Economic status as a predictor of motivational and affective experiences in Physical Education and physical activity intentions: a cross-sectional study in six European countries

SAOUDI Ilyes, Philippe Sarrazin, Athanasios G. Papaioannou, Charalambos Krommidas, Marta Borrueco, Erica Gobbi, João Martins, Paul Appleton, Silvio Maltagliati, Gokce Erturan, Damien tessier, Géraldine Escriva-Boulley, Yago Ramis Laloux, Gıyasettin Demirhan, Attilio Carraro, Joan Duda, Nikolaos Digelidis, Georgios Loules, Boris Cheval, Aïna Chalabaev

Research output: Contribution to journalArticleResearch

Abstract

Lower economic status (ES) is associated with a less adaptive experience of school and physical activity. However, empirical evidence supporting the detrimental association of lower ES on the affective and motivational experience in Physical Education (PE) remains scarce. Using a large sample (n = 10392) of adolescents from six countries (i.e., Greece, Spain, Italy, Portugal, England, Turkey), this cross-sectional study tested whether students’ ES was associated with the satisfaction of their basic psychological needs in PE, and in turn with motivational and affective outcomes in PE and their out-of-school physical activity intention. We further explored whether gender moderated the abovementioned relationship. Multigroup structural equation modelling showed that, in five of six countries (i.e., Greece, Spain, Italy, Portugal, England), a lower ES was associated with lower basic needs satisfaction (β = .10, p < .001), which in turn was associated with lower enjoyment (β = .75, p < .001), lower autonomous motivation (β = .83, p < .001), and weaker out-of-school physical activity intention (β = .36, p < .001), higher displeasure (β = -.51, p < .001), higher controlled motivation (β = -19, p < .001) and stronger amotivation in PE (β = -.28, p < .001). Exploratory analyses suggested that the relationship between lower ES and the less adaptative outcomes was amplified among girls. At the crossroad between psychology and sociology, this study provides new insights into how family lower ES and gender might interact to predict less adaptative motivational and affective experiences and outcomes in PE.
Original languageEnglish
Number of pages37
JournalPsyArXiv Preprints
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 30 Jun 2023

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