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Participation in community sports centres: motives and predictors of enjoyment

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CONTRIBUTORS:
  Author Ashford, B.
  Author Biddle, S. (Loughborough University)
  Author Goudas, M.
JOURNAL:
  Journal of Sports Sciences (JSS), 11(3), 249 - 256.
YEAR: 1993
PUB TYPE: Journal Article
SUBJECT(S): EXERCISE; PHYSICAL-FITNESS; PARTICIPATION; MOTIVATION; ENGLAND; SURVEY
DISCIPLINE: No discipline assigned
HTTP:
LANGUAGE: English
PUB ID: 103-366-353 (Last edited on 2002/02/27 18:45:01 US/Mountain)
SPONSOR(S):
 
ABSTRACT:
Research into why people engage in sport and physical recreation has received relatively little attention in both recreation planning and sport psychology. Although there has been a steady flow of North American literature related to participation motivation in competitive youth sport settings, such evidence is of limited value in explaining adult involvement in sport and recreation in Britain. The purpose of this exploratory study was to determine why people paticipate in sport and exercise in community sports centres and to identify whether these motives predict sport enjoyment. The study was based on a questionnaire-interview of approximately 5 min duration conducted in six community sports centres in Leicester. The sample comprised 336 respondents aged 16 years and over. The subjects were presented with 15 motives for sports participation and indicated their degree of agreement on a 5-point scale. The three most commonly endorsed motives were to maintain health, develop physical fitness and aid relaxation. A factor analysis with oblique rotation revealed four factors: assertive achievement, physical well-being, socio-psychological well-being, and sports mastery and performance. Discriminant analysis showed that males were more motivated to participate for sports mastery and performance and assertive achievement than females. A MANOVA showed that older subjects were more motivated by socio-psychological well-being than younger subjects. Sport enjoymnent was best predicted by socio-psychological well-being, sports mastery and performance, and sports importance, although only 14.4 percent of the variance in enjoyment scores was accounted for. These results confirm other research on age differences in exercise and mental health, as well as gender differences on participation motives.
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