Articles

THE EFFECT OF PHYSICAL EDUCATION AND SPORT ON FITNESS STATUS of UNIVERSITY STUDENTS

Published:
2020-12-18 — Updated on 2020-12-18
Authors
View
Keywords
License

Copyright (c) 2020 József Márton Pucsok, Gergely Ráthonyi, Katalin Varga, Eszter Bíró, Gabriella Perényi, Andrea Lenténé Puskás Zoltán Bács, László Balogh

Creative Commons License

This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License.

How To Cite
Selected Style: APA
Pucsok, J. M., Balogh, L., Ráthonyi, G. ., Varga, K., Bíró, E., Perényi, G., & Lenténé Puskás, A. (2020). THE EFFECT OF PHYSICAL EDUCATION AND SPORT ON FITNESS STATUS of UNIVERSITY STUDENTS. Stadium - Hungarian Journal of Sport Sciences, 3(2). https://doi.org/10.36439/SHJS/2020/2/8599
Abstract

The physical fitness state of university students has deteriorated over the years. Relevant data is needed to investigate this tendency thoroughly. We conducted a longitudinal examination among university students in Debrecen, Hungary. At the first stage of our examinations, we examined sixty male and female participants to assess their physical fitness status. They participated in four different activities (pilates, spinning, wellness-general fitness, body-shaping) once a week. Each exercise session lasted for 90 minutes. We conducted a pre-and post-exercise screening, which consisted of a Beep-test, push-up, and sit-up tests. 

We hypothesized that the different types of activities might alter the exercise response. Aerobic performance, upper-body, and abdominal strength may differ depending on the type of exercise—international recommendations suggesting that 150 minutes of physical activity is necessary for physical fitness benefits. Our results demonstrated that 90 minutes of exercise might significantly improve inactive young adults' physical fitness state once a week.