1 research outputs found
Perceptions about quality of interpersonal processes and practice activities in youth sport are interdependent
Despite calls in the literature, little is known about how dimensions of a social and task
nature relate to each other in school and out-of-school learning environments. This study
explored whether interpersonal and task dimensions of the youth sport environment, as
perceived by young people, are related, and, if so, how they are related. We used data from
310 adolescent sport participants from eastern Canada (Mage = 14.69 ± 1.60 years; 54.8 %
girls). Participants completed comprehensive assessments of interpersonal dimensions of the
sport environment and the characteristics of learning activities they do in practices. We used
canonical correlation analysis to examine the multivariate shared relationship between the
variable sets. The relationship was largely captured by the first three functions in the
canonical model. The first two functions revealed areas of intersection between perceptions
of interpersonal and practice-based activity factors in the form of supports and challenges for
the learning and development process in sport. Accounting for the participants’ age, the third
function displayed characteristics consistent with recent descriptions of complex
environments in youth sport. The findings suggest that adolescents’ perceptions of
interpersonal- and task-related features of sport are interdependent, and highlight the
relevance of including variables assessing both factors in studies that attempt to characterize
and understand learning environments in sport and other achievement domains. Findings also
afford new insights into whether dimensions of a social and task nature are complementary,
and inadequacies in one dimension can be attenuated by strengths in another or not