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The Effect of Parental Involvement on Student-Athlete Academic Performance, Academic Self- Efficacy, Functional Independence, and Achievement of Adulthood Criteria

<p> Parental involvement in student- athletes&rsquo; lives is ubiquitous and important. Despite efforts of many to determine the best means for student-athletes to succeed academically, little is known about the relationship between levels of parent involvement and an athlete&rsquo;s ability to succeed academically. Having an involved, but not over-involved, parenting relationship is key to having their children develop the necessary academic skills to be ready for the realm of collegiate athletics. </p><p> The purpose of this non-experimental quantitative analyses of NCAA Division I student-athletes in the Big Sky Conference was to examine the relationship (if any) among parental involvement, academic performance, academic self-efficacy, functional independence, and the achievement of adulthood criteria. Participants included four hundred and sixty-one student-athletes from a population of 3,000 representing ten different institutions. </p><p> An independent t-test was conducted to explore the difference between student-athletes&rsquo; GPAs with a high and low amount of parental involvement. Findings revealed no statistically significant differences between a high and low level of involvement and student-athletes&rsquo; GPAs. Three non-parametric Spearman Rho tests were employed to determine the relationship between parent involvement and academic self-efficacy, functional independence and the achievement of adulthood criteria. Findings revealed a positive, and strong or medium correlation among all three tests. Further analyses through three one-way ANOVAs indicated that student-athletes with the highest level of parent involvement had the lowest GPA&rsquo;s and student-athletes with a medium amount of involvement had the highest GPA&rsquo;s. Additionally, student-athletes with the highest academic self-efficacy had the highest cumulative GPA&rsquo;s. </p><p> Future studies should include a random sample that contains a more diverse representation of student-athletes with below a cumulative 3.0 GPA. Future studies should also use a mixed methods approach with parents that include further analyses of involvement.</p><p>

Identiferoai:union.ndltd.org:PROQUEST/oai:pqdtoai.proquest.com:10826234
Date13 June 2018
CreatorsHarris, Grace Harris
PublisherUniversity of Montana
Source SetsProQuest.com
LanguageEnglish
Detected LanguageEnglish
Typethesis

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