Abstract
Background/Objectives: This study investigates disparities in physical fitness among Connecticut K-12 students post-COVID-19, highlighting persistent inequities across race, socioeconomic status, language proficiency, and dis/ability. Methods: Utilizing state-wide data from Connecticut's EdSight portal, the research reveals a significant decline in student physical fitness compared to pre-pandemic levels, notably lagging behind academic recovery. Results: Findings underscore stark disparities, with marginalized groups such as students with disabilities, English learners, and racially minoritized students consistently performing lower than their peers. District-level analyses further illustrate pronounced inequities, where affluent, predominantly White districts achieved nearly four times higher fitness scores compared to economically disadvantaged, racially diverse districts. Conclusions: These disparities reflect systemic resource allocation issues and align with the framework of stratification economics, emphasizing structural inequities rather than individual deficits. The study advocates for equity-based funding, mandatory physical education monitoring, culturally responsive teaching practices, and systemic policy reforms to ensure equitable access to physical education resources and holistic student well-being.