Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
894418 Psychology of Sport and Exercise 2011 8 Pages PDF
Abstract

ObjectivesSocial anxiety (SA) is characterized by high anxiety in social situations and can be significantly debilitating in its long-term duration. In the case of children it additionally has a negative impact on the child’s social and cognitive development. As reported in Wipfli, Rethorst, and Landers’ (2008) meta-analysis, exercise does have an anxiolytic effect. In this study, the role of sport as a mediating variable in the onset or development of SA symptoms is investigated, where a similar effect on this specific anxiety-type is expected.DesignThis repeated-measures cohort study includes two data collections. The first data collection was carried out in 2007 and the second a year later in 2008.MethodTwo hundred and eight 7- to 8-year old Swiss primary school children participated in structured interviews. Parents and teachers completed questionnaires regarding children’s SA symptoms and classroom behaviour respectively. Parents also provided information about their children’s extra-curricular sport activities. The same information was gathered a year later.ResultsAlthough most differences were not statistically significant a pattern emerged: children practising sport tended to score lower on all instruments in both 2007 and 2008. Repeated-measures analysis of variance indicated a reduction in social anxiety over time in children practising a team sport.ConclusionThese results are interpreted in reference to a potential positive effect of team sport on a child’s experience of anxiety in social situations based on Antonovsky’s (1997) salutogenesis model and Bandura’s (1977) social learning theory.

► Children practising team sports exhibited a decrease in social anxiety over time. ► No effect on children’s social anxiety in the case of individual sport. ► Number of sport hours per week revealed no effect on social anxiety over time.

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