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Peer-Review Record

Parents’ Inadequate Estimate of Their Children’s Objectively Physical Activity Level

Children 2022, 9(3), 392; https://doi.org/10.3390/children9030392
by Karin Kippe 1, Adilson Marques 2, João Martins 2,3 and Pål Arild Lagestad 1,*
Reviewer 1: Anonymous
Reviewer 2:
Children 2022, 9(3), 392; https://doi.org/10.3390/children9030392
Submission received: 26 January 2022 / Revised: 24 February 2022 / Accepted: 8 March 2022 / Published: 10 March 2022
(This article belongs to the Section Global Pediatric Health)

Round 1

Reviewer 1 Report

Thank you for the opportunity to review the manuscript. While the manuscript is well written, the findings are consistent with the current literature as referenced by the authors. As it stands, it offers minimal extension of our  current knowledge although it does validate it (refer to Discussion, lines 204 and 205 and references 22-25). However, if the authors are willing, this research would be enhanced and contribute to the literature with the collection of  additional data , for example, 1) by interviewing the parents (phase two) to inquire how they estimated the activity level of their child (and use this qualitative knowledge in a subsequent study to provide the rubric to measure their child’s and their own PA); and/or 2) by interviewing parents about perceptions of and expectations of children’s activity overall getting to the documented decline in activity toward adulthood and the high level of activity in early childhood (as referenced in the Discussion page 8/13).

I offer the following suggestions for the authors’ consideration.

The title is intriguing as a question but long. Consider a title that shares the main findings of the research, namely parents are poor estimators of their preschool children’s duration of MV physical activity or parents engagement with children during PA does not result in more MVPA.

Page 2/13, lines 47/48: This sentence is confusing following the sentence about the child’s social environment created by parents (no reference to inheritance) and then suggests “Therefore, parents transfer inherited physical capital to their children.” Suggest removing the word “inherited” for revising the sentence for clarity.

Page 2/13, line 77: define the term “free-living”

Page 3/13, line 137: Questionnaire: Identify the constructs clearly to be measured with the questions that measured them in the survey ncluding the scale or other response form. If this study were to be replicated, it is not clear how the constructs were measured thus difficult to compare with findings of other studies, which is a general issue with the manuscript.

Did the authors inquire about the biological relationship between child and parent? How many children of each gender participated? What was the SES status of the children’s families? What was the educational level of the parents? Describe the physical living environment of the family (that is, is there space inside and outside to be active or are living spaces small; Is this an urban or rural area)? At what time during the year was the survey administered (i.e., does weather make a difference)? Were all families from Norway or were some families international and thus bring their own cultural expectations for children’s appropriate behavior? For the international reader who does not know Norway as well as for the study itself, these are predictive variables.

The authors suggest in the Discussion that the children come from a wide range of preschools. Consequently, could the type of preschool (i.e., curriculum) influence the children’s behavior during leisure time (most preschool teachers with PA in the curriculum certainly hope so). (In the Discussion (Strengths and Limitations, line 306), the authors suggest that data was collected in the preschools.)

The PA literature is more mature now than even 5 years ago and a number of these variables are predictive of activity. By including them, the authors tease out their contributions in this sample and continue to study emerging differences (or lack thereof).

Page 4/13, line 148: the authors include 122 cases that had missing data to compare to those with complete data (Table 2).Why? How did the authors account for the missing data statistically? 

The scatterplots were helpful to illustrated clearly the range of estimations by parents.

Page 8/13, line 250: Please clarify this portion of the sentence: “…and that socialization mechanisms may be more prominent later on.” Does this mean children pay more attention to parents as they mature?

Page 8/13, line 275: define the term “active travel.” Does this mean children walk or ride their bike to their destination?

Page 9/13, line 306…The authors suggest that this is the first to study children’s PA in preschool and leisure in the same study (there are other studies in progress that do measure activity in home and preschool) however, the preschool data was not shared in this study. Including the data from preschool and teacher perceptions would recognize the ecological complexity of studying PA in children and this study. If this data is not included in this manuscript, I suggest removing this sentence.

Please add Implications for Research and for Practice. The conclusions drawn by the authors from the data and shared in the Discussion appear to be appropriate (e.g., concrete measures for parents to help judge physical activity (page 7/13, lines 22 and 23 and first full paragraph on page 8). Because this is not included in this study, discuss this suggestion as implication for further research. Of equal importance is understanding these results as evidence for practice (evidence-based or evidence informed practice) for parents, teachers, health professionals. Offer concrete suggestions of utilization of the results in practice.

