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Podium. Revista de Ciencia y Tecnología en la Cultura Física

versión On-line ISSN 1996-2452

Rev Podium vol.15 no.1 Pinar del Río ene.-abr. 2020  Epub 02-Abr-2020

 

Original article

Motivation and basic psychological needs in basketball initiation

Suelen Vicente Vieira1  * 
http://orcid.org/0000-0002-4604-5023

Lucas Jacob Beuttemmuller2 
http://orcid.org/0000-0002-8412-737X

Verónica Gabriela Silva Piovani2 
http://orcid.org/0000-0002-4451-8229

Luciane Cristina Arantes da Costa3 
http://orcid.org/0000-0002-8155-2776

Jorge Both1 
http://orcid.org/0000-0002-8238-5682

1Universidade Estadual de Londrina, Brasil.

2Centro Universitário de Maringá, Brasil.

3Universidade Estadual do Oeste do Paraná, Brasil.

Abstract

Motivation is considered an important factor for the success and maintenance of the practice in any sport. The objective of the study was to correlate the motivation and basic psychological needs of young basketball athletes who were in the initiation phase of sport. The research involved 53 athletes from the city of Maringá-Paraná- Brazil, with an average age of 13.25 years (PD 2.54 years). The instruments used in the research were the sport motivation scale and the exercise basic psychological needs questionnaire. The Spearman test was used for data analysis, assuming a significance level of 95% (p<0.05). The results showed that the dimensions of basic psychological needs are not uniformly correlated with the dimensions of motivation. The greatest correlation found was between competition and extrinsic motivation introjection, which shows that the internal pressures of the athlete himself and the fear of constraint make the practitioner develop greater competence to perform the proposed activities. Furthermore, the relationship dimension was only linked to aspects related to extrinsic motivation, where good relationships favor knowledge, testing and the search for pleasure in the sport. Finally, autonomy showed a moderate relationship with intrinsic and extrinsic motivations.

Keywords: Sport; school; motivation; self-determination theory; sports initiation.

Introduction

Motivation is considered an important factor for the success and maintenance of the practice in any sport modality. In the study of motivation, researchers start from the principle that, by offering students good options, stimulating their relationships during the proposed activities and providing tasks that provoke the perception of competence, it can favour motivation during training sessions (Arias, Castuera, Navarrete, Álvarez, & Gonzales, 2010; Costa, Maroco, & Vieira, 2017).

In this way, the good performance of young athletes in sports is associated with pleasure, the relationships built in the practice of sports, the perception of competition and the learning of the modality, among other aspects (Vieira, Mizoguchi, García Junior, & García, 2013). Likewise, social, environmental and individual factors contribute to the choice, initiation and maintenance of the sport practice. They also affect the dedication and commitment to training that athletes develop during their sports careers (Weinberg et al., 2000; Nakashima et al., 2018).

Sport development can begin in the early school years through initiation to sport and, over time, athletes can begin to participate in formal and institutionalized competitions in and out of the school environment. In this way, motivation can be one of the most important aspects, making young athletes more attached to or abandoning the sport. It is understood that by starting earlier, opportunities to develop skills and confidence can allow for a differentiated view of the young athlete's competitive process (Zambrin et al., 2016). However, Santana, (2005) states that young people who begin sports training with large competitive participations may have a greater chance of abandoning the sport. Therefore, it can be interpreted that, although initiation into competition is important, it should be proposed in an appropriate way, without overloading, so as not to generate demotivation. However, the absence of competitions can also develop demotivation.

In this sense, in explaining the construct of motivation, the Theory of Self-Determination (Tad), which emerged in the 1980s, sought to describe the factors resulting from studies that showed that extrinsic reward is not the only way to motivate an individual. In addition, it was verified that, offering a reward to a person for something he would do anyway, would negatively influence his intrinsic motivation (Deci & Ryan, 1985).

