Physical Activity and Social Support for Exