish-speaking parents were recruited to give a voice to a growing constituency of the rural community and in response to the request of school officials in the rural community. Parent groups comprised parents/guardians of the students in the student group while the student groups consisted of dependent children who met the single inclusion criterion of attending the rural or urban school during the current school year. All focus groups were conducted at the middle schools where the youth attended. Each group consisted of 5–10 individuals each for a total of 91 participants (41 parents and 50 students). With one exception (a mother/father pair in the rural county), only one parent/guardian per household participated.
The focus groups were conducted by trained moderators who worked from a facilitator guide. Previous research was used to frame facilitator guide questions [38, 39]. Sample questions as they relate to the socioecologic framework can be seen in Table I. All facilitators were oriented to the procedures and the script in order to maximize uniformity in order and manner of questions asked. All sessions were digitally voice recorded except for one (due to an equipment malfunction) and detailed notes were taken during all sessions as a backup recording method and to document body language. All recorded sessions were transcribed by a professional transcriptionist with the exception of the Spanish session, which was transcribed by the Spanish-speaking facilitator. Focus group sessions lasted 30–60 min.
Sample questions from the student moderator guide and relationship to the socioecologic framework
• Is there anyone that lives close to you that you can be physically active with? | |
• If your friends were more active, do you think you would be more active? | |
Physical/social environment | • Do you think the lack of sidewalks, parks or other open areas in your neighborhood prevent you from being physically activity? |
• Do you think crime or traffic in your neighborhood prevents you from being physically activity? |
• Is there anyone that lives close to you that you can be physically active with? | |
• If your friends were more active, do you think you would be more active? | |
Physical/social environment | • Do you think the lack of sidewalks, parks or other open areas in your neighborhood prevent you from being physically activity? |
• Do you think crime or traffic in your neighborhood prevents you from being physically activity? |
Sample questions from the student moderator guide and relationship to the socioecologic framework
• Is there anyone that lives close to you that you can be physically active with? | |
• If your friends were more active, do you think you would be more active? | |
Physical/social environment | • Do you think the lack of sidewalks, parks or other open areas in your neighborhood prevent you from being physically activity? |
• Do you think crime or traffic in your neighborhood prevents you from being physically activity? |
• Is there anyone that lives close to you that you can be physically active with? | |
• If your friends were more active, do you think you would be more active? | |
Physical/social environment | • Do you think the lack of sidewalks, parks or other open areas in your neighborhood prevent you from being physically activity? |
• Do you think crime or traffic in your neighborhood prevents you from being physically activity? |
Sociodemographics
Forty-one parents (20 rural and 21 urban, 10% male, mean age = 41.0 years) and their 50 children (22 rural and 28 urban, 44% male, mean age = 12.6 years, 58% 6th grade) participated in focus group sessions. Among the parents, 19.6% considered themselves to be Hispanic or Latino, and 21.6% considered their child to be Hispanic or Latino. In addition, 39.2% were married, 27.5% were single/never married and 33.3% were separated/divorced or widowed. Regarding parental education, 19.6% had less than a ninth grade education, 9.8% had some high school, 9.8% had a high school diploma or equivalent, 11.8% had some college, 15.7% had an associate's degree, 15.7% had a bachelors degree and 7.8% had a graduate or professional degree. The remainder selected multiple responses or did not answer. The participants were similar across counties with respect to race, education and marital status. However, rural parents were more likely to indicate that they and their child were of Hispanic or Latino ethnicity.
Analysis
Three representative transcripts were chosen from each of the urban/rural and parent/child focus groups. Two independent coders read the three>Results
Barriers to PA
Among parents, distance, lack of culturally appropriate facilities and programming, cost, crime/danger and television were mentioned as the primary barriers. Youth mentioned school policies related to PA and crime/danger as the main deterrents of PA. The most salient facilitators discussed by parents were social/peer interactions, facilities available and parental role modeling of PA. The primary facilitators mentioned by youth were social/peer interactions and facilities available. Table II shows commonly reported barriers and facilitators.
Commonly reported barriers and facilitators of PA by each of the four focus groupsa
Social: ‘… you get a group of group of kids together, maybe play kickball, basketball; it helps with their social skills and interacting with others, and how to get along with other people that are from different backgrounds.’Facilities: ‘there's a lot of playgrounds and stuff around here that you can take your kids to go to free. But … a lot of times transportation and the cost cut a big part in it’. | ||
Rural parent groups (n = 4) | Distance and cost: ‘… just to get her out the house to have activities, do you want to pay the price of gas? … Because he wanted to play traveling ball, and I told him we just couldn't afford to play traveling ball …’Television: ‘and they just stay inside the house (and watch) the television… They don't want to go outside…for me it's important that they go outside to run around …. Not so much time in front of the television.’ | Social: ‘When they have friends over, they going to want to do stuff other than just look at TV.’Parent role modeling: ‘But you can't be a couch potato yourself and expect your child to go out there and do’. |
Urban youth groups (n = 3) | School PA policies: ‘… we should get exercise all day in school … PE every day.’‘I did go to PE last semester, and it was really fun, but now I think I'm just turned into like waste … I'm not getting that much exercise.’Danger and supervision: ‘it's like you have on a certain color … they might think you like that gang member and they like want to fight you or jump you or something like that and don't know nothing about you.’ | Social: ‘… my school friends, we just go on bike rides and play volleyball and shoot hoops.’Facilities: I live at a big field … we have like two big fields on the sides at the entrance in our neighborhood. |
Rural youth groups (n = 3) | School PA policies: ‘The sixth graders and seventh graders do (get recess) … but eighth grade, we can't go outside no more and play.’Danger: ‘We had a breaking in, we have vandalism … sometimes they don't want us to go out too far depending how the area looks.’‘We have woods in our backyard. They be hunting. We hearing gunshots.’ | Social: ‘We—me, her, and my friends play baseball, soccer.’Facilities: ‘We have … jump ropes … we have sports equipment that we can take outside and play … we have fields, we have our PE classes … softball field, football field.’‘down the street there's a community center, and they have a basketball court and all that stuff.’ |
Social: ‘… you get a group of group of kids together, maybe play kickball, basketball; it helps with their social skills and interacting with others, and how to get along with other people that are from different backgrounds.’Facilities: ‘there's a lot of playgrounds and stuff around here that you can take your kids to go to free. But … a lot of times transportation and the cost cut a big part in it’. | ||
Rural parent groups (n = 4) | Distance and cost: ‘… just to get her out the house to have activities, do you want to pay the price of gas? … Because he wanted to play traveling ball, and I told him we just couldn't afford to play traveling ball …’Television: ‘and they just stay inside the house (and watch) the television… They don't want to go outside…for me it's important that they go outside to run around …. Not so much time in front of the television.’ | Social: ‘When they have friends over, they going to want to do stuff other than just look at TV.’Parent role modeling: ‘But you can't be a couch potato yourself and expect your child to go out there and do’. |
Urban youth groups (n = 3) | School PA policies: ‘… we should get exercise all day in school … PE every day.’‘I did go to PE last semester, and it was really fun, but now I think I'm just turned into like waste … I'm not getting that much exercise.’Danger and supervision: ‘it's like you have on a certain color … they might think you like that gang member and they like want to fight you or jump you or something like that and don't know nothing about you.’ | Social: ‘… my school friends, we just go on bike rides and play volleyball and shoot hoops.’Facilities: I live at a big field … we have like two big fields on the sides at the entrance in our neighborhood. |
Rural youth groups (n = 3) | School PA policies: ‘The sixth graders and seventh graders do (get recess) … but eighth grade, we can't go outside no more and play.’Danger: ‘We had a breaking in, we have vandalism … sometimes they don't want us to go out too far depending how the area looks.’‘We have woods in our backyard. They be hunting. We hearing gunshots.’ | Social: ‘We—me, her, and my friends play baseball, soccer.’Facilities: ‘We have … jump ropes … we have sports equipment that we can take outside and play … we have fields, we have our PE classes … softball field, football field.’‘down the street there's a community center, and they have a basketball court and all that stuff.’ |
PE = physical education.
Commonly reported barriers and facilitators of PA by each of the four focus groupsa
Social: ‘… you get a group of group of kids together, maybe play kickball, basketball; it helps with their social skills and interacting with others, and how to get along with other people that are from different backgrounds.’Facilities: ‘there's a lot of playgrounds and stuff around here that you can take your kids to go to free. But … a lot of times transportation and the cost cut a big part in it’. | ||
Rural parent groups (n = 4) | Distance and cost: ‘… just to get her out the house to have activities, do you want to pay the price of gas? … Because he wanted to play traveling ball, and I told him we just couldn't afford to play traveling ball …’Television: ‘and they just stay inside the house (and watch) the television… They don't want to go outside…for me it's important that they go outside to run around …. Not so much time in front of the television.’ | Social: ‘When they have friends over, they going to want to do stuff other than just look at TV.’Parent role modeling: ‘But you can't be a couch potato yourself and expect your child to go out there and do’. |
Urban youth groups (n = 3) | School PA policies: ‘… we should get exercise all day in school … PE every day.’‘I did go to PE last semester, and it was really fun, but now I think I'm just turned into like waste … I'm not getting that much exercise.’Danger and supervision: ‘it's like you have on a certain color … they might think you like that gang member and they like want to fight you or jump you or something like that and don't know nothing about you.’ | Social: ‘… my school friends, we just go on bike rides and play volleyball and shoot hoops.’Facilities: I live at a big field … we have like two big fields on the sides at the entrance in our neighborhood. |
Rural youth groups (n = 3) | School PA policies: ‘The sixth graders and seventh graders do (get recess) … but eighth grade, we can't go outside no more and play.’Danger: ‘We had a breaking in, we have vandalism … sometimes they don't want us to go out too far depending how the area looks.’‘We have woods in our backyard. They be hunting. We hearing gunshots.’ | Social: ‘We—me, her, and my friends play baseball, soccer.’Facilities: ‘We have … jump ropes … we have sports equipment that we can take outside and play … we have fields, we have our PE classes … softball field, football field.’‘down the street there's a community center, and they have a basketball court and all that stuff.’ |
Social: ‘… you get a group of group of kids together, maybe play kickball, basketball; it helps with their social skills and interacting with others, and how to get along with other people that are from different backgrounds.’Facilities: ‘there's a lot of playgrounds and stuff around here that you can take your kids to go to free. But … a lot of times transportation and the cost cut a big part in it’. | ||
Rural parent groups (n = 4) | Distance and cost: ‘… just to get her out the house to have activities, do you want to pay the price of gas? … Because he wanted to play traveling ball, and I told him we just couldn't afford to play traveling ball …’Television: ‘and they just stay inside the house (and watch) the television… They don't want to go outside…for me it's important that they go outside to run around …. Not so much time in front of the television.’ | Social: ‘When they have friends over, they going to want to do stuff other than just look at TV.’Parent role modeling: ‘But you can't be a couch potato yourself and expect your child to go out there and do’. |
Urban youth groups (n = 3) | School PA policies: ‘… we should get exercise all day in school … PE every day.’‘I did go to PE last semester, and it was really fun, but now I think I'm just turned into like waste … I'm not getting that much exercise.’Danger and supervision: ‘it's like you have on a certain color … they might think you like that gang member and they like want to fight you or jump you or something like that and don't know nothing about you.’ | Social: ‘… my school friends, we just go on bike rides and play volleyball and shoot hoops.’Facilities: I live at a big field … we have like two big fields on the sides at the entrance in our neighborhood. |
Rural youth groups (n = 3) | School PA policies: ‘The sixth graders and seventh graders do (get recess) … but eighth grade, we can't go outside no more and play.’Danger: ‘We had a breaking in, we have vandalism … sometimes they don't want us to go out too far depending how the area looks.’‘We have woods in our backyard. They be hunting. We hearing gunshots.’ | Social: ‘We—me, her, and my friends play baseball, soccer.’Facilities: ‘We have … jump ropes … we have sports equipment that we can take outside and play … we have fields, we have our PE classes … softball field, football field.’‘down the street there's a community center, and they have a basketball court and all that stuff.’ |
PE = physical education.
Parent perceptions of PA barriers
Distance.
Most rural parents reported that recreation centers and other centers for PA were located in urban areas, at least a 20-min drive from their homes.
