The Social-Ecological Model
Physical Activity & Sedentary Behaviour Guidelines
Measuring Physical Activity
SMARTER Goal-Setting Method
Homophones
100

This level focuses on personal knowledge, attitudes, and skills.

What is the individual level?

100

Children aged 5–17 should accumulate at least this many minutes of moderate-to-vigorous PA daily.

What is 60?

100

This device measures step counts.

What is a pedometer?

100

Rewrite this goal to make it Specific: I want to get fitter.

What is "I will run 3km, three times a week, for the next month”?

100

Flung and ceremonial chair.

What is thrown/throne?

200

This level involves friends, family, and peers encouraging physical activity.

What is the social environment level?

200

Children aged 5–17 should have no more than this many hours of recreational screen time daily.

What is 2 hours?

200

This method involves an assessor watching and recording PA behaviours.

What is direct observation?

200

Which SMARTER component ensures you track progress, and why is this important?

What is Measurable, because it allows you to track improvement and know when the goal is achieved?

200

Castle protector and dust particle.

What is moat/mote?

300

Building bike racks at school is an example of change at this level.

What is the physical environment?

300

Adults aged 18–64 should aim for this many minutes of moderate PA each week.

What is 150–300 minutes?

300

Participants record their own PA patterns over time in this method.

What are diaries?

300

Linking a fitness goal to a chosen sport applies which SMARTER element?

What is Relevant?

300

A large marine creature and a loud lamentation.

What is whale/wail?

400

Upper management introducing a walk, ride, or run to work day once a week is an example of this level of influence.

What is policy?

400

The excuse adults give most as to why they cannot meet the guidelines.

What is time?

400

For example, when Sally wears her FitBit, she feels inclined to be active.

What is reactivity?

400

A student sets a goal to swim 1km without training first. Which SMARTER element does this violate, and how could it be fixed?

What is Achievable, and it could be adjusted to “Swim 200m continuously, three times a week for a month” before progressing?

400

Hard to unravel and badly behaved.

What is naughty/knotty?

500

Analyse Alice Miller's cross-country program using the social-ecological model.

What is individual (different groups for varying abilities), social (run with your peers), physical (running tracks), and policy (a weekly, compulsory schedule)?

500

Name the three main types of activities that should be included weekly in adult guidelines.

What are aerobic, muscle-strengthening, and flexibility activities?

500

A response bias that answers questions in a manner that will be viewed favorably by others.

What is social desirability bias?

500

A Year 10 student sets this goal: “I will improve my beep test score.” Identify three SMARTER elements missing or weak in this goal, and rewrite it so that it fully meets the SMARTER criteria.

Possible weaknesses:

  • Specific: Doesn’t state how or by how much.

  • Measurable: No clear score target or timeframe.

  • Time-bound: No end date given.

Rewritten:

“I will improve my beep test score from 6.5 to 8.0 within 8 weeks by completing three 30-minute running interval sessions per week.”

500

Finished and drab.

What is done/dun?