6533b83afe1ef96bd12a7ae9

RESEARCH PRODUCT

A longitudinal transitional perspective on why adolescents choose to quit organized sport in Norway

Magne Hem StenersenMarte BentzenMats Melvold HordvikBård Erlend Solstad

subject

Data collectionbiologyAthletesInterpretation (philosophy)media_common.quotation_subjectPerspective (graphical)biology.organism_classificationVDP::Medisinske Fag: 700::Idrettsmedisinske fag: 850Focus groupDevelopmental psychologyContent analysisPerceptionPsychologyPsychosocialApplied Psychologymedia_common

description

Abstract The present study used a prospective cohort design to explore the reasons why young athletes decided to quit playing handball. The theoretical underpinnings were drawn from the fields of career transition, motivation, and meaningful experiences in organized youth sport. Thirty-four athletes were included in a larger research project exploring the complex interplay of psychosocial factors during the transition period from lower-to upper-secondary school in Norway. In this study, the data collection involved three sources: individual interviews with the 10 athletes who decided to leave their teams during the study period (five girls and five boys), and individual open-ended questionnaires for these 10 participants collected five times over two seasons, aligned with their participation in focus group interviews. The data analysis involved a three-step process of inductive content analysis of the total corpus of the data. A core finding indicates that all adolescents had gone through a decision-making process over time to determine whether they should continue or quit. It was a process of accumulating reasons that resulted in the final decision. However, the results reveal a broad variation within individual perception and interpretation of what each adolescent experienced as meaningful. Of equal importance, the adolescents not only took their experiences in sport into account when considering quitting organized youth sport, but these were considered in light of their evaluation of meaningfulness in other areas of life. Overall, findings indicate that “dropping out of organized youth sport” should not be regarded as unambiguously negative.

10.1016/j.psychsport.2021.102015https://hdl.handle.net/11250/2991318