As kids' activities reopen, parents share insights about keeping families active during COVID-19 shutdowns

As kids’ activities reopen, parents share insights about keeping families active during COVID-19 shutdowns
Credit: CC0 Public Domain

Organized play and sporting opportunities for children have finally started to resume after having just passed the two-year mark of the pandemic.

As know too well, the led to extended closures of settings that previously supported children's play and sport, like parks, community centers and sport facilities.

Our team of researchers in the Child Health and Physical Activity Lab at Western University wanted to understand COVID-19's impact on 's activity levels. Via and sports organizations, we recruited Ontario parents and their children (under 12 years), to hear their perspectives in interviews.

We also wanted to know parents' plans for returning their children to physical activities or sport when COVID-19 cases were still present in the community, or if they were planning to wait until after the pandemic had ended.

We conducted interviews in December 2020 and January 2021 to learn more. Eleven parents who participated were from urban communities across Ontario and one was from a rural community. Seven lived in a semi-detached or detached home, two lived in an apartment or condominium and two respondents did not relay detail about their living quarters. All nine children who participated lived in urban areas.

Children and adults missed socializing

Getting active by engaging in play and sport is important for children's healthy development.Playing in the neighborhood, or attending an organized activity such as soccer or dance, can enhance children's social skills, cognitive development and promote a better night's sleep.

As we heard in our study, children and adults also rely on play and organized physical activities to connect with friends and community. Children we spoke with noted that they really missed seeing their friends and sport coaches when restricted their participation in .

Parents also missed the that came with attending their children's extracurricular activities. One parent said: "Well, I guess when you're at the dance studio five nights a week and then all of a sudden you're not there anymore … it's like for her, it was more like the loss of activity. For me, it was I feel it was my that was my social time."

Financial, weather, space barriers

New financial barriers arose during the pandemic, such as the cost of financing new toys for children to play with while at home for extended periods of time. One parent said: "We tried to purchase some aids in the form of a climber or swing set or bike but like literally everything was sold out … anything that was left available was, like, exorbitantly priced."

Parents cited the cold weather and long winter as a challenge for getting children engaged in activity. One parent said: "In the summer, we're very, very active. But yeah, in the winter … it's getting hard again because I will get up and get bundled up … But my four-year-old wants to wear shorts all day, every day. I can't, like he fights every morning when I try to take him to school to put splash pants or snow pants on … he just refuses to get ready to go outside."

A parent who lived in an apartment talked about missing outdoor space: "We have no yard; we have no balcony. And our neighbor in the summer at one point just said, look, if you want to use our backyard, you can come sit here, which made a huge difference."

As kids’ activities reopen, parents share insights about keeping families active during COVID-19 shutdowns
Credit: CC0 Public Domain

New ways to be active

Both parents and their children reported that they found new ways to get active. Many families reported spending time outdoors, practicing sport with family members inside in their back or front yards and exploring their neighborhoods. One child said: "I got to see the neighborhood kids in the summer, and I made some new friends."

Despite the in Canada, it turns out that the pandemic encouraged some families to put their snow gear on and get outside. Getting outdoors was the most frequently mentioned solution used by parents and their children, regarding getting active.

Children spoke about using virtual platforms, such as YouTube and TikTok to get moving.

Some parents noted social media could be a great way to get active as a family, by learning dances or following pre-recorded workouts. One child attended hockey training camp on Zoom five days a week, an hour per day for six  weeks.

One parent described that before the pandemic, their family often traveled internationally or cross-provincially, but had never explored Ontario. With closures, they embarked on weekly local hikes: "We had no idea what was close by and we've hiked everything now close by … When you think you've done it all, there's more to do with it. So that was a radical change."

Returning to play and sport

Many children had already returned to play and sport in the summer months, when case counts were lower in Ontario.

We asked children how it felt to return, and findings were positive. Children told us that they did not mind wearing their masks while at their play or sport activities, and that they were not bothered by other public health measures, such as sanitization protocols.

The children we spoke with were impressionable and quick to adapt when it comes to learning new rules.

Pandemic shifts in activity

Children's activity levels have been noted to be generally low, and especially during the pandemic. For service providers and , understanding the challenges children and parents face, and supports that parents need to encourage physical activity, is critical to our post-COVID-19 recovery.

The forced slow down that the pandemic offered may have long-lasting effects. Many citizens are reporting that, due to COVID-19, they have found a joy for at-home workouts, and discovered new outdoor habits like walking, cycling and hiking or new ways to interact with their neighbors.

If future public health measures prevent organized sport and activities, our hope is that communities will continue to do try to embrace the outdoors, take advantage of free virtual opportunities—and mutually support one another to get active.

Provided by The Conversation

This article is republished from The Conversation under a Creative Commons license. Read the original article.The Conversation

Citation: As kids' activities reopen, parents share insights about keeping families active during COVID-19 shutdowns (2022, April 13) retrieved 23 April 2024 from https://phys.org/news/2022-04-kids-reopen-parents-insights-families.html
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