The relation between children's accuracy estimates of their physical competence and achievement-related characteristics

Research Quarterly for Exercise and Sport
M R Weiss, T S Horn

Abstract

The relationship between perceptions of competence and control, achievement, and motivated behavior in youth sport has been a topic of considerable interest. The purpose of this study was to examine whether children who are under-, accurate, or overestimators of their physical competence differ in their achievement characteristics. Children (N = 133), 8 to 13 years of age, who were attending a summer sport program, completed a series of questionnaires designed to assess perceptions of competence and control, motivational orientation, and competitive trait anxiety. Measures of physical competence were obtained by teachers' ratings that paralleled the children's measure of perceived competence. Perceived competence and teachers' ratings were standardized by grade level, and an accuracy score was computed from the difference between these scores. Children were then categorized as underestimators, accurate raters, or overestimators according to upper and lower quartiles of this distribution. A 2 x 2 x 3 (age level by gender by accuracy) MANCOVA revealed a significant gender by accuracy interaction. Underestimating girls were lower in challenge motivation, higher in trait anxiety, and more external in their control perceptions than ...Continue Reading

References

Apr 1, 1977·Bulletin of Environmental Contamination and Toxicology·R Martens

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Citations

Jan 31, 2009·Research Quarterly for Exercise and Sport·Maureen R Weiss
Aug 21, 2002·Perceptual and Motor Skills·Lennart Raudsepp, Raino Liblik
Jun 1, 1993·Perceptual and Motor Skills·M E RudisillK S Meaney
Nov 2, 2013·Perceptual and Motor Skills·Mirko SchmidtAchim Conzelmann
May 17, 2007·The British Journal of Educational Psychology·Nicola D RidgersStuart J Fairclough

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