College students' hope, body-esteem, motivation, and participation in exercise.

Maria N Moylan, Jessica L Fales, Cathy A Grover
Author Information
  1. Maria N Moylan: Emporia State University, Emporia, Kansas, USA.
  2. Jessica L Fales: Washington State University Vancouver, Vancouver, Washington, USA.
  3. Cathy A Grover: Emporia State University, Emporia, Kansas, USA.

Abstract

While many are aware of the benefits of exercise, there has been a decline in participation across all ages, with dramatic declines during adolescence/young adulthood. This study aimed to determine whether hope, body-esteem, and motivation to exercise contribute to exercise behavior among college students. : Undergraduates ( = 104) were recruited through the psychology research pool and athletic department. : Participants completed a set of questionnaires measuring hope, motivation, body-esteem, and participation in exercise. : We performed a hierarchical regression to determine whether hope predicted exercise above the influence of motivation, body-esteem, and demographic factors. Our analysis revealed a significant model predicting exercise with hope and participation in collegiate athletics as significant predictors. : The combination of health/enjoyment motivation, participation in collegiate athletics, body-esteem, and hope predicts exercise behavior among college students. Identifying that hope played a significant role is an intriguing finding and warrants continued research on hope in health.

Keywords

MeSH Term

Humans
Students
Motivation
Exercise
Female
Male
Universities
Hope
Young Adult
Surveys and Questionnaires
Adolescent
Body Image
Adult
Self Concept

Word Cloud

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