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DROP OUT A problem or a sign of a development? Lämsä, Jari & Antonie, Andrei Research institute for Olympic Sports, Jyväskylä Finland [email protected]

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Page 1: A problem or a sign of a development? Lämsä, Jari & Antonie, Andrei Research institute for Olympic Sports, Jyväskylä Finland jari.lamsa@kihu.fi

DROP OUT A problem or a sign of a development?

Lämsä, Jari & Antonie, AndreiResearch institute for Olympic Sports, Jyväskylä [email protected]

Page 2: A problem or a sign of a development? Lämsä, Jari & Antonie, Andrei Research institute for Olympic Sports, Jyväskylä Finland jari.lamsa@kihu.fi

The YouthThe youth – transit period between childhood

and adulthood The puberty phase (11-15 year) is a time of

constant testing and searching – so it is somehow natural to stop doing something and start something else. (Franzén & Peterson 2004, 8).

Leisure time is the period when different lifestyles can be tried and exchanged. Adolescence is a peak time of leisure needs.

Page 3: A problem or a sign of a development? Lämsä, Jari & Antonie, Andrei Research institute for Olympic Sports, Jyväskylä Finland jari.lamsa@kihu.fi

Leisure activitiesParticipation through a range of filters

(Roberts 1981):Social; age, gender, education, income, social

mobilityDecision; motivation, awareness of

opportunities, free time and costs

Constrains of participation: (Hendry 1993)Perceived incompetenceAttitudinal variables (motives, lack of

information...)Social-cultural variables (from play to work)

Page 4: A problem or a sign of a development? Lämsä, Jari & Antonie, Andrei Research institute for Olympic Sports, Jyväskylä Finland jari.lamsa@kihu.fi

Changes in the adolescents leisure preferences (hendry et al. 1993)

Organized activities

Casualactivities

Commercialactivities

17 years15 years13 years

Page 5: A problem or a sign of a development? Lämsä, Jari & Antonie, Andrei Research institute for Olympic Sports, Jyväskylä Finland jari.lamsa@kihu.fi

Youth participation in organized sport – Norway 2002

Krange & Strandbu 2004

Page 6: A problem or a sign of a development? Lämsä, Jari & Antonie, Andrei Research institute for Olympic Sports, Jyväskylä Finland jari.lamsa@kihu.fi

Registered Youths in athletics - Finland 2007

Page 7: A problem or a sign of a development? Lämsä, Jari & Antonie, Andrei Research institute for Olympic Sports, Jyväskylä Finland jari.lamsa@kihu.fi

Starters and drop outs

Page 8: A problem or a sign of a development? Lämsä, Jari & Antonie, Andrei Research institute for Olympic Sports, Jyväskylä Finland jari.lamsa@kihu.fi

Worldwide trends in youth sportIncreasing opportunities for participating in

sportThe institutionalization process of youth

sportIncreasing opportunities to do sport outside

the traditional club structure?Lifestyle/extreme sport, sports related to youth

culture, street sports, consumer culture, fitness clubs…

The extent and intensity of physical activity have become more varied

The narrowing of the gender gap, mainly because of the fitness-related activity and because of the girl’s sport habits have come to resemble the boys.

Page 9: A problem or a sign of a development? Lämsä, Jari & Antonie, Andrei Research institute for Olympic Sports, Jyväskylä Finland jari.lamsa@kihu.fi

Registered female football players in Finland 1972 -

Page 10: A problem or a sign of a development? Lämsä, Jari & Antonie, Andrei Research institute for Olympic Sports, Jyväskylä Finland jari.lamsa@kihu.fi

Drop out studiesPioneers in the 1970’s and 1980’s:

The controversies about the effects of youth sport: Early specialization Too many competitions for too young children Too much emphasis on winning Stress and adult dominance

657 young athletesFrom 5 sport clubs

Active in sport 87 % Drop outs 13 %

Patriksson 1988

18 months

Page 11: A problem or a sign of a development? Lämsä, Jari & Antonie, Andrei Research institute for Olympic Sports, Jyväskylä Finland jari.lamsa@kihu.fi

The concept of drop out: Athletes quit sport

prematurely, that is, before athletic performance declines because of age or injury forces them to stop.

(Völk & Keil 1987) Sport –leavers = those

discontinuing participation in one particular sport

drop outs = those withdrawing from sport altogether

Sport –transfers = those taking up a new sport after leaving another sport.

(Gordon 1990)

If you describe someone as a drop-out, you disapprove of the fact that they have

rejected the accepted ways of society, e.g. not having a

job (Collins Cobuild English dictionary)

Page 12: A problem or a sign of a development? Lämsä, Jari & Antonie, Andrei Research institute for Olympic Sports, Jyväskylä Finland jari.lamsa@kihu.fi

Talented;“Sport is my life”

Committed;“Sport is my hobby”

Survivor; “I don’t want to compete”

Sampler;“I’m having fun”

Who is dropping out?

