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- Title
A Season-Long Investigation of Fun in Youth Sports.
- Abstract
Fifty-five girls and 67 boys (ages 7-15 yrs) from five ringette and six hockey teams completed pregame and postgame questionnaires at 12 games of their youth sport schedule. Multiple-regression analyses were performed to identify the best predictors of the reported fun level experienced in each of the 12 games. Variables entered into the regression equations included the following: age and sex; pre- and postgame measures of state anxiety and affect, activation, and motivation mood states; pregame measures of choice, how well one expected to play, and confidence that one's team would win; and postgame measures of game outcome, level of challenge in the game, how much was at stake, and how well one played. Postgame positive affect, how well one played, and challenge were consistently the best predictors of fun. When the postgame mood state measures were deleted, game outcome also became an important predictor. The results are interpreted as indicating that fun in youth sports is a positive mood state largely determined by one's perception of personal achievement and the matching of one's skills against a realistic challenge. The results are interpreted as being consistent with the theoretical perspectives of Csikszentmihalyi (1975) and Nicholls (1984a).
- Subjects
SPORTS for children; RINGETTE (Game); HOCKEY for children; STRESS in children; CHILD psychology; ANXIETY in children; RECREATION; CHILDREN in sports; REGRESSION analysis; PSYCHOLOGY
- Publication
Journal of Sport & Exercise Psychology, 1989, Vol 11, Issue 4, p355
- ISSN
0895-2779
- Publication type
Article
- DOI
10.1123/jsep.11.4.355