According to Deci and Ryan, (1985), Tad postulates that every human being is endowed with an innate propensity to develop self-determination. From birth, people are involved in activities that enable them to satisfy basic psychological needs: competence, autonomy and relationships. When people experience the satisfaction of basic psychological needs in a specific situation, they tend to become more intrinsically motivated. On the other hand, when they experience frustration of these needs, they tend to become less intrinsically motivated. Consequently, when immediate rewards are used for activities, people lose their experience of autonomy and the locus of causality for behavior becomes external (Mallia et al., 2019). This can occur when evaluations, social pressure and demands for results are used, which are very common practices in the sports environment.

The most autonomous form of extrinsic motivation is integrated regulation; in this, subjects perform activities consistent with other aspects of themselves, such as the action of studying. Thus, the action of learning is in accordance with the philosophy of life.

The forms of motivation are arranged along a continuum of autonomy. For Tad, the continuum reflects the degree of regulation of behavior. De-motivation is totally devoid of autonomy; intrinsic motivation is autonomous and the other types of extrinsic motivation (integrated regulation, introjection regulation and identified regulation) are organized between de-motivation and intrinsic motivation. It is emphasized that de-motivation is totally devoid of autonomy and intrinsic motivation is more autonomous (Ryan & Deci, 2009).

When external pressure is not used, individuals can maintain an internal locus of perceived causality, maintaining intrinsic motivation. Together with this, positive feedback helps to maintain feelings of competence and therefore evidence of intrinsic motivation. On the contrary, negative feedback, especially when inserted in a control context, causes feelings of frustration, damaging intrinsic motivation (Mouratidis, Vansteenkiste, Lens, & Sideridis, 2008). Thus, the environment of sports initiation, such as clubs, schools and social projects, is a propitious place for young athletes to build more appropriate behaviours, which can improve their motivation.

Precisely, in sports initiation, motivation can instigate factors such as increased adherence to the practice of sport, provoking abandonment due to lack of motivation for the practice of the modality, interference in the selection of the sports activity, in addition to influencing the quality of the athlete's performance in the sport (Soares, Reis, & Perufo, 2013). Thus, the understanding of these constructs is relevant to understand sport initiation and the diverse motivational factors that influence it. Likewise, it helps in the reduction of elements that cause negative aspects in athletes, which can lead to the abandonment of the practice of the sport modality, due to the lack of motivation.

In order to understand the aspects that interfere in the motivation of young athletes and to identify the basic psychological needs that stand out in the sports initiation phase, the objective of the present study was to correlate the different existing dimensions in the motivational environment and the basic psychological needs of young basketball athletes in the sports initiation phase

Materials and methods

The research is characterized as descriptive-exploratory with a quantitative and cross-sectional approach, which allows us to understand the panorama of the population under investigation. Thus, by means of questionnaires, it is possible to carry out a characterization of the selected sample (Gil, 2002) .

The study population was made up of basketball athletes who participated in the Paraná School Games-Maringá Municipal Phase (Brazil). The athletes were distributed in two categories: Class A, which included students aged 15-17, and Class B, which included students aged 12-14. The School Games are organized in five stages, which are Municipal Phase, Regional Phase, Regional Macro Phase, State Phase and National Phase. The Municipal Phase is the stage in which athletes begin to participate in sports competitions. The sample for this study was composed of young athletes, linked to the school teams of ten basic education institutions, which in Brazil includes primary and secondary education and which were randomly selected. The selection criteria for the sample was as follows: athletes participating in the Paraná Municipal School Games, registered in the basketball modality and who accepted to participate in the study. Thus, the sample was integrated by 53 basketball athletes with an average age of 13.25 years (standard deviation of 2.54 years).

The Sports Motivation Scale was used to identify motivation levels (Bara Filho et al., 2011; Costa et al., 2011). The instrument was developed in French by (Brière, Vallerand, & Pelletier, 1995) and called "Échelle de Motivation dans lês Sports".

