A qualitative study in UK secondary schools exploring how PE uniform policies influence body image attitudes and PE engagement among adolescent girls

Background Many adolescent girls experience body dissatisfaction and have low levels of physical activity. Secondary school physical education (PE) offers opportunities for girls to build self-confidence and stay active; however, PE uniforms can be a barrier to participation.Objectives To explore ho...

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Main Authors: Laura Chapman, Sally Barber, Russ Jago, Helen Bould, Angela S Attwood, Ruth Wadman, Alice Porter, Ian Penton-Voak, Elin Cawley, Charlotte Crisp
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: BMJ Publishing Group 2025-07-01
Series:BMJ Open
Online Access:https://bmjopen.bmj.com/content/15/7/e099312.full
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author Laura Chapman
Sally Barber
Russ Jago
Helen Bould
Angela S Attwood
Ruth Wadman
Alice Porter
Ian Penton-Voak
Elin Cawley
Charlotte Crisp
author_facet Laura Chapman
Sally Barber
Russ Jago
Helen Bould
Angela S Attwood
Ruth Wadman
Alice Porter
Ian Penton-Voak
Elin Cawley
Charlotte Crisp
author_sort Laura Chapman
collection DOAJ
description Background Many adolescent girls experience body dissatisfaction and have low levels of physical activity. Secondary school physical education (PE) offers opportunities for girls to build self-confidence and stay active; however, PE uniforms can be a barrier to participation.Objectives To explore how secondary school PE uniform policies influence body image attitudes and PE engagement (participation and enjoyment) among adolescent girls, and how these policies could be co-developed in future.Design A qualitative study involving focus groups and interviews.Participants and setting Forty-four 12–13 year-old girls and six PE staff members from six mixed-sex secondary schools in England.Data collection and analysis Using topic guides and participatory activities to aid discussions, we explored PE uniform preferences and the influence on body image attitudes and PE engagement with adolescent girls, as well as the PE uniform policy development process with PE staff. Data were analysed using reflexive thematic analysis, supported by NVivo V.14.Results Three themes were generated. Theme 1, ‘Striking the right balance between choice, comfort and uniformity’, describes the challenges of developing PE uniform policies that offer pupils choice to maximise comfort, while maintaining uniformity to ensure smartness, and to reduce social comparison. Theme 2, ‘PE uniforms are “made for boys”’ reflects that current policies can often provide unisex uniforms that do not fit the female body, or gendered options that limit girls’ choices over style and fit. Theme 3, ‘Self-confidence influences comfort in wearing PE uniform, and in turn PE engagement’ suggests girls with high self-confidence may be less concerned about others’ opinions and how they look, leading to greater PE enjoyment, whereas girls with lower self-confidence described feeling self-conscious, especially in communal changing rooms, which could impact their comfort and PE engagement.Conclusions Our findings suggest that developing PE uniform policies, which allow pupils to choose their own bottoms, wear additional layers and wear PE uniform all day may improve comfort and inclusivity among girls, facilitating better PE engagement.
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spelling doaj-art-e1f233cfd16a4ed495875099f81862c82025-08-20T03:51:03ZengBMJ Publishing GroupBMJ Open2044-60552025-07-0115710.1136/bmjopen-2025-099312A qualitative study in UK secondary schools exploring how PE uniform policies influence body image attitudes and PE engagement among adolescent girlsLaura Chapman0Sally Barber1Russ Jago2Helen Bould3Angela S Attwood4Ruth Wadman5Alice Porter6Ian Penton-Voak7Elin Cawley8Charlotte Crisp9Centre for Academic Mental Health, Population Health Sciences, University of Bristol, Bristol, UKNIHR Bristol Biomedical Research Centre, Bristol, UKNIHR Bristol Biomedical Research Centre, Bristol, UKNIHR Bristol Biomedical Research Centre, Bristol, UKSchool of Psychological Science, University of Bristol, Bristol, UKDepartment of Health Sciences, University of York, York, UKNIHR Bristol Biomedical Research Centre, Bristol, UKNIHR Bristol Biomedical Research Centre, Bristol, UKNIHR Bristol Biomedical Research Centre, Bristol, UKNIHR Bristol Biomedical Research Centre, Bristol, UKBackground Many adolescent girls experience body dissatisfaction and have low levels of physical activity. Secondary school physical education (PE) offers opportunities for girls to build self-confidence and stay active; however, PE uniforms can be a barrier to participation.Objectives To explore how secondary school PE uniform policies influence body image attitudes and PE engagement (participation and enjoyment) among adolescent girls, and how these policies could be co-developed in future.Design A qualitative study involving focus groups and interviews.Participants and setting Forty-four 12–13 year-old girls and six PE staff members from six mixed-sex secondary schools in England.Data collection and analysis Using topic guides and participatory activities to aid discussions, we explored PE uniform preferences and the influence on body image attitudes and PE engagement with adolescent girls, as well as the PE uniform policy development process with PE staff. Data were analysed using reflexive thematic analysis, supported by NVivo V.14.Results Three themes were generated. Theme 1, ‘Striking the right balance between choice, comfort and uniformity’, describes the challenges of developing PE uniform policies that offer pupils choice to maximise comfort, while maintaining uniformity to ensure smartness, and to reduce social comparison. Theme 2, ‘PE uniforms are “made for boys”’ reflects that current policies can often provide unisex uniforms that do not fit the female body, or gendered options that limit girls’ choices over style and fit. Theme 3, ‘Self-confidence influences comfort in wearing PE uniform, and in turn PE engagement’ suggests girls with high self-confidence may be less concerned about others’ opinions and how they look, leading to greater PE enjoyment, whereas girls with lower self-confidence described feeling self-conscious, especially in communal changing rooms, which could impact their comfort and PE engagement.Conclusions Our findings suggest that developing PE uniform policies, which allow pupils to choose their own bottoms, wear additional layers and wear PE uniform all day may improve comfort and inclusivity among girls, facilitating better PE engagement.https://bmjopen.bmj.com/content/15/7/e099312.full
spellingShingle Laura Chapman
Sally Barber
Russ Jago
Helen Bould
Angela S Attwood
Ruth Wadman
Alice Porter
Ian Penton-Voak
Elin Cawley
Charlotte Crisp
A qualitative study in UK secondary schools exploring how PE uniform policies influence body image attitudes and PE engagement among adolescent girls
BMJ Open
title A qualitative study in UK secondary schools exploring how PE uniform policies influence body image attitudes and PE engagement among adolescent girls
title_full A qualitative study in UK secondary schools exploring how PE uniform policies influence body image attitudes and PE engagement among adolescent girls
title_fullStr A qualitative study in UK secondary schools exploring how PE uniform policies influence body image attitudes and PE engagement among adolescent girls
title_full_unstemmed A qualitative study in UK secondary schools exploring how PE uniform policies influence body image attitudes and PE engagement among adolescent girls
title_short A qualitative study in UK secondary schools exploring how PE uniform policies influence body image attitudes and PE engagement among adolescent girls
title_sort qualitative study in uk secondary schools exploring how pe uniform policies influence body image attitudes and pe engagement among adolescent girls
url https://bmjopen.bmj.com/content/15/7/e099312.full
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