6533b831fe1ef96bd12984cf

RESEARCH PRODUCT

Motivational Antecedents of Well-Being and Health Related Behaviors in Adolescents

Joan L. DudaIsabel CastilloIsabel Balaguer

subject

Psychological intervention050109 social psychologyPhysical Therapy Sports Therapy and RehabilitationStudent engagementGoal theorystructural equation modelingStructural equation modelingDevelopmental psychology03 medical and health sciences0302 clinical medicinePhysiology (medical)health determinantsmedicine0501 psychology and cognitive sciences030212 general & internal medicinelcsh:Sports medicine05 social sciencesLife satisfactionBoredomschool healthadolescent healthpsychosocial theoriesWell-beingMotivation in Physical Education Sport and Physical Activity and Healthmedicine.symptomlcsh:RC1200-1245Adolescent health

description

Abstract Grounded in the Achievement Goal Theory framework of motivation and optimal functioning, there were two objectives of this study: (a) to test a model hypothesizing links between personal theories of school achievement, indices of the quality of academic engagement, wellbeing, and health-related behaviors, and (b) to explore whether the hypothesized model was invariant across gender groups. A multisection questionnaire pack tapping the targeted variables was administered to 967 teenagers (475 boys and 492 girls) aged between 11 to 16 years old. Structural equation modeling analysis revealed that Task theory of achievement predicted positively satisfaction in school and negatively boredom in school. An Ego theory of achievement was linked to higher levels of boredom in school. Satisfaction in school corresponded to higher life satisfaction, while boredom was negatively related. Higher life satisfaction was associated with lower tobacco, alcohol and marijuana consumption, more healthy food intake and greater levels of physical activity. The results revealed partial invariance of the model by gender. The quality of adolescents’ involvement in the classroom holds important implications for adolescent’s well-being and their health related behaviors. Interventions on the creation of a task-involving motivational climate in the school are proposed to promote healthy lifestyles among young people.

10.1515/hukin-2017-0152http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC5680691