The effects of cohesion and psychological climate on male ice hockey players' perceived effort and intention to return

<p>The purpose of this study was to examine the relationship between two group-based perceptions (i.e., cohesion and psychological climate) and two forms of individual adherence behavior (i.e., intention to return and perceived effort). More specifically, the objectives of this thesis were (a)...

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Main Author: Odnokon, Patrick Albert
Other Authors: Pezer, Vera
Format: Others
Language:en
Published: University of Saskatchewan 2012
Online Access:http://library.usask.ca/theses/available/etd-08172012-125341/
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description <p>The purpose of this study was to examine the relationship between two group-based perceptions (i.e., cohesion and psychological climate) and two forms of individual adherence behavior (i.e., intention to return and perceived effort). More specifically, the objectives of this thesis were (a) to examine the relationship between perceptions of cohesion and psychological climate and the adherence measurement of intention to return and (b) to examine the relationship between perceptions of cohesion and psychological climate and the adherence measurement of perceived effort.</p> <p>Male ice hockey players (n = 194) were administered the Group Environment Questionnaire to assess cohesion, a modified version of the Psychological Climate Questionnaire to assess psychological climate, a modified version of the Perceived Effort Questionnaire to assess effort and an Intention to Return Questionnaire during the last two weeks of the ice hockey season. Results from a series of multiple regression analyses revealed that selected perceptions of both cohesion and psychological climate predicted perceived effort. Specifically, it was found that the cohesion subscale Group Integration-Task successfully predicted individual perceived effort, F (4, 188) = 9.44, p < .001 (accounting for 17% of the total variance), with those ice hockey players reporting a greater attraction to the group's task also being the ones who reported the greatest individual effort. In terms of psychological climate, the subscale of role clarity predicted perceived effort, F (4, 187) = 10.66, p < .001 (accounting for 19% of the total variance) with male ice hockey players reporting greater perceptions of role clarity also being the ones indicating greater perceptions of individual effort. Similar to the results for the adherence measurement of perceived effort, both perceptions of cohesion and psychological climate predicted intention to return. The cohesion subscale of Individual Attractions to Group-Social, F (4, 144) = 6.48, p < .001, significantly predicted intention to return for another season accounting for 15% of the total variance. Specifically, those ice hockey players reporting a greater attraction to the group socially were the ones indicating a greater intention to return to participate the following season. In terms of psychological climate, the subscales of role clarity and self-expression predicted intention to return, F (4, 143) = 6.26, p < .001, accounting for 15% of the total variance. This indicates that male ice hockey players reporting greater perceptions of role clarity and self-expression also were the ones who indicated a greater intention to return to participate the following season. As a secondary objective, the relative contributions of cohesion and psychological climate to adherence behavior also were examined. The results indicated that both perceptions of cohesion (i.e., Group Integration-Task) and psychological climate (i.e., role clarity) added unique variance to perceived effort. Similarly, both perceptions of cohesion (i.e., Individual Attractions to Group-Social) and psychological climate (i.e., role clarity) added unique variance to intention to return. These results suggest that both perceptions of cohesion and psychological climate are salient in examining adherence behavior. Practical implications and future directions also are discussed.</p>
author2 Pezer, Vera
author_facet Pezer, Vera
Odnokon, Patrick Albert
author Odnokon, Patrick Albert
spellingShingle Odnokon, Patrick Albert
The effects of cohesion and psychological climate on male ice hockey players' perceived effort and intention to return
author_sort Odnokon, Patrick Albert
title The effects of cohesion and psychological climate on male ice hockey players' perceived effort and intention to return
title_short The effects of cohesion and psychological climate on male ice hockey players' perceived effort and intention to return
title_full The effects of cohesion and psychological climate on male ice hockey players' perceived effort and intention to return
title_fullStr The effects of cohesion and psychological climate on male ice hockey players' perceived effort and intention to return
title_full_unstemmed The effects of cohesion and psychological climate on male ice hockey players' perceived effort and intention to return