It should be noted that Pelletier et al., (1995), validated the instrument for the English language, which favoured its dissemination. Then, the validation and translation of this questionnaire to the reality of athletes in Brazil occurred (Bara Filho et al., 2011). Subsequently, it was applied and validated specifically for soccer athletes (Costa et al., 2011). The instrument uses a Likert scale from one to seven, in which one is "not applicable at all" and seven is "fully applicable".

The Sports Motivation Scale (Bara Filho et al., 2011) is composed of 28 items, divided into seven dimensions, among which are: intrinsic motivation-to know; intrinsic motivation-to achieve goals; intrinsic motivation-stimulating experiences; extrinsic motivation-external regulation; extrinsic motivation-introjection; extrinsic motivation-identification; de-motivation. It is highlighted that the instrument presented in its validation for the Portuguese language a variation of the internal consistency index in the dimensions between 0.62 and 0.76, which is considered acceptable.

To identify the basic psychological needs for the practice of sport, the Basic Psychological Needs Questionnaire was used in the exercise validated for the Brazilian population by Costa et al., (2017); Vlachopoulos & Michailidou, (2006), developed this questionnaire with the aim of evaluating perceptions of the extent to which innate needs for autonomy, competence and relationships are met during the practice of physical exercise.

In the validation of this instrument, for the Brazilian reality, 12 items that are divided into three dimensions formed the questionnaire: competence, autonomy and relationships. It is emphasized that the instrument is answered with the help of a five-point Likert scale, where one is "I do not agree" and five is "I fully agree". In the evaluation of the internal consistency of the instrument, Cronbach's alpha indexes reached heights considered good, which were between 0.84 and 0.89 (Costa et al., 2017).

Finally, a sociodemographic questionnaire was used to characterize the study participants. In the questionnaire, the following sociodemographic variables were investigated: age range, sex, practice of another sport modality, time spent practicing basketball, place of training, distance from the place of training to the residence, weekly training time and level of education.

Data Collection

The data collection happened in a single stage during the Paraná School Games-Municipal Phase. First, the parents or those responsible for the athletes were asked to sign the Consent Statement for the realization of the research with each of the students. Afterwards, the athletes were invited to answer the questionnaires. The researcher mediated throughout the data collection. Data collection occurred after approval by the Human Research Ethics Committee of Maringá State University (approval protocol number: 2831186).

Data analysis

For data analysis, descriptive statistics were initially used to characterize the sample: relative (percentage) and absolute (n) frequency, median (Md) and interquartile interval (Q1-Q3). Inferential statistical analysis was used to evaluate the objective of the study. First, the distribution of the data was analyzed by means of the Kolmogorov-Smirnov test. When it was found that the data had no normal distribution, the Spearman test was used to correlate the heels of the construct dimensions.

For the correlation analysis, a significance level of 95 % (p<0.05) was adopted. It is highlighted that the correlation indexes were categorized according to the cut-off adaptation, suggested by Mitra and Lankford, (1999) , which are: 0.00 to 0.19, very weak correlation; 0.20 to 0.39, weak correlation; 0.40 to 0.59, moderate correlation; 0.60, to 0.79, strong correlation; 0.80 to 1.00, very strong correlation.

Results

Most of the athletes studied were in basic education (59.6 %), did not practice any other sport (75.5 %), trained with the school basketball team and attended training sessions in another sport institution in the city (43), 4 %), lived close to the training sites (66 %), were over 13 years old (60.4 %), trained for over a year (62.7 %) and participated in basketball training for over four hours a week (52.8 %) (Table 1).

Table 1 - Socio-demographic characteristics of basketball athletes  

Socio-demographic characteristics n (%)
Level of education Fundamental (1st to 9th year of primary education) Middle (1st to 3rd year of secondary school) 31 (59,6%) 21 (40,4%)
Practice of another modality Yes No 13 (24,5%) 40 (75,5%)
Training place School Out of the scholl Both places 19 (35,8%) 11 (20,8%) 23 (43,4%)
Perception of the distance from the training place Distant Near 18 (34%) 35 (66%)
Age range Up to 14 years More than 15 years 32 (60,4%) 21 (39,6%)
Practice time Up to one year One year or more 19 (37,3%) 32 (62,7%)
Hours of weekly training Up to 3 hours per week 4 Hours or more 25 (47,25%) 28 (52,8%)

In relation to the concept motivation for sport, it was observed that the intrinsic motivation dimensions had greater heel, when compared to the extrinsic dimensions. In addition, the de-motivation dimension presented a low index (Table 2).

