Perfectly Active Teenagers. When Does Physical Exercise Help Psychological Well-Being in Adolescents?
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González Hernández, Juan; Gómez López, Manuel; Pérez Turpín, José Antonio; Muñoz-Villena, Antonio Jesús; Andreu Cabrera, EliseoEditorial
MDPI
Materia
Perfectionism (Personality trait) Expectations Self-assessment Physical activity Young people
Date
2019-11-15Referencia bibliográfica
González-Hernández, J., Gómez-López, M., Pérez-Turpin, J. A., Muñoz-Villena, A. J., & Andreu-Cabrera, E. (2019). Perfectly Active Teenagers. When Does Physical Exercise Help Psychological Well-Being in Adolescents?. International journal of environmental research and public health, 16(22), 4525.
Abstract
In the context of physical activity and sport, perfectionism and the regular practice of
physical activity are related to psychological well-being and the regulation of psychological resources
necessary for adaptation to effort and satisfaction. At the same time, the most active students
are also those who show greater appetites for physical education classes. The goal of this work
was to identify the influence of perfectionist beliefs and the regularity of the practice of physical
exercise on psychological well-being. The participants were adolescents (n = 436) aged between
14 and 19 years (M = 16.80, SD = 0.77). They were administered the Multidimensional Perfection
Scale, the Psychological Wellbeing Scale, the Global Physical Activity Questionnaire (GPAQv2),
and a sociodemographic questionnaire. The results showed, under a non-random and transversal
design, that the participants gave important value to physical exercise because they feel both
active and vigorous. Regarding perfectionism, the functional aspects of perfectionism (expectations
of achievement and organization) correlated positively, while the dysfunctional aspects (fear of
committing errors and external expectations) did so negatively with the importance given to physical
exercise performed by adolescents; this in turn positively predicted psychological well-being. In this
way, the hypothesized model contemplated the relevance of the included variables and reflected the
mediation of the degree of importance given to the practice of physical exercise on perfectionist beliefs
and psychological well-being. Currently, most physical activity practice proposals for adolescents
focus on federated and structured environments for competition, and those that deal with recreational
and health-oriented sports are far less common. Hence, “the perfect way of doing sports” for a
teenager should be accompanied by cognitive schemes aimed at strengthening psychological resources
that allow the regulation of beliefs, attitudes, and behaviors.