首页> 外文期刊>Journal of youth and adolescence >It's Not How Much You Play, but How Much You Enjoy the Game: The Longitudinal Associations Between Adolescents' Self-Esteem and the Frequency Versus Enjoyment of Involvement in Sports
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It's Not How Much You Play, but How Much You Enjoy the Game: The Longitudinal Associations Between Adolescents' Self-Esteem and the Frequency Versus Enjoyment of Involvement in Sports

机译:这不是玩多少,而是玩游戏的乐趣:青少年的自尊心与运动参与的频率与享受之间的纵向联系

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The frequency of involvement in sports often has been concurrently and longitudinally associated with higher self-esteem. The interpretation of this association consistently has been framed as involvement in sports leading to higher levels of self-esteem over time (i.e., socialization effect), although no studies have tested whether higher levels of self-esteem lead to increased involvement in sports over time (i.e., selection effect). Another important aspect of involvement in sports that may be related to self-esteem is the degree to which youth enjoy sports. However, this aspect has received much less attention. To address these gaps in the literature, we first examined the bidirectional effects between self-esteem and the frequency of involvement in sports with 1,492 adolescents (50.8 % female; 92.4 % Canadian-born) over 4 years. Higher levels of self-esteem predicted greater involvement in sports over time, but greater involvement in sports did not predict higher levels of self-esteem over time, offering support only for selection effects. We then tested the bidirectional effects between the enjoyment of sports and self-esteem and found evidence of both socialization and selection effects. Specifically, greater enjoyment of sports predicted higher self-esteem over time, and higher selfesteem predicted greater enjoyment of sports over time. These novel findings suggest that adolescents with higher self-esteem play sports more frequently and enjoy sports more than adolescents with lower self-esteem. In addition, the degree to which adolescents enjoy sports may be more important for increasing self-esteem than the frequency with which adolescents play sports.
机译:参与体育运动的频率常常与纵向和更高的自尊相关。尽管没有研究测试较高水平的自尊是否会导致随着时间的推移增加自尊,但始终没有将这种联系解释为参与体育活动会导致自尊随着时间的推移而升高(即社会化效应)。 (即选择效果)。参与运动可能与自尊有关的另一个重要方面是青年享受运动的程度。但是,这方面的关注很少。为了弥补文献中的这些空白,我们首先研究了4年内1,492名青少年(女性为50.8%;加拿大出生的为92.4%)中的自尊与参与运动频率之间的双向影响。自尊水平越高,随着时间的推移,人们对运动的参与程度越高,但是,随着时间的推移,自尊心的增强程度却不会随时间的推移而升高,只能为选择效果提供支持。然后,我们测试了运动享受与自尊之间的双向影响,并发现了社交和选择影响的证据。具体来说,随着时间的流逝,运动的乐趣越多,自尊心越高;随着时间的流逝,自尊心越高,就意味着运动自娱自乐。这些新颖的发现表明,自尊心较高的青少年比自尊心较低的青少年更常运动,并喜欢运动。此外,青少年享受运动的程度对于提高自尊心可能比青少年参加运动的频率更重要。

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