University of Wollongong
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Continued participation in youth sports: the role of achievement motivation

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posted on 2024-11-14, 18:57 authored by Lauren Gardner, Stewart VellaStewart Vella, Christopher Magee
This study explored the antecedents of enjoyment and intention to continue in youth sports using the social-cognitive model of achievement motivation with the 2x2 achievement goal modification. Participants were 327 sports participants aged between 11 and 15 years. Individuals high in incremental beliefs reported greater enjoyment and intention to continue. This was perhaps due to endorsing mastery-approach goals. Individuals relatively high in entity beliefs reported relatively less enjoyment. This was perhaps due to endorsing performance-avoidance goals. These individuals also reported relatively less intention to continue regardless of their achievement goals. Findings could have implications for preventing dropout from youth sports.

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Citation

Gardner, L. A., Vella, S. A. & Magee, C. A. (2017). Continued participation in youth sports: the role of achievement motivation. Journal of Applied Sport Psychology, 29 (1), 17-31.

Journal title

Journal of Applied Sport Psychology

Volume

29

Issue

1

Pagination

17-31

Language

English

RIS ID

107351

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