Resource Library

Page 34 of 106 pages. This page shows results 661 - 680 of 2104 total results.
  Video

An instructional video by Jason Serafino-Agar on how to teach your child to ride a bike in 3 steps

  Fact Sheet
Making Strides: 2016 State Report Cards

Learn how you can use the report cards to communicate the importance of supportive state policies and highlight ideas for inspiring change in your state.

  Fact Sheet
Making Strides: 2016 State Report Cards

This fact sheet provides a quick summary of the report cards' scoring structure.

  Fact Sheet

This fact sheet explores the benefits of making healthy food accessible by foot, bike, or transit, and highlights examples of how businesses, agencies, and nonprofits are taking action to improve transportation options to healthy food.

  Fact Sheet

This guide provides step-by-step instructions for creating walking route maps using free tools.

  Fact Sheet
What Are They and How Do We Use Them?

Here is a guide to use walking meetings in your workplace to stimulate creativity, boost workplace morale, and provide easy opportunities for physical activity during the workday.

  Video

The ChangeLab Solutions' pedcast, Road Signs, is designed for public health practitioners and advocates interested in creating safe and active streets. Each episode introduces one transportation tool that promotes community health and well-being. 

  Fact Sheet

This fact sheet includes tips for employers and employees who want to incorporate walking into the workday.

  Toolkit, Report
How Public Health Can Help Implement Complete Streets

This guide can help communities ensure their Complete Streets policy becomes more than words on paper and creates real, on-the-ground change. It focuses on how public health practitioners, in particular, can collaborate with other agencies to implement Complete Streets. 

  Research

Fear is a big barrier to bicycling for Blacks and Hispanics (i.e., fear of traffic collisions, fear of robbery and assault, fear of being stranded with a broken bicycle, fear of police racial profiling, and fear of verbal harassment). 

  Fact Sheet

Use this checklist to assess the walkability of your route or neighborhood.

  Research

The Bike Score measure was found to be significantly correlated with cycling mode share, in that a higher composite Bike Score, made up of a weighted sum of bike lane availability, topography, and connectivity, was associated with higher rates of commute cycling.

  Research

This study provides helpful strategies and evaluation measures for enhancing Safe Routes to School programming and participation. 

  Blog

Archived tweets from #MoveEquity tweetchat with @SafeRoutesNow @KaBOOM @SaludToday @Voices4HK @AmericaWalks @AL_Research

  Research

This study examined the degree of usage and production of PA among schools with shared use, and how variation in PA output is related to characteristics of the school, type of activity, facility type, and when activity occurs. g schools.

  Research
Evidence from Davis, California

Study results indicate a possible positive relationship between lower levels of stress when cycling and greater average numbers of cyclists riding to both elementary and junior high schools. 

  Research
Difference Between Shortest and Actual Route

KEY TAKEAWAYS:

  • The built environment has a significant impact on a child’s choice to walk or bike to school. Specifically, children tend to avoid busy streets on their active commute to school, which is an important consideration for the planning and design of the neighborhoods surrounding schools. 
  Research

In this study, the Safe Routes to School program was associated with an approximately 23 percent percent reduction in pedestrian/bicyclist injury risk and a 20 percent reduction in pedestrian/bicyclist fatality risk in school-age children (5-19 years) compared to adults (30-64 years). 

  Research

KEY TAKEAWAYS: This study found that neighborhood social environments have a positive influence on children’s active commuting to and from school for boys, and an inverse significant association for girls. 

  Research

Both the quality and process of placemaking, defined loosely within this publication as a project that occurs in public spaces helping people to feel connected to a place and greater community, has demonstrated physical, mental, and social health benefits.