Table 2 - Internal correlation of the concept motivation for sport  

Dimensions 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 Md (Q1-Q3)
1 - MI know 1 5,75 (4,12-6,50)
2 - MI Perform 0,699* 1 5,25 (4,25-6,25)
3 My Experiment 0,696* 0,633* 1 6,00 (4,75-6,37)
4 - ME Identify 0,526* 0,501* 0,634* 1 4,00 (3,00-5,37)
5 - ME Introjection 0,414* 0,403* 0,476* 0,514* 1 4,00 (2,50-5,37)
6 - ME External Relationships 0,492* 0,369* 0,502* 0,587* 0,571* 1 2,50 (2,00-4,00)
7 - Demotivation 0,167 -0,013 0,258 0,321* 0,203 0,281* 1 1,50 (1,00-2,37)

Legend: *Significant correlation (p<0.05) MI: Intrinsic Motivation; ME: Extrinsic Motivation.

Regarding the internal correlations of the concept motivation for sport, strong correlations were found between the two: Intrinsic Motivation know and Intrinsic Motivation perform (0.699); Intrinsic Motivation perform and Intrinsic Motivation experiment (0.696); Intrinsic Motivation know and Intrinsic Motivation experiment (0.633) and Intrinsic Motivation experiment and Extrinsic Motivation identify (0.634) (Table 2).

Despite this, it was found that most of the correlations identified were moderate, where the correlations that reached this relationship were: Intrinsic Motivation know with Extrinsic Motivation identify (0.526); Intrinsic Motivation perform with Extrinsic Motivation identify (0.501); Intrinsic Motivation know with Extrinsic Motivation introjection (0,414); Intrinsic Motivation perform with Extrinsic Motivation Introjection (0,403); Intrinsic Motivation Experiment with Extrinsic Motivation Introjection (0,476); Extrinsic Motivation Identify with Extrinsic Motivation Introjection (0,514); Intrinsic Motivation know with Extrinsic Motivation External relations (0,492); Intrinsic Motivation Experiment with Extrinsic Motivation External relations (0,502); Extrinsic Motivation Identify with Extrinsic Motivation External relations (0,587) and Extrinsic Motivation Introjection with Extrinsic Motivation External relations (0,571). Finally, three weak correlations between them were evidenced: Intrinsic Motivation to carry out External relations with Extrinsic Motivation (0.369); Extrinsic Motivation Identify with Demotivation (0.321) and Extrinsic Motivation External relations with Demotivation (0.281) (Table 2).

In assessing the concept of basic psychological needs, it was found that the competence dimension presented the highest satisfaction score. On the other hand, the autonomy dimension showed the lowest satisfaction index (Table 3).

Table 3 - Internal correlation of the concept of basic psychological needs for sport 

Dimensions 1 2 3 Md (Q1-Q3)
1 - Autonomy 1 3,25 (2,75-4,00)
2 - Competence 0,532* 1 4,00 (3,12-4,50)
3 - Relatioships 0,367* 0,490* 1 3,75 (3,25-4,25)

Legend: *Significant correlation (p<0.05)

With regard to the internal correlations of the concept of basic psychological needs, it was observed that the Autonomy (0.532) and Relationship (0.490) dimensions were moderately correlated with the dimension Competence. However, a weak correlation was identified between the dimensions, Relationships and Autonomy (0.367) (Table 3).