Author Response

Comments to reviewers; parents estimation (changes with red in the article)

 

Reviewers comments

Authors comments

Reviewer 1

 

As it stands, it offers minimal extension of our  current knowledge although it does validate it (refer to Discussion, lines 204 and 205 and references 22-25). However, if the authors are willing, this research would be enhanced and contribute to the literature with the collection of  additional data , for example, 1) by interviewing the parents (phase two) to inquire how they estimated the activity level of their child (and use this qualitative knowledge in a subsequent study to provide the rubric to measure their child’s and their own PA); and/or 2) by interviewing parents about perceptions of and expectations of children’s activity overall getting to the documented decline in activity toward adulthood and the high level of activity in early childhood (as referenced in the Discussion page 8/13).

 

We agree that interviewing the parents and/or interviewing parents about perceptions of and expectations of children’s activity overall getting to the documented decline in activity toward adulthood, is a good strategy. It would have been very interesting. However, this could be done in a follow up study and in a new article. The present article is based upon a large number of objectively measured accelerometer data, and we will argue that it can be published as it is. We will argue that the article is unique, using both accelerometer data and parents estimation of their 4-6 year old children.

 

The title is intriguing as a question but long. Consider a title that shares the main findings of the research, namely parents are poor estimators of their preschool children’s duration of MV physical activity or parents engagement with children during PA does not result in more MVPA.

The article is rewriting according to the reviewers comments

Page 2/13, lines 47/48: This sentence is confusing following the sentence about the child’s social environment created by parents (no reference to inheritance) and then suggests “Therefore, parents transfer inherited physical capital to their children.” Suggest removing the word “inherited” for revising the sentence for clarity.

 

The article is rewriting according to the reviewers comments

Page 2/13, line 77: define the term “free-living”

The article is rewriting according to the reviewers comments

Page 3/13, line 137: Questionnaire: Identify the constructs clearly to be measured with the questions that measured them in the survey ncluding the scale or other response form. If this study were to be replicated, it is not clear how the constructs were measured thus difficult to compare with findings of other studies, which is a general issue with the manuscript.

We totally agree. The article is rewriting according to the reviewers comments

Did the authors inquire about the biological relationship between child and parent?

The article is rewriting according to the reviewers comments

How many children of each gender participated?

The article is rewriting according to the reviewers comments

What was the SES status of the children’s families?

The article is rewriting according to the reviewers comments

What was the educational level of the parents?

The article is rewriting according to the reviewers comments

Describe the physical living environment of the family (that is, is there space inside and outside to be active or are living spaces small; Is this an urban or rural area)?

The article is rewriting according to the reviewers comments

At what time during the year was the survey administered (i.e., does weather make a difference)?

The article is rewriting according to the reviewers comments

Were all families from Norway or were some families international and thus bring their own cultural expectations for children’s appropriate behavior? For the international reader who does not know Norway as well as for the study itself, these are predictive variables.

The article is rewriting according to the reviewers comments

The authors suggest in the Discussion that the children come from a wide range of preschools. Consequently, could the type of preschool (i.e., curriculum) influence the children’s behavior during leisure time (most preschool teachers with PA in the curriculum certainly hope so). (In the Discussion (Strengths and Limitations, line 306), the authors suggest that data was collected in the preschools.)

The PA literature is more mature now than even 5 years ago and a number of these variables are predictive of activity. By including them, the authors tease out their contributions in this sample and continue to study emerging differences (or lack thereof).

 

The article is rewriting according to the reviewers comments

Page 4/13, line 148: the authors include 122 cases that had missing data to compare to those with complete data (Table 2).Why? How did the authors account for the missing data statistically? 

 

To include as many participants as possible in each of the statistical analyses, an independent t-test was conducted to examine differences in PA levels among children with children with all data (N=122) and children with some missing data according to mother or fathers participation/estimation (N=122). There were no significant differences between the two groups, and the drop was random

The scatterplots were helpful to illustrated clearly the range of estimations by parents.

We agree

Page 8/13, line 250: Please clarify this portion of the sentence: “…and that socialization mechanisms may be more prominent later on.” Does this mean children pay more attention to parents as they mature?

The article is rewriting according to the reviewers comments

Page 8/13, line 275: define the term “active travel.” Does this mean children walk or ride their bike to their destination?

The article is rewriting according to the reviewers comments

Page 9/13, line 306…The authors suggest that this is the first to study children’s PA in preschool and leisure in the same study (there are other studies in progress that do measure activity in home and preschool) however, the preschool data was not shared in this study. Including the data from preschool and teacher perceptions would recognize the ecological complexity of studying PA in children and this study. If this data is not included in this manuscript, I suggest removing this sentence.

