Too far from home? Adult attitudes on children's independent mobility range

© 2015 Taylor & Francis. The purpose of this study was to investigate adult attitudes on distances children should be allowed to travel to places and play in outdoor areas without adult supervision, with consideration of differences in adult attitudes by socio-demographics and urbanisation. In...

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Main Authors: Schoeppe, S., Duncan, M., Badland, H., Rebar, Amanda, Vandelanotte, C.
Format: Journal Article
Published: Routledge 2016
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11937/71354
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author Schoeppe, S.
Duncan, M.
Badland, H.
Rebar, Amanda
Vandelanotte, C.
author_facet Schoeppe, S.
Duncan, M.
Badland, H.
Rebar, Amanda
Vandelanotte, C.
author_sort Schoeppe, S.
building Curtin Institutional Repository
collection Online Access
description © 2015 Taylor & Francis. The purpose of this study was to investigate adult attitudes on distances children should be allowed to travel to places and play in outdoor areas without adult supervision, with consideration of differences in adult attitudes by socio-demographics and urbanisation. In 2013, Australian adults (N = 1293) were asked what distances children aged 8–12 years should be allowed to walk/cycle to places, and play outdoors without adults. Descriptive analyses and chi-square tests were conducted to assess adult attitudes on children's independent mobility range. Overall, 62% of adults would restrict children's independent travel to places <500 m from home, and 74% would restrict independent outdoor play <500 m from home. Women and adults with lower education were more likely to report restrictive attitudes than men and adults with higher education, respectively. The promotion of active travel and outdoor play in children may require increasing adults’ acceptance of greater independent mobility range.
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spelling curtin-20.500.11937-713542018-12-13T09:33:48Z Too far from home? Adult attitudes on children's independent mobility range Schoeppe, S. Duncan, M. Badland, H. Rebar, Amanda Vandelanotte, C. © 2015 Taylor & Francis. The purpose of this study was to investigate adult attitudes on distances children should be allowed to travel to places and play in outdoor areas without adult supervision, with consideration of differences in adult attitudes by socio-demographics and urbanisation. In 2013, Australian adults (N = 1293) were asked what distances children aged 8–12 years should be allowed to walk/cycle to places, and play outdoors without adults. Descriptive analyses and chi-square tests were conducted to assess adult attitudes on children's independent mobility range. Overall, 62% of adults would restrict children's independent travel to places <500 m from home, and 74% would restrict independent outdoor play <500 m from home. Women and adults with lower education were more likely to report restrictive attitudes than men and adults with higher education, respectively. The promotion of active travel and outdoor play in children may require increasing adults’ acceptance of greater independent mobility range. 2016 Journal Article http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11937/71354 10.1080/14733285.2015.1116685 Routledge restricted
spellingShingle Schoeppe, S.
Duncan, M.
Badland, H.
Rebar, Amanda
Vandelanotte, C.
Too far from home? Adult attitudes on children's independent mobility range
title Too far from home? Adult attitudes on children's independent mobility range
title_full Too far from home? Adult attitudes on children's independent mobility range
title_fullStr Too far from home? Adult attitudes on children's independent mobility range
title_full_unstemmed Too far from home? Adult attitudes on children's independent mobility range
title_short Too far from home? Adult attitudes on children's independent mobility range
title_sort too far from home? adult attitudes on children's independent mobility range
url http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11937/71354