BACKGROUND: 
  Physical  activity (PA) declines sharply and rapidly during adolescence, especially among  girls, posing a risk for inactivity and obesity in adulthood. This study  identified personal, behavioral, and socioenvironmental correlates of  concurrent and 6-month longitudinal PA among adolescent girls.
METHODS: 
  Data were  gathered from 356 adolescent girls (mean age 15.8 ± 1.2 years; > 75%  racial/ethnic minorities) in the Minneapolis/St. Paul area in 2007-2009. Linear  regression analyses controlling for age, race/ethnicity, and school were  conducted predicting baseline and follow-up levels of total PA and  moderate-to-vigorous PA (MVPA) assessed via 3-Day Physical Activity Recall.  Models were fit for each correlate individually and for all correlates  together, mutually adjusted.
RESULTS: 
  For  concurrent PA, significant positive predictors when adjusting for the influence  of all other variables included self-efficacy, support from friends and  teachers, and friends' PA. Total screen time and distance from school to PA resources  related inversely to concurrent PA. In mutually-adjusted models, 6-month PA was  positively related to self-worth, family support, and parent PA and inversely  related to total screen time.
CONCLUSIONS: 
  PA  interventions with adolescent girls might be enhanced by involving adolescents'  social networks and also by helping adolescents feel better about their  self-worth and athletic abilities.