Research article - (2012)11, 95 - 101 |
Parental Predictors of Physical Inactivity in Spanish Adolescents |
Eva Sanz-Arazuri, Ana Ponce-de-León-Elizondo, María Ángeles Valdemoros-San-Emeterio |
Key words: Physical activity, sport, adolescents, leisure, parents |
Key Points |
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A methodological triangulation, using both quantitative and qualitative techniques, was employed. |
Quantitative techniqueParticipants |
The study population comprised 11,259 subjects aged between 12 and 16 years, spanning all the adolescents who were registered in any of the four levels of Secondary Education in schools throughout the province of La Rioja (Spain). La Rioja is an autonomous community in north-central Spain, covering 5,035 km2. The sample comprised 1,978 subjects: 51.7% girls and 48.3% boys, for a 95% confidence level and a sample error of ± 2 sigma. |
Instruments |
The MACOFYD (Questionnaire on the motivation, attitudes, and behaviors in children's physical-sport leisure) (Ponce de León et al., Reliability was verified through two pilot studies in real conditions, taking into account the inputs during the process, including suggestions by experts and university specialists in Sport and Physical Activity. Cronbach’s alpha (α = 0.721) shows that the items have a high reliability. |
Procedure |
The questionnaire was administered during the academic year 2008 between the months of February and April. The information was collected through a self-administered approach designed for massive classroom impact, during the usual class time and with previous consent given by the corresponding teacher and the headmaster. Students were asked for their anonymous and voluntary collaboration. A researcher was present at all times and special emphasis was placed on the sincerity of the students' responses. |
Data analysis |
Cramer's V coefficients were calculated to determine the extent and direction of the bivariate association between adolescent physical activity and all the other variables. A multinomial regression analysis was performed in order to detect the parental factors that determine the absence of physical-sport practice in the children. Significance of the analysis was set at an alpha level of p < 0.05. |
Qualitative techniqueParticipants |
A total of 41 participants took part in this section: 10 parents, 10 physical education (PE) teachers, 10 teachers of other subjects, and 11 students. |
Instruments |
A discussion group technique was used with the four above-mentioned collectives. The selection of the participants was crucial, and the diverse collectives were primarily formed according to membership criteria. The following aspects were taken into account: homogeneity regarding collective education; gender heterogeneity; the decision to balance the number of participants in relation to their birthplace (i.e., whether or not they were from the capital or from another area in the province); and the balance of the type of school (public and state-subsidized or chartered). The category system for analyzing the value of health in physical-sport leisure created by Valdemoros, |
Procedure |
An observational protocol, which is represented in In order to optimize the reliability of the protocol, only one researcher was responsible for data analysis. Flexible criteria were used concerning the duration of the group discussions and when to end them (when the group was saturated or discourse became redundant). All the participants were observed to determine whether they changed their opinion about any of the issues. |
Data analysis |
The accounts of these discussion groups were analyzed with Nvivo 9 software. The analytical category and subcategories were validated by the judgments of five experts and university specialists in Sciences Education, Sport and Physical Activity, who identified the textual units in one of the discussion groups (PE teachers), registering each unit in the corresponding subcategories. Cohen's kappa formula was applied to measure inter-evaluator reliability, obtaining satisfactory reliability. Concerning the degree of correlation among the experts, the variance was never less than 0.5 (Cohen, After the category system had been validated, a single investigator was responsible for coding the textual units of the other three focus groups. |
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In the questionnaire, most of the young people (78.4%) currently exercised. Of these, 73.5% had already engaged in some form of physical-sport activity in the past, but 4.9% had no prior experience. In contrast, 3.1% of the children had never engaged in sport activity, and 18.5% of the adolescents had quit practicing physical sport. These results are presented in The bivariate correlation analysis showed that the children's physical-sport practice correlated significantly with gender (Cramer's V = 0.264), the importance granted by parents to physical-sport activities (Cramer's V = 0.213), and both parents' physical-sport practice (Cramer's V = 0.164 and V 0.125, respectively, for fathers and mothers). However, the children's physical-sport practice did not significantly correlate with either parent's educational level. These results are presented in In order to determine the predictors of adolescents' physical inactivity, a multinomial regression analysis was