When analyzing the correlation of the concepts of basic psychological needs and motivation for sport, it was found that the dimension Autonomy had a moderate correlation with all the intrinsic and extrinsic motivation dimensions (from 0.401 to 0.559). The dimension Competence presented strong correlations with the Extrinsic Motivation dimension Introjection (0.643); moderate correlations with the Intrinsic Motivation Experiment (0.416) and Extrinsic Motivation External relations (0.513) and weak correlations with the dimensions: Intrinsic Motivation know (0.281), Intrinsic Motivation Perform (0.248) and Extrinsic Motivation Identifying (0.344). The dimension Relationships did not present significant correlation with the dimensions of intrinsic motivation, although it had moderate correlation with the dimension Extrinsic Motivation Identify (0.411) and weak correlations with the dimension Extrinsic Motivation Introjection (0.296) and Extrinsic Motivation External relationship (0.323) (Table 4).

Table 4 - Correlation between the concepts of motivation and basic psychological needs for sport  

Dimensions Autonomy Competence Relationships
MI know 0,559* 0,281* 0,070
MI Perform 0,401* 0,248 -0,062
MI Experiment 0,559* 0,416* 0,258
ME Identify 0,418* 0,344* 0,411*
ME Introjection 0,550* 0,643* 0,296*
ME External Relationships 0,584* 0,513* 0,323*
Demotivation 0,126 0,038 0,079

Legend: **Significant correlation (p<0, 05).

Discussion

When analyzing the profile of the sample of this study, it was evident that the young athletes were mostly in fundamental education (1st to 9th year of primary education in Brazil), did not practice any other modality, trained at school and also in another part of the city, lived close to the training place, were over 13 years old and trained for more than four hours per week. These characteristics can be explained because in secondary education (1st. to 3rd. year of high school in Brazil), athletes begin to have other concerns and pressures such as entering university, which can lead to the abandonment of sports practices (Marques & Samulski, 2009). In addition, basic education athletes are younger, in the period of initiation to sports practice and have greater protection from their families, when compared to older athletes (Ryan & Deci, 2019; Vieira et al., 2013).

Initially, it is highlighted that the dimensions of intrinsic motivation are directly related to personal factors, which consequently depend on the subject himself. In another sense, the dimensions of extrinsic motivation are associated with factors that do not depend exclusively on the athlete, such as environmental factors, performance in the modality and importance of sport in the life of the athlete (Costa et al., 2011).

Intrinsic motivations had the highest indexes, which shows that the interest in the practice of the sport modality is more spontaneous and does not depend, to a great extent, on the external factors associated with it. A study with taekwondo athletes corroborates this argument; in this one, the athletes showed greater heels related to intrinsic motivation (Bento et al., 2018). In addition, it is identified that the motivation for the practice of the modality is associated to pleasure and fun, which is connected to the stimulating experiences (intrinsic motivation), to the achievement of the objectives and to the knowledge of the activity (intrinsic motivations) (Vieira et al., 2013).

Extrinsic and intrinsic motivations were moderately correlated. In fact, both motivations are influenced by each other, as they are poles of a motivational continuum. In a contradictory way, it was found a weak correlation between extrinsic motivation for external regulation and intrinsic motivation perform. This may be associated with external environmental factors, such as financial rewards, trophies, among others, that make pleasure in the modality be left aside (Costa et al., 2011).

It is noted that the intrinsic motivation dimension of experimenting presented a strong correlation with the extrinsic motivation dimension of identification. In this sense, athletes who seek to actively participate in sports tend to have stimulating experiences at the same time. This can be explained by the fact that the experience of these sports can favor the development of the athletes (Costa et al., 2011). In addition, it can be verified that not all the dimensions of the concepts of motivation and basic psychological needs showed significant correlation with demotivation. This fact indicates that, the commitment of young athletes with competitions and training awakens positive feelings towards the modality. Moreover, this leads to the absence of demotivation among the athletes, who showed high intrinsic motivation, moderate extrinsic motivation (Table 2) and moderate feelings of having autonomy, competition and good relationships (Table 3).

On the internal correlations of the concept of basic psychological needs, it was observed that the competence dimension was moderately correlated with the relationship and autonomy dimensions. In this sense, it was identified that, in young athletes, the greater the perception that the athlete has of his competence, the more comfortable and confident he will be in relating with his peers and even in making decisions during the practice of the modality (Deci, Ryan & Guay, 2013).

