Significant others and students’ leisure-time physical activity intention: A prospective test of the social influence in sport model

This two-wave prospective study applied the Social Influence in Sport Model to investigate whether the social influences of parents, physical education (PE) teachers, and peers were predictive of students' intention to engage in leisure-time physical activity (PA). Participants were 2,484 secon...

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Main Authors: Su, Diana L.Y., Lee, Alfred S.Y., Chung, Joan S.K., Tang, Tracy C.W., Capio, Catherine M., Zhang, Lei, Chan, Derwin K.C.
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Published: Archīum Ateneo 2023
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Online Access:https://archium.ateneo.edu/hs-faculty-pubs/36
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Institution: Ateneo De Manila University
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spelling ph-ateneo-arc.hs-faculty-pubs-10352024-02-21T09:12:02Z Significant others and students’ leisure-time physical activity intention: A prospective test of the social influence in sport model Su, Diana L.Y. Lee, Alfred S.Y. Chung, Joan S.K. Tang, Tracy C.W. Capio, Catherine M. Zhang, Lei Chan, Derwin K.C. This two-wave prospective study applied the Social Influence in Sport Model to investigate whether the social influences of parents, physical education (PE) teachers, and peers were predictive of students' intention to engage in leisure-time physical activity (PA). Participants were 2,484 secondary school students (11–18 years old) who completed a questionnaire assessing positive influence, punishment, and dysfunction from the three social agents (parents, PE teachers, and peers) at baseline, and PA intention at a 1-month follow-up. Structural equation modelling (SEM) yielded excellent goodness-of-fit and consistent pathways between the three social agents. Students' leisure-time PA intention (R2 =.103 to 0.112) was positively associated with positive influence (β =.223 to 0.236, p <.001) and punishment (β =.214 to 0.256, p <.01), and negatively associated with dysfunction (β = - 0.281 to -.335, p <.001). Multi-group SEM showed that the predictions were invariant between parents, PE teachers, and peers. Furthermore, no significant differences in students' gender were found between perceived social influence and PA intention. The findings supported the application of the Social Influence in Sport Model in explaining the role of significant others on students’ intention to take part in leisure-time PA. 2023-07-01T07:00:00Z text https://archium.ateneo.edu/hs-faculty-pubs/36 Health Sciences Faculty Publications Archīum Ateneo Children and adolescents Positive reinforcement Punishment Social influence Sport and exercise
institution Ateneo De Manila University
building Ateneo De Manila University Library
continent Asia
country Philippines
Philippines
content_provider Ateneo De Manila University Library
collection archium.Ateneo Institutional Repository
topic Children and adolescents
Positive reinforcement
Punishment
Social influence
Sport and exercise
spellingShingle Children and adolescents
Positive reinforcement
Punishment
Social influence
Sport and exercise
Su, Diana L.Y.
Lee, Alfred S.Y.
Chung, Joan S.K.
Tang, Tracy C.W.
Capio, Catherine M.
Zhang, Lei
Chan, Derwin K.C.
Significant others and students’ leisure-time physical activity intention: A prospective test of the social influence in sport model
description This two-wave prospective study applied the Social Influence in Sport Model to investigate whether the social influences of parents, physical education (PE) teachers, and peers were predictive of students' intention to engage in leisure-time physical activity (PA). Participants were 2,484 secondary school students (11–18 years old) who completed a questionnaire assessing positive influence, punishment, and dysfunction from the three social agents (parents, PE teachers, and peers) at baseline, and PA intention at a 1-month follow-up. Structural equation modelling (SEM) yielded excellent goodness-of-fit and consistent pathways between the three social agents. Students' leisure-time PA intention (R2 =.103 to 0.112) was positively associated with positive influence (β =.223 to 0.236, p <.001) and punishment (β =.214 to 0.256, p <.01), and negatively associated with dysfunction (β = - 0.281 to -.335, p <.001). Multi-group SEM showed that the predictions were invariant between parents, PE teachers, and peers. Furthermore, no significant differences in students' gender were found between perceived social influence and PA intention. The findings supported the application of the Social Influence in Sport Model in explaining the role of significant others on students’ intention to take part in leisure-time PA.
format text
author Su, Diana L.Y.
Lee, Alfred S.Y.
Chung, Joan S.K.
Tang, Tracy C.W.
Capio, Catherine M.
Zhang, Lei
Chan, Derwin K.C.
author_facet Su, Diana L.Y.
Lee, Alfred S.Y.
Chung, Joan S.K.
Tang, Tracy C.W.
Capio, Catherine M.
Zhang, Lei
Chan, Derwin K.C.
author_sort Su, Diana L.Y.
title Significant others and students’ leisure-time physical activity intention: A prospective test of the social influence in sport model
title_short Significant others and students’ leisure-time physical activity intention: A prospective test of the social influence in sport model
title_full Significant others and students’ leisure-time physical activity intention: A prospective test of the social influence in sport model
title_fullStr Significant others and students’ leisure-time physical activity intention: A prospective test of the social influence in sport model
title_full_unstemmed Significant others and students’ leisure-time physical activity intention: A prospective test of the social influence in sport model
title_sort significant others and students’ leisure-time physical activity intention: a prospective test of the social influence in sport model
publisher Archīum Ateneo
publishDate 2023
url https://archium.ateneo.edu/hs-faculty-pubs/36
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