conducted with the children who had never engaged in physical-sport activities ( Based on these findings, it is four times more likely for an adolescent whose father has never engaged in physical-sport activities to be more sedentary than a child whose father currently practices and has practiced physical exercise in the past. Likewise, children are three and a half times more likely to be sedentary if their mothers have never practiced physical activities than if their mothers practice and have practiced in the past. Girls are three times more likely to avoid physical-sport activities in their free time, in comparison to boys. Lastly, regarding the effect of the importance granted by parents to physical-sport activities, granting “none,” “little” or “some” importance to such activities has no impact on adolescents' participation in physical-sport activities in their free time. However, granting “much” or “very much” importance to these types of experiences reduces the likelihood of adolescents being physically inactive. In the qualitative phase, a total of 215 opinions about the influence of social agents in the children's physical-sport practice were recorded in the discussions generated in the 4 focus groups. Twenty percent of the comments point to the coaches as influential agents, 22% to parents, another 22% to the teachers, and 26% to friends. Regarding comments that consider the parents as influential education agents, such comments were equitably distributed in the four groups analyzed ( According to their statements about education agents, 32% of the parents' arguments showed that they are aware that they constitute a fundamental model for their children's physical-sport activity or the absence thereof. Arguments like the following support this claim: On the other hand, children occasionally reproach their parents for placing more importance on academics rather than on physical-sport practice (seen in 25% of the children's comments). Testimonials like the following reflect this idea: “Many of us have been influenced by the fact that our parents consider studies as being primary, and sports secondary” (Students' collective). Teachers of subjects other than PE voiced their agreement with the adolescents on this issue (20% of the comments by teachers of subjects other than PE), expressing the following: “Although you can try to explain to parents that one can study and participate in sports at the same time, many of them are reticent about this notion” (Collective of teachers of subjects other than PE). Finally, PE teachers reproach the influence parents placing more importance on academics to the detriment of physical-sport activity, and focusing on economic arguments to justify the lack of physical participation (33% of PE teachers' comments). “Another factor is the family's mentality, and the fact of paying for physical-sport activity. There are many families that consider that to pay 50 Euros a month for English classes is absolutely normal, but to pay 20 or 30 Euros a month to participate in a physical activity in a club is unusual” (PE Teachers' Collective). |
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The present research sought answers to the following questions: how, when, and why can parents exert a negative influence over their children, resulting in the absence of physical activity? The goal of this article was to determine which parental factors could have a negative impact on their children's active lifestyle. We conclude that both parents are influential education agents for their children's physical activities. As mentioned above, numerous investigations have discovered a positive association between the participation in physical-sport activities of parents and their children (Aarnio, This study verifies that when parents confer more importance on physical activity, the likelihood that the adolescent is sedentary is minimized. The results are consistent with those obtained by other authors (Edo, Gender is also an important determinant in these experiences and deserves more attention in future research. For instance, when parents do not provide a physical-sport model in recreational activities, their daughters are three times more likely to be inactive. Lastly, the discussion group analysis reveals a reproach that is reiterated both by teachers and children, aimed at both parents: the perception that parents grant more importance to academics than to physical-sport activities, which creates an obstacle to practice sports and, consequently, determines the absence of physical activity in their children. This result corresponds with that of Daskapan et al., The results obtained in other investigations (Gordon-Larsen el al., We are aware of the limitations of this kind of study, as the information about parents' physical practice and the importance they grant such practice was collected through the adolescents' perception. |
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ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS |
We thank the Ministry of Education, Culture, and Sport in La Rioja (Spain) for financing this study within the framework of the “I+D+I Riojano Plan” from the Government of La Rioja (promoted 02/2007). |
AUTHOR BIOGRAPHY |
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REFERENCES |
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