Title: Differences in Personality between Non-Athletes and Athletes and between Athletes Participating in Selected Sports
Abstract:Objectives/Goals The purpose of this experiment was to determine if there was a significant difference in measures of ambition, perseverance, self-esteem, and power motive between non-athletes and ath...Objectives/Goals The purpose of this experiment was to determine if there was a significant difference in measures of ambition, perseverance, self-esteem, and power motive between non-athletes and athletes, and also between different sports such as soccer, volleyball, basketball, softball, baseball, football, track/cross country, and cheerleading. Methods/Materials 118 high school students were tested using a 40-question personality test composed of four different tests published in The Big Book of Personality Tests (Salvatore V. Didato, 2003). The personality traits measured were ambition, perseverance, self-esteem, and power motive. 32 subjects were non-athletes (they did not play any of these sports: soccer, volleyball, basketball, softball, baseball, football, track/cross country, and cheerleading) and 86 subjects played one or more of the sports. Results On average the athletes scored 9.25% higher than the non-athletes on the personality test as a whole. According to the data, the athletes# ambition scored 6% higher than the non-athletes# level of ambition. Athletes scored 7% higher in perseverance than non-athletes. The athletes# healthy self-esteem was 17% higher than the non-athletes#. The need for power in the athletes was only 7% higher than the need for power in the non-athletes. Out of the eight selected sports, cheerleading has the highest level of ambition: 27% of the cheerleaders were #intensely ambitious# (they scored 8-10 points on questions 1-10). Soccer had the highest level of perseverance with 20% of the participants who are #very tenacious and work hard to achieve their goals (a score of 8-10 points on questions 11-20). Soccer had 87% of their participants with a #healthy and robust# self-esteem (a score of 6-10 points on questions 21-30). Baseball had the highest power motive: 29% of the participants are #motivated by a compulsive drive for power# (they scored 23-30 points on questions 31-40). Conclusions/Discussion The data support the hypothesis: the athletes have a higher ambition, more perseverance, higher self-esteem, and a higher power motive than non-athletes. The results of the experiment can be applied to children: if parents encourage sports participation at an early age, the kids will have a better chance of having more ambition and self-esteem later on in life. This could enable children to be more successful in school and personal goals.Read More
Publication Year: 2005
Publication Date: 2005-01-01
Language: en
Type: article
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Cited By Count: 1
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