title_sort effects of cohesion and psychological climate on male ice hockey players' perceived effort and intention to return
publisher University of Saskatchewan
publishDate 2012
url http://library.usask.ca/theses/available/etd-08172012-125341/
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spelling ndltd-USASK-oai-usask.ca-etd-08172012-1253412013-01-08T16:35:34Z The effects of cohesion and psychological climate on male ice hockey players' perceived effort and intention to return Odnokon, Patrick Albert <p>The purpose of this study was to examine the relationship between two group-based perceptions (i.e., cohesion and psychological climate) and two forms of individual adherence behavior (i.e., intention to return and perceived effort). More specifically, the objectives of this thesis were (a) to examine the relationship between perceptions of cohesion and psychological climate and the adherence measurement of intention to return and (b) to examine the relationship between perceptions of cohesion and psychological climate and the adherence measurement of perceived effort.</p> <p>Male ice hockey players (n = 194) were administered the Group Environment Questionnaire to assess cohesion, a modified version of the Psychological Climate Questionnaire to assess psychological climate, a modified version of the Perceived Effort Questionnaire to assess effort and an Intention to Return Questionnaire during the last two weeks of the ice hockey season. Results from a series of multiple regression analyses revealed that selected perceptions of both cohesion and psychological climate predicted perceived effort. Specifically, it was found that the cohesion subscale Group Integration-Task successfully predicted individual perceived effort, F (4, 188) = 9.44, p < .001 (accounting for 17% of the total variance), with those ice hockey players reporting a greater attraction to the group's task also being the ones who reported the greatest individual effort. In terms of psychological climate, the subscale of role clarity predicted perceived effort, F (4, 187) = 10.66, p < .001 (accounting for 19% of the total variance) with male ice hockey players reporting greater perceptions of role clarity also being the ones indicating greater perceptions of individual effort. Similar to the results for the adherence measurement of perceived effort, both perceptions of cohesion and psychological climate predicted intention to return. The cohesion subscale of Individual Attractions to Group-Social, F (4, 144) = 6.48, p < .001, significantly predicted intention to return for another season accounting for 15% of the total variance. Specifically, those ice hockey players reporting a greater attraction to the group socially were the ones indicating a greater intention to return to participate the following season. In terms of psychological climate, the subscales of role clarity and self-expression predicted intention to return, F (4, 143) = 6.26, p < .001, accounting for 15% of the total variance. This indicates that male ice hockey players reporting greater perceptions of role clarity and self-expression also were the ones who indicated a greater intention to return to participate the following season. As a secondary objective, the relative contributions of cohesion and psychological climate to adherence behavior also were examined. The results indicated that both perceptions of cohesion (i.e., Group Integration-Task) and psychological climate (i.e., role clarity) added unique variance to perceived effort. Similarly, both perceptions of cohesion (i.e., Individual Attractions to Group-Social) and psychological climate (i.e., role clarity) added unique variance to intention to return. These results suggest that both perceptions of cohesion and psychological climate are salient in examining adherence behavior. Practical implications and future directions also are discussed.</p> Pezer, Vera Russell, Keith Chilibeck, Phil Spink, Kevin S. University of Saskatchewan 2012-08-17 text application/pdf http://library.usask.ca/theses/available/etd-08172012-125341/ http://library.usask.ca/theses/available/etd-08172012-125341/ en unrestricted I hereby certify that, if appropriate, I have obtained and attached hereto a written permission statement from the owner(s) of each third party copyrighted matter to be included in my thesis, dissertation, or project report, allowing distribution as specified below. I certify that the version I submitted is the same as that approved by my advisory committee. I hereby grant to University of Saskatchewan or its agents the non-exclusive license to archive and make accessible, under the conditions specified below, my thesis, dissertation, or project report in whole or in part in all forms of media, now or hereafter known. I retain all other ownership rights to the copyright of the thesis, dissertation or project report. I also retain the right to use in future works (such as articles or books) all or part of this thesis, dissertation, or project report.