The dimensions of relationships and autonomy were low correlated, which is an indication of this link. In fact, Grolnick, (2003) states that autonomous support is characterized by the commitment of the child/youth, and, consequently, it is fundamental for development both in the family and in sports. In this case, the development of autonomy does not happen in conjunction with good relationships. Autonomy must be developed first and relationships later, teaching the athlete to live together socially. In addition to this, the motivational focus is centered on intrinsic motivation, making the student enjoy achieving goals and obtaining pleasure from new learning (Vieira et al., 2013).

The results showed that the competence dimension was strongly correlated with the extrinsic motivation dimension introjection, which may be the result of the pressures athletes place on themselves or of constraints due to errors and failures that may be occurring in their practice, which, therefore, affect the athlete's competition. Thus, it is observed that athletes feel pressure, both for positive results of the team, and for their own pressure for their development in the sport (Vissoci, Vieira, Oliveira, & Vieira, 2008).

Autonomy showed moderate correlation with intrinsic and extrinsic motivations. Thus, the more autonomous the athlete is, the more intrinsically and extrinsically motivated he will be. This confirms that athletes who manage to make choices are more motivated. In line with this result, Fiorese et al., (2017) pointed out that when an athlete feels more autonomous and competent to perform his tasks in training, he becomes more committed to the sport he practices. However, the opposite is also true, less motivated athletes may have less autonomy in choosing their actions directed at sport; thus, it can be understood that the development of autonomy corresponds directly to good intrinsic and extrinsic motivation (Table 4). It can be stated that, for older ages, good autonomy is fundamental for the athlete to be motivated, since they must feel capable and consequently competent.

It is highlighted that competence showed higher correlation rates with extrinsic motivation dimensions. This seems to show that the competence has a relationship with the motivation linked to the process of experimentation of game situations, as well as, with the relationships established through the sport practice. Thus, the greater the competence, the greater the capacity to assimilate the objectives, to relate to each other and to experience the playing activities. In that sense, Soares et al., (2013) showed that competition was very relevant for athletes who were new to basketball. García, Weis and Valdiviesco, (2005) showed that younger athletes have more competence and less autonomy, while older ones have more competence along with autonomy.

When evaluating the dimension relationships, a moderate correlation was evident with the extrinsic motivation of identifying weak correlations with the introjection and external relationship motivation dimensions. Then, the better the relationship of the young athlete with coaches, teammates and family members, the more extrinsically motivated he will be with the aspects associated with identification, introjection and external relations, linked to the sport modality. This result corresponds with the literature on the topic, which describes that the actions of coaches, friends, training partners and family influence the insertion and continuation of the sport practice (Deci & Ryan, 2012; Balaguer, et al., 2015).

It should be noted that the limitations of this study are associated with the non-differentiation between male and female motivational aspects, because the random selection of the sample allowed researching few athletes. Despite this, it is observed that the results found may represent a theoretical contribution for those involved in the training of young basketball athletes to understand the relationship between motivational aspects related to their practice.

In general, it is concluded that the intrinsic motivation dimensions are more representative within the motivation construct and the competence dimension is more representative in the basic psychological needs construct for exercise. In other words, the personal feeling of developing and improving basketball skills is a marker for the group investigated, determining the level of motivation, as well as the perception of satisfaction with the basic psychological needs for the exercise.

In addition, it was identified that the dimensions of competence and autonomy were related to intrinsic and extrinsic motivations. However, the relationships had a greater correspondence with the extrinsic motivation. Thus, it was found that coexistence with peers is associated with social acceptance, which can be mediated by a good performance in the practice of the modality.

It is suggested that future studies deepen the research in relation to this thematic, mainly relating motivation, technical and tactical performance and the different categories that represent the sport initiation, pointing out its consequences for the context of the modality.

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Received: April 28, 2019; Accepted: January 21, 2020

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