The article is rewriting according to the reviewers comments

Please add Implications for Research and for Practice. The conclusions drawn by the authors from the data and shared in the Discussion appear to be appropriate (e.g., concrete measures for parents to help judge physical activity (page 7/13, lines 22 and 23 and first full paragraph on page 8). Because this is not included in this study, discuss this suggestion as implication for further research. Of equal importance is understanding these results as evidence for practice (evidence-based or evidence informed practice) for parents, teachers, health professionals. Offer concrete suggestions of utilization of the results in practice.

 

The article is rewriting according to the reviewers comments

Reviewer 2

 

I would only suggest adding a few clauses in the conclusion part connecting the findings and the related statements. 

The article is rewriting according to the reviewers comments

 

Author Response File: Author Response.docx

Reviewer 2 Report

Interesting topic and will make both a practical and academic impact on the readers. I have already been inspired by the subject and started planning-related research with my graduate students. 
I would only suggest adding a few clauses in the conclusion part connecting the findings and the related statements. 

Author Response

Comments to reviewers; parents estimation (changes with red in the article)

 

Reviewers comments

Authors comments

Reviewer 1

 

As it stands, it offers minimal extension of our  current knowledge although it does validate it (refer to Discussion, lines 204 and 205 and references 22-25). However, if the authors are willing, this research would be enhanced and contribute to the literature with the collection of  additional data , for example, 1) by interviewing the parents (phase two) to inquire how they estimated the activity level of their child (and use this qualitative knowledge in a subsequent study to provide the rubric to measure their child’s and their own PA); and/or 2) by interviewing parents about perceptions of and expectations of children’s activity overall getting to the documented decline in activity toward adulthood and the high level of activity in early childhood (as referenced in the Discussion page 8/13).

 

We agree that interviewing the parents and/or interviewing parents about perceptions of and expectations of children’s activity overall getting to the documented decline in activity toward adulthood, is a good strategy. It would have been very interesting. However, this could be done in a follow up study and in a new article. The present article is based upon a large number of objectively measured accelerometer data, and we will argue that it can be published as it is. We will argue that the article is unique, using both accelerometer data and parents estimation of their 4-6 year old children.

 

The title is intriguing as a question but long. Consider a title that shares the main findings of the research, namely parents are poor estimators of their preschool children’s duration of MV physical activity or parents engagement with children during PA does not result in more MVPA.

The article is rewriting according to the reviewers comments

Page 2/13, lines 47/48: This sentence is confusing following the sentence about the child’s social environment created by parents (no reference to inheritance) and then suggests “Therefore, parents transfer inherited physical capital to their children.” Suggest removing the word “inherited” for revising the sentence for clarity.

 

The article is rewriting according to the reviewers comments

Page 2/13, line 77: define the term “free-living”

The article is rewriting according to the reviewers comments

Page 3/13, line 137: Questionnaire: Identify the constructs clearly to be measured with the questions that measured them in the survey ncluding the scale or other response form. If this study were to be replicated, it is not clear how the constructs were measured thus difficult to compare with findings of other studies, which is a general issue with the manuscript.

We totally agree. The article is rewriting according to the reviewers comments

Did the authors inquire about the biological relationship between child and parent?

The article is rewriting according to the reviewers comments

How many children of each gender participated?

The article is rewriting according to the reviewers comments

What was the SES status of the children’s families?

The article is rewriting according to the reviewers comments

What was the educational level of the parents?

The article is rewriting according to the reviewers comments

Describe the physical living environment of the family (that is, is there space inside and outside to be active or are living spaces small; Is this an urban or rural area)?

The article is rewriting according to the reviewers comments

At what time during the year was the survey administered (i.e., does weather make a difference)?

The article is rewriting according to the reviewers comments

Were all families from Norway or were some families international and thus bring their own cultural expectations for children’s appropriate behavior? For the international reader who does not know Norway as well as for the study itself, these are predictive variables.

The article is rewriting according to the reviewers comments

The authors suggest in the Discussion that the children come from a wide range of preschools. Consequently, could the type of preschool (i.e., curriculum) influence the children’s behavior during leisure time (most preschool teachers with PA in the curriculum certainly hope so). (In the Discussion (Strengths and Limitations, line 306), the authors suggest that data was collected in the preschools.)

The PA literature is more mature now than even 5 years ago and a number of these variables are predictive of activity. By including them, the authors tease out their contributions in this sample and continue to study emerging differences (or lack thereof).

 

The article is rewriting according to the reviewers comments

Page 4/13, line 148: the authors include 122 cases that had missing data to compare to those with complete data (Table 2).Why? How did the authors account for the missing data statistically? 

 

To include as many participants as possible in each of the statistical analyses, an independent t-test was conducted to examine differences in PA levels among children with children with all data (N=122) and children with some missing data according to mother or fathers participation/estimation (N=122). There were no significant differences between the two groups, and the drop was random

The scatterplots were helpful to illustrated clearly the range of estimations by parents.

We agree

Page 8/13, line 250: Please clarify this portion of the sentence: “…and that socialization mechanisms may be more prominent later on.” Does this mean children pay more attention to parents as they mature?

The article is rewriting according to the reviewers comments

Page 8/13, line 275: define the term “active travel.” Does this mean children walk or ride their bike to their destination?

The article is rewriting according to the reviewers comments

Page 9/13, line 306…The authors suggest that this is the first to study children’s PA in preschool and leisure in the same study (there are other studies in progress that do measure activity in home and preschool) however, the preschool data was not shared in this study. Including the data from preschool and teacher perceptions would recognize the ecological complexity of studying PA in children and this study. If this data is not included in this manuscript, I suggest removing this sentence.

The article is rewriting according to the reviewers comments

Please add Implications for Research and for Practice. The conclusions drawn by the authors from the data and shared in the Discussion appear to be appropriate (e.g., concrete measures for parents to help judge physical activity (page 7/13, lines 22 and 23 and first full paragraph on page 8). Because this is not included in this study, discuss this suggestion as implication for further research. Of equal importance is understanding these results as evidence for practice (evidence-based or evidence informed practice) for parents, teachers, health professionals. Offer concrete suggestions of utilization of the results in practice.

 

The article is rewriting according to the reviewers comments

Reviewer 2

 

I would only suggest adding a few clauses in the conclusion part connecting the findings and the related statements. 

The article is rewriting according to the reviewers comments

 

Round 2

Reviewer 1 Report

Thank you for the revised manuscript. I appreciate that the authors addressed most of the comments. Numerous grammatical errors in the edits will need correction before publishing. Lines 121/122 What is normal for Norway? Rather than a subjective assessment, consider offering objective data such as temperature range, no precipitation (which is stated). Line 144 If no data was collected on the biological relationship between the parent and child, just state as such rather than guess. Lines 148-152 – Was the response format to the survey questions open ended (the parent gave an estimate) or intervals (for example 0 to 10%, 11 to 20%...) Line 163…What was the answer to the question as to whether or not the dropout was random? If researchers did not assess the randomness, then take part of the sentence out and leave it as a comparison only. Lines 266 – 270. Thank you for adding this language. I suggest, however, that just adding the word “early” “…and that early socialization mechanisms may be more…” provides clarification. The additional wording could be removed. Lines 344-352 Thank you for addressing the implications for professionals in practice. Again, grammar needs editing. The authors might consider wording such as: We suggest teachers and health professionals encourage parents to be physically active with their children by sharing information about the current and potential future health benefits of a physically active lifestyle. Early childhood teachers and public health authorities have a key role in health promotion and guidance for parents, for example, sharing information and guidance during conversations with parents in preschool and during health examinations. Such strategies will promote awareness of the health benefits of PA, regardless of socioeconomic status, and address health inequalities.

Author Response

Reviewers comments

Author response

Numerous grammatical errors in the edits will need correction before publishing.

The article is rewritten according to the reviewers comments

Lines 121/122 What is normal for Norway? Rather than a subjective assessment, consider offering objective data such as temperature range, no precipitation (which is stated).

The article is rewritten according to the reviewers comments

Line 144 If no data was collected on the biological relationship between the parent and child, just state as such rather than guess.

The article is rewritten according to the reviewers comments

Lines 148-152 – Was the response format to the survey questions open ended (the parent gave an estimate) or intervals (for example 0 to 10%, 11 to 20%...)

The article is rewritten according to the reviewers comments

Line 163…What was the answer to the question as to whether or not the dropout was random?

No question about this, but in the data set we could identify which children where both parents’ had reported their estimation level (122 children), and the group of children with missing data from the mother, the father, or both (122 children). The article is rewritten according to the reviewers comments

If researchers did not assess the randomness, then take part of the sentence out and leave it as a comparison only.

We did assess the randomness using statistical analyses

Lines 266 – 270. Thank you for adding this language. I suggest, however, that just adding the word “early” “…and that early socialization mechanisms may be more…” provides clarification. The additional wording could be removed.

The article is rewritten according to the reviewers comments

Lines 344-352 Thank you for addressing the implications for professionals in practice. Again, grammar needs editing. The authors might consider wording such as: We suggest teachers and health professionals encourage parents to be physically active with their children by sharing information about the current and potential future health benefits of a physically active lifestyle. Early childhood teachers and public health authorities have a key role in health promotion and guidance for parents, for example, sharing information and guidance during conversations with parents in preschool and during health examinations. Such strategies will promote awareness of the health benefits of PA, regardless of socioeconomic status, and address health inequalities.

Thank you. The article is rewritten according to the reviewers comments

 

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