In XXX (rural) County, it's not much for them to do. They don't have no YMCA. You know, for the parents, like myself, that don't have a car, you know, it's … hard for them to get somewhere. (Rural parent)
If you ain't got no money to buy the recreation stuff … you ain't got nothing in XXX (rural) County … my kids like to go skating, and everything is in XXX (large town) … About 25 minutes [from home]. (Rural parent)
Participants in one urban group noted that there were venues for ice-skating and skate boarding in the area, but these were not activities that ‘ethnic kids’ would enjoy:
It's like she said, nothing but ice skating and if you got a skateboard, it's a skateboard park. But, again, the ethnic kids are not really into skateboarding. (Urban parent)
Urban parents also mentioned that resources such as a local recreation club and newer parks were being built outside the city, in the ‘suburbs’, a long drive from their downtown residences.
easy access to it … I mean, I live in a neighborhood, any place I take my kids, I have to drive them. You know, they can't—like when I grew up two blocks from the Y, we just walked down to the Y by ourselves all the time for everything, you know… . There's access in certain neighborhoods—yeah—but it's not where my family is. It's like the XXX Club moved out of XXX (large town). (Urban parent)
I think that we have parks in XXX, but I think that, especially now, they'll build them all out in the country … they're not doing anything for the city. They're building out in the country because it's less expensive—uh-huh—and personally, if I could afford it, I'd get out of the city. (Urban parent)
Participants in both urban and rural parent groups noted the burden of transporting youth to and from activities, especially after a long day's work:
But the thing was, even though it was free, the thing was transportation, trying to get them there and trying to, you know, get them home with, you know—I, you know, I made arrangements where I could get her there but I couldn't pick her up. I had my daughter pick her up. (Urban parent)
Cost.
The expense associated with using various PA venues was mentioned in all six parent groups. This cost was frequently associated with venues such as kids' recreational sports programs, bowling alley, skating rink, commercial gyms and a local recreation club.
…we don't go there [to the XXX Club] no more … It costs too much. I used to go, but it costs too much. (Urban student)
Cause it can get expensive getting kids involved in different types of activities. I have two daughters … in cheerleading, softball, basketball, I mean, doing everything, it gets expensive. (Urban parent)
The expense of gas to get to venues was mentioned by all parent groups, despite whether they were urban or rural. Even some of the student groups mentioned how the gas expense was becoming unaffordable for their parents.
That's on the north end of (urban city), so we're traveling back and forth taking them different places, and the way gas prices are now, I mean, you spend a lot of money in gas. (Urban parent)
We wanted to go to the skating rink in Raleigh with Ms. XXX, but gas prices and we've never could. (Rural student)
The barriers of rural residence combined with high gas cost were stressed most often by rural Hispanic parents, who frequently discussed the remote nature of their residence in the rural county as a barrier to youth's PA. Participants mentioned being far away from potential PA programs or facilities, and given high gas prices, they were not able to drive their children to these opportunities. One participant said:
we are all alone at our house. We're outside. There are no parks or basketball courts … because it's like 8 miles away … they want to play but … and another thing, gas just keeps going up and we can't take our kids to the park either. It's not so easy to just drive our cars and take our kids to a park. (Hispanic rural parent)
However, Hispanic parents reported that their children made the best of the resource-poor environment:
there aren't any basketball courts where they can go play … just cornfields. Sometimes they go run around and go hide in the cornfields. (Hispanic rural parent)
One urban parent gave a succinct summary of the combined effect of the distance and cost barriers:
Transportation is another thing … limits it for a lot of folks to participate with their children … transportation or funds. (Urban parent)
Danger and crime.
There were different perceptions of danger and crime among urban versus rural parents. Urban parents reported more apprehension related to gang activity and peer violence compared with parents of rural children.
’cause I live on XXX Road, and it do have a basketball court now in the street for the summer, but it's not safe to let your children go down there because they got other children that are about the same size down there, and nobody supervising nobody. So it's not a safe environment for any children. (Urban parent)
Parents of rural youth mentioned less fear regarding major crime, including fear of kidnapping:
We don't have that much crime. Normally, if they commit a crime, I hope they got a car 'cause they ain't going to get far … I'm glad it ain't no crime or murders, so kids can go out there and enjoy their self. And you don't hear of crime on the news … (Rural parent)
Lack of adult supervision was mentioned as a barrier to urban parents allowing their children to play outdoors in the neighborhood as well as a barrier to enrolling their children to use a local recreation club. Parents were uneasy when they witnessed teenagers supervising their children.
And when they change, you know, you used to go in and you feel safe with your child going to the XXX Club. Now, you aren't. But it is because you—it's just so many kids … We have so many kids and not enough people to watch the kids. And then you have the kids volunteering to watch over kids. (Urban parent)
Television.
Among both urban and rural parents, television and video gaming were mentioned as a barrier to PA. Parents expressed the preference for children to play outside, especially compared with video gaming and television watching. Said one parent:
I think now the way kids are raised, or the way the media is, it's pulling them toward television and more video games, and less is for activities than when I was young. (Rural parent)
Youth perceptions of PA barriers
School policies related to PA.
School policies were mentioned by all student groups as barriers to PA. While the school schedule was structured so that physical education (PE) was half the semester and health was the other half, students desired PE classes every day. Students also reported that the age requirement for school sports participation was a barrier:
They do [have sports here], but they don't allow sixth graders to play. (Urban student)
They say, for some reason, if you're 15 like August, you can't play … I'll be 15 in July, so I can't play any sports. (Urban student)
Students and parents both reported zoning policies that districted students to attend a school not within walking or biking distance when the student actually lived within walking distance to another school.
What's weird though is they got people like right beside XXX [school that is a block away] … that they make them go here [school that is across town] … Like I knew someone that lives … only like two blocks away, and she has to go here … so it's weird. (Urban student)
Students often mentioned the amount of homework assignments as a barrier to spending time in physical activities and also mentioned teachers making excuses to skip recess:
… sometimes like when—when we don't finish our work, our teachers just don't take us outside. (Rural student)
And we have to do homework. I mean, every night, … like when you get out of practice, you decide to do homework, and then you won't have time to do nothing (Urban student)
Danger and crime.
Both rural and urban students mentioned danger and crime as barriers to PA, especially discussing parental restrictions on movement and activities in certain areas. However, unlike their parents, urban youth discussed a dislike of adult supervision and desired more independence.
But I don't like being under people's supervision like that. It aggravates me for some reason. I hate when people watch me. (Urban student)
Rural youth did not mention supervision, but did report the unique barrier of hearing gunshots, people hunting in their area.
Parent perceptions of PA facilitators
Social/peer influences.
In general, parents perceived that children were in an important time in their lives for establishing peer relationships and noted that peers were the ones with the greatest influence over children:
'Cause at this age, the teen age, it's like the friends are becoming more impressionable, rather than the parents (Urban parent)
Parents also noted the advantage of PA allowing students to cultivate social skills:
I think it helps provide kids, you know—you know, you get a group of group of kids together, maybe play kickball, basketball; it helps with their social skills and interacting with others, and how to get along with other people that are from different backgrounds. (Rural parent)
Parents noted the importance of children having friends around for being physically active, comparing it to their own desires for more social support:
When they have friends over, they going to want to do stuff other than just look at TV. (Urban parent)
Urban parents reported that there were facilities in their areas where youth could be active compared with rural parents. Rural parents, compared with urban parents, reported greater importance of parental PA role modeling as a facilitator.
Youth perceptions of PA facilitators
Youth, like parents, frequently reported participating in active (e.g. basketball and walking around town) pursuits with peers.
I don't like it when I have to walk alone. But like when I'm with my friend to walk somewhere, it's fun. (Urban student)
Similar to their parents, youth mentioned facilities such as fields, basketball courts and community centers as facilitating PA.
Future PA venues
Suggestions for future PA venues are shown in Table III. Parents’ suggestions focused on supervised family social time. They preferred indoor areas that would integrate skating, bowling and other such indoor activities into one complex. Both urban and rural parents mentioned using abandoned buildings as the shell for a recreation complex that might contain a skating rink and other activities:
But downtown where that fire was … all those abandoned buildings out there … I looked at that stuff, I said, if they would gut that out and throw in a skating rink … (Urban parent)
Suggestions for future PA venues by focus group