Students’ personal desire for excitement and teachers’ autonomy support in outdoor activity: Links to passion, intrinsic motivation, and effort
Permanent lenke
https://hdl.handle.net/10037/26656Dato
2022-07-07Type
Journal articleTidsskriftartikkel
Peer reviewed
Sammendrag
The purpose of the study was to test the role of the personal desire for excitement and its links to
autonomy support, harmonious and obsessive passion, and longitudinal intrinsic motivation, and
effort in students’ favorite outdoor activity. 675 students at Norwegian folk high schools [folkehøgskole] attending a one-year study of their favorite outdoor activity (for instance, hunting, fishing,
mountain climbing, kiting, and sailing) completed a questionnaire package. The desire for excitement positively predicted perceived autonomy support and the two types of passion. Autonomy
support positively predicted harmonious passion, which in turn was positively linked to change in
intrinsic motivation, which again positively predicted change in effort. Length of experience moderated the link between desire for excitement and obsessive passion. Furthermore, participants with
short experience in the activity, relative to those with long experience and males, reported a higher
desire for excitement and a higher obsessive passion. Autonomy support from teachers is important
for young adults pursuing activities giving experiences of excitement, speed, and risk. Teachers
can be autonomy supportive by acknowledging students’ feelings and perspectives, encouraging
self-initiation and exploration of new experiences, avoiding communicating pressuring expectations, and instead offering choice among different types of exercises and training methods that may
help the participants to attain their personal goals. In such a social context, it is important that
teachers encourage them to further explore and to improve their skills, as they understand their
excitement-seeking personality. Autonomy support might help the students choose activities providing excitement arousal in a good way, instead of high-risk activities with negative consequences.
Forlag
Nordic Open Access Scholarly PublishingSitering
Waaler, Halvari, Skjesol, Ulstad. Students’ personal desire for excitement and teachers’ autonomy support in outdoor activity: Links to passion, intrinsic motivation, and effort. Journal for Research in Arts and Sports Education. 2022;6:61-80Metadata
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