- Age- Gender- The level of competition- The level of investment- The involvement in other sports

“the majority of the youth sport attrition studies conducted to date have been descriptive in nature. These studies have helped to identify important trends and variables influencing the attrition process. However, descriptive studies alone will not further advance knowledge in the area” (Gould 1987)

Page 13: A problem or a sign of a development? Lämsä, Jari & Antonie, Andrei Research institute for Olympic Sports, Jyväskylä Finland jari.lamsa@kihu.fi

Dropout reason Sampler Low High Elite

Did not enjoy 1 1 1 6

I was not good enough 2 4 6 12

Wanted more time for non-sport activities

3 2 2 5

Too much pressure to perform well

4 5 5 1

Other sports took too much time

5 3 3 8

Needed time for studying 6 6 4 3

There was no longer a opportunity

7 7 9 9

Coach was the reason 8 8 8 4

Injury played a role 9 9 7 2

My parents discouraged me 10 10 12 11

Took a job, giving me less time 11 11 10 10

It was too expensive 12 12 11 7

Lindner et al 1991

Page 14: A problem or a sign of a development? Lämsä, Jari & Antonie, Andrei Research institute for Olympic Sports, Jyväskylä Finland jari.lamsa@kihu.fi

Drop outThe different studies indicate drop out rates

between 5- 90 % depending of the used methodology and definition of the problem Individual level Sports club level Sport-specific withdrawal (Sport federation level) Domain-specific withdrawal (National sport system)

There are is no single reason for dropout. Instead each case is raised by a combination of different factors (Buβmann 1999)

Those, who drop out from organized sport, doesn’t automatically leave all sport or physical activities The drop out rate from sport clubs in Norway was 35 % (4

year follow-up study), but only 13 % were physically inactive (Seippel 2005)

Page 15: A problem or a sign of a development? Lämsä, Jari & Antonie, Andrei Research institute for Olympic Sports, Jyväskylä Finland jari.lamsa@kihu.fi

Models and theoriesAchievement

orientation theory ability orientation; a child

participates in an activity in an effort to demonstrate high ability and minimize low ability, usually by winning;

A task orientation where the child participates in an effort to perform the task as well as possible, regardless of any competitive outcome;

a social approval orientation where child participates in an effort to seek approval from significant others, usually by exhibiting maximum effort (Gould 1987, 68)

Competence Motivation theory predicted that children are

motivated to experience mastery or competence feelings when dealing with the environment and because of this; they seek to demonstrate or acquire competencies by engaging in mastery attempts. When mastery is attained, perceived competence is enhanced, which in turn increases competence motivation and increased competence motivation then causes the child to seek out other situations where competence can be developed.

Page 16: A problem or a sign of a development? Lämsä, Jari & Antonie, Andrei Research institute for Olympic Sports, Jyväskylä Finland jari.lamsa@kihu.fi

Social exchange theoryAthlete begins to

evaluate the benefits he or she is deriving from sport participation against the input that is required and the sacrifices that have to be made.

Developmental theory:Social and

psychological changes that come with increasing age, deals with the growing attractiveness of other leisure activities in which many of teh athlete friends are involved

Responsibilities related to school, work and the family tend to increase role conflicts.

Page 17: A problem or a sign of a development? Lämsä, Jari & Antonie, Andrei Research institute for Olympic Sports, Jyväskylä Finland jari.lamsa@kihu.fi

Burn out: Burnout comprises three

dimensions: 1) emotional exhaustion, 2) depersonalization, 3) reduced performance accomplishment

(Maslach & Jackson 1984) the results of chronic stress

which leads to the point where athletes feel that the demands on them exceed their capacities to meet those demands.

(Smith 1986) Young athletes in sport

organizations experience identify foreclosure, which results in an one-dimensional identity a feeling of loss of autonomy

(Coakley 1992)

Burnout is more than simple reaction to stress. Athletes who experience burn out are typically involved in their sports because they “have to be” rather than “want to be”

Burn out is the final stage of a continuum of overtraining and staleness and the result of a negative response or maladaption to training

(Silva 1990)Drop out and burn out

are two types of withdrawal; The

process is same, but burn out takes place

over a longer period of time

(Schmidt & Stein 1991)

Page 18: A problem or a sign of a development? Lämsä, Jari & Antonie, Andrei Research institute for Olympic Sports, Jyväskylä Finland jari.lamsa@kihu.fi

Enhancing youth sport participation Participation in sport or any other ways of

physical activity is a complex behaviour determined by many factors.If we want significant behavioral change,

interventions should involve radical changes. In youth sport research, two contextual

factors have consistently emerged as contributing to positive and negative outcomes and experiences in youth sport:program design (e.g. early diversification

versus early specialization)adult influence (parents and coaches)

Page 19: A problem or a sign of a development? Lämsä, Jari & Antonie, Andrei Research institute for Olympic Sports, Jyväskylä Finland jari.lamsa@kihu.fi

Côté, Baker, & Abernethy, 2007

Models of Youth sport 6- 11 year 12-14 year 15-17 year Outcome

Sampling years•Deliberate play + several sports

Recreational yearsDeliberate play

Recreational participation

Sampling years•Deliberate play + several sports

Specializing years•Deliberate play and practice, fewer sports

Investment years•Deliberate practice + focus on one sport

Elite performance

Elite performance through early specialization • Deliberate practice, focus on one sport, early specialization

and investment

Elite performance

Drop out

Page 20: A problem or a sign of a development? Lämsä, Jari & Antonie, Andrei Research institute for Olympic Sports, Jyväskylä Finland jari.lamsa@kihu.fi

Deliberate play versus deliberate practice

Page 21: A problem or a sign of a development? Lämsä, Jari & Antonie, Andrei Research institute for Olympic Sports, Jyväskylä Finland jari.lamsa@kihu.fi

Winning at all costsBarnett et al. (1992) studied the young athletes’

baseball participation through two coach experiments. The first group of coaches (trained) were focused more on the group and its needs such as the skills development, “doing the best” and “having fun”. The second group emphasized the importance of “winning at all costs”.

The results outlined that in the first group the rate of attrition (5%) was lower than in the second group (26%). At the same time, the trained coaches had a better image over the players and the players have better relationships between the team.

Page 22: A problem or a sign of a development? Lämsä, Jari & Antonie, Andrei Research institute for Olympic Sports, Jyväskylä Finland jari.lamsa@kihu.fi

FinallyThe youth

themselves see and interpret drop out phenomenon differently than the adults. The adults see mostly two options; the organized form of activity and non-activity. So dropping out from sport means doing nothing.