sport psychology chap 3 motivation
Competitiveness:
"A disposition to strive for satisfaction when making comparisons with some standard of excellence in the presence of evaluative others" (Martens, 1986)
2. Identify why people participate in physical activity (PA)
- How will you identify these? - What are the major motive for sport vs. exercise?
Theories of Achievement Motivation
1.Attribution theory 2.Achievement goal theory 3.Competence motivation theory
Achievement motivation:
A person's orientation to strive for task success, persist in the face of failure, and experience pride in accomplishments (Gill, 2000) *interactional view
Participant- or trait-centered view
Function of individual characteristics •"winner"/ "loser"
Situation-centered view
Function of the situation •Competition/training (work/play)
Views of Motivation
Participant- or trait-centered view Situation-centered view Interactional view
Intensity of effort
how much effort an individual puts forth in a situation Too little............................Too much
Achievement motivation =
self-comparison of achievement
What Is Motivation
the direction and intensity of effort.
5. Use behavior change methods, where appropriate
•Encourage/reward desired behaviors
Achievement Goal Theory Keys
•Focus extra attention on task-oriented goals. •Foster mastery or task motivational climates.
4. Understand that you influence motivation as a coach, therapist, trainer, teacher, leader, or teammate...whether you know it or not!
•Mood
Competence motivation theory
•Self-worth and competence affective sates motivation People are motivated to feel worthy or competent. •Feelings of competence and worth, as well as perceptions of control, determine motives.
Attribution theory
•Stability/locus of causality/locus of control How people explain their successes and failures
Achievement goal theory
•Task/ego orientation . Outcome goal orientation (or competitive goal orientation) focuses on comparing performance with that of others and defeating others. . Task goal orientation (or mastery goal orientation) focuses on improving relative to one's own past performances. . Social goal orientation focuses on judging competence in terms of affiliation with the group and recognition of being liked by others.
Five guidelines
-Mood, different methods, opportunities, identify why people participate, situation and trait affect motivation
•Competitiveness =
social evaluation or comparison
Five Guidelines for Building Motivation
1.Understand that both situations and traits motivate people 2. Identify why people participate in physical activity (PA) 3. Change the environment to enhance motivation 4. Understand that you influence motivation as a coach, therapist, trainer, teacher, leader, or teammate...whether you know it or not! 5. Use behavior change methods, where appropriate
Interactional-centered view:
Motivated behavior results from the interaction of participant factors and situational factors
Direction of effort
whether an individual seeks out, approaches, or is attracted to situations
3. Change the environment to enhance motivation
•Multiple opportunities •Intense training and fun •Competitive and recreation choices
1.Understand that both situations and traits motivate people
•Personal and environmental factors affect motivation •Motivated in lectures