The importance of motor coordination for children's motivational orientations in sport.

B. Rose, Dawne Larkin, B. Berger

    Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

    27 Citations (Scopus)

    Abstract

    According to competence motivation theory, children who are successful at movement will be intrinsically motivated in the motor domain (Harter, 1978, 1981a). By contrast, intrinsic motivation of children who repeatedly fail at movement is likely to diminish. The present study aimed to examine motivational orientations of children (N = 130) who differed in motor ability. Children (age 8-12) were categorized as coordinated (n = 62) or poorly coordinated (n = 68) according to scores on a neuromuscular development battery (McCarron, 1982). The poorly coordinated group was less motivated by challenge than well-coordinated participants as measured on the Motivational Orientation in Sport Scale (Weiss, Bredemeier, & Shewchuk, 1985a). Girls were less intrinsically motivated toward challenge than boys. There was little support that movement competence and motivational orientation are linked.
    Original languageEnglish
    Pages (from-to)316-327
    JournalAdapted Physical Activity Quarterly
    Volume15
    Publication statusPublished - 1998

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