The Roles of Sex and Minority Status in Children’s Motivation and Psychomotor Learning
Document Type
Article
Publication Date
12-1-2021
Abstract
In this study, we had two inter-related goals: (a) to examine sex and minority status differences on children’s motivation for physical education (PE; i.e., their expectancy beliefs, subjective task values, and situational interest) and their psychomotor learning outcomes (i.e., motor competence, cardiorespiratory fitness, and in-class physical activity); and (b) to examine the relationships between children’s motivation and their psychomotor learning outcomes while testing the moderation effects of sex and minority status. We recruited 195 fourth and fifth-grade students (101 boys; 94 girls; Mage = 10.7, SD = 0.7 years) from three elementary schools in North Texas. Using multivariate analysis of variance, we identified a significant sex difference that favored boys in motivation and psychomotor learning outcomes, with no significant minority status difference in relation to these variables. Regression analysis revealed that children’s expectancy beliefs were significantly associated with both motor competence (R2 = 11%) and cardiorespiratory fitness (R2 = 16%), while both situational interest and sex were associated with in-class physical activity (R2 = 18%). Thus, improving children’s expectancy beliefs may be a means of enhancing psychomotor learning outcomes in PE, especially for girls. Enhancing children’s beliefs in their own ability and offering diversified PE content so as to generate greater interest may facilitate psychomotor learning.
Publication Source (Journal or Book title)
Perceptual and Motor Skills
First Page
2849
Last Page
2866
Recommended Citation
Zhang, X., Gu, X., Chen, S., Keller, M., & Lee, J. (2021). The Roles of Sex and Minority Status in Children’s Motivation and Psychomotor Learning. Perceptual and Motor Skills, 128 (6), 2849-2866. https://doi.org/10.1177/00315125211046446