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College Student Athletes and Psychological Well-being in Retirement

The purpose of this study was to investigate college student athletes' psychological health and well-being in the months immediately following graduation/retirement, which has been indicated as a critical time period. Participants consisted of collegiate athletes (N = 166; women = 138, men = 28; Mage = 21.84 years, SD = 0.86) who were surveyed at the end of their competitive seasons when they were graduating and retiring from their sports (Time 1) and 3 to 4 months later (Time 2). Athletes completed measures of readiness to graduate/retire, depression, body satisfaction, and satisfaction with life at Time 1; they completed the measures of psychological well-being at Time 2. Bivariate correlations revealed six dimensions of retirement readiness related to outcomes at Time 2: seeing self as more than an athlete, maintaining social support, neglecting other areas of life, achieving sport goals, utilizing sport career services and developing a new focus after retirement. Through a series of hierarchical regression analyses, one of reach psychological well-being outcome, I entered the Time 1 measure and gender in Step 1 and then the correlated dimensions for that outcome at Step 2. For body satisfaction, F(5, 160) = 27.281, p < .000, adj. R2 = .443, only Time 1 Body Satisfaction was a significant predictor (β = .639). For depressive symptoms, F(5, 160) = 17.110, p < .000, adj. R2 = .328, Time 1 depression (β = .462) predicted higher levels whereas developing a new focus upon ending career their sport career predicted less depression at Time 2 (β = -.161). Finally, for satisfaction with life, F(7, 158) = 18.336, p < .000, adj. R2 = .424, being male (β = -.165), being more satisfied with one's life at Time 1 (β = .436), maintaining social support networks (β = .199), and having a new focus upon ending sport careers (β = .140) predicted more life satisfaction at Time 2. Although no dimensions were significantly related to higher body satisfaction, a new focus after retirement and social support were essential in understanding the athletes' satisfaction with life and depressive symptoms three to four months post retirement. Future research may continue to apply longitudinal methods to follow the retirement process up to six months to a year, explore gender, race, and NCAA Division differences, identify what is incorporated in an athlete's new focus or examine other dimensions of body image that may better represent it during retirement. Universities may look to implement career assistance programs focusing on these psychosocial factors to prepare athletes for their retirement experiences.

Identiferoai:union.ndltd.org:unt.edu/info:ark/67531/metadc1833525
Date08 1900
CreatorsShander, Karolina
ContributorsPetrie, Trent, Wang, Chiachih DC, Hook, Joshua, Martin, Scott B
PublisherUniversity of North Texas
Source SetsUniversity of North Texas
LanguageEnglish
Detected LanguageEnglish
TypeThesis or Dissertation
Formativ, 75 pages, Text
RightsPublic, Shander, Karolina, Copyright, Copyright is held by the author, unless otherwise noted. All rights Reserved.

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