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RESEARCH PRODUCT
The associations between seventh grade Finnish students’ motivational climate, perceived competence, self-determined motivation, and fundamental movement skills
Sami KalajaYngvar OmmundsenTimo JaakkolaJarmo LiukkonenAnthony P Wattsubject
Psychomotor learningGoal orientationmedia_common.quotation_subjectSelf-esteemSelf-conceptPhysical Therapy Sports Therapy and RehabilitationEducationPhysical educationRating scaleOrthopedics and Sports MedicinePath analysis (statistics)PsychologySocial psychologyCompetence (human resources)media_commondescription
The aim of the study was to investigate the relationships between motivational climate, perceived competence, self-determined motivation towards physical education (PE) and the fundamental movement skills of Finnish secondary school students. A sample of 370 seventh-grade PE students (girls n = 189; boys n = 181; mean age = 13.08; SD = 0.25) completed measures pertaining to motivational climates, perceived competence, regulation of motivation, and fundamental movement skills. Path analysis revealed results generally consistent with the theoretical tenets of the self-determination and the achievement goal theories by demonstrating that a task-involving motivational climate influenced perceived competence, which in turn affected more self-determined motivation towards PE. Furthermore, results revealed that this motivational sequence was associated with increased balance skill. A sequence consisting of task-involving climate, intrinsically regulated motivation, and balance skills was also observed. Additionally, the results indicated that task-involving motivational climate influenced perceived competence, in turn influencing manipulative and locomotor skills. Finally, an ego-involving climate was found to be a marginally positive predictor of manipulative skills.
year | journal | country | edition | language |
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2009-10-01 | European Physical Education Review |