Audio By Carbonatix
Schools are being urged to introduce more female-friendly fitness activities such as Zumba classes and rollerblading because so many girls are opting out of exercise.
Research suggests the gap between the amount of exercise girls and boys do widens during their time at school.
A study for the Women's Sports and Fitness Foundation says more than half of girls are put off by PE classes.
The WSFF wants schools to make sports lessons more appealing to girls.
The research was conducted by Loughborough University, which found big differences in the attitudes of girls and boys towards doing sport.
Those differences were wider among older schoolchildren.
Falling exercise levels
Eight-year-olds did similar levels of activity: about 60% of those questioned, both girls and boys, said they did regular exercise - at least an hour, five days a week.
But among 14-year-old girls, that figure had halved - only 31% said they exercised regularly, compared with 50% of 14-year-old boys.
The research found most girls wanted to do more physical activity, but many were put off by PE classes.
Some said they did not like exercising in front of boys, and they were not confident about their sporting skills.
A number felt teachers paid too much attention to the girls who were best at sport.
Role models
Girls were also concerned about what their friends thought about exercise, and said getting sweaty was not feminine.
And many of those questioned said they did not think there were enough female sporting role models.
The WSFF is writing to schools offering advice on how to make school sports more attractive to girls.
WSFF said some PE lessons were "stuck in the 1950s jolly-hockey-sticks style of the past".
"It's simply unacceptable that the overwhelming majority of our young women are leaving school with dangerously low levels of physical activity," said WSFF chief executive Sue Tibbals.
"We can't afford to keep ignoring the evidence that school sport plays a key role in shaping attitudes to sports and fitness."
The Youth Sport Trust said schools needed to do more to address issues such as girls feeling body conscious or lacking confidence in their abilities.
"Schools that deliver PE well recognise these challenges and offer a wider variety of sports and physical activity that make girls feel included," said chairwoman Baroness Sue Campbell.
"We would like to see all schools take this approach."
DISCLAIMER: The Views, Comments, Opinions, Contributions and Statements made by Readers and Contributors on this platform do not necessarily represent the views or policy of Multimedia Group Limited.
Tags:
DISCLAIMER: The Views, Comments, Opinions, Contributions and Statements made by Readers and Contributors on this platform do not necessarily represent the views or policy of Multimedia Group Limited.
Latest Stories
-
TGMA 2026: The night ahead; who wins what?
12 minutes -
Kenyasi Government Hospital faces infrastructure and equipment challenges despite top performance rankings
1 hour -
Energy ministry sets up control and command centre to improve response time to power challenges
1 hour -
North East Regional Minister highlights major development gains at maiden Government Accountability Series
2 hours -
Trump says Russia and Ukraine to observe three-day ceasefire
2 hours -
Iran accuses US of ‘reckless military adventure’
2 hours -
Oppong Nkrumah named chair of NPP policy committee amid party reorganisation
2 hours -
GSE equity market records 72% return in April 2026, SIC led pack of 10 gainers
2 hours -
US judge rules humanities grant terminations by DOGE were unlawful, discriminatory
2 hours -
Nalerigu High Court halts NPP elections in Bunkpurugu constituency
2 hours -
Davido announces break from music
2 hours -
Ethiopian woman’s joy at rare quintuplets after 12 years trying for a baby
2 hours -
Fitch upgrades Ghana’s credit rating amid global uncertainty, economic turbulence
2 hours -
International cyber attack disrupts swathe of universities and schools
2 hours -
The companies making billions from the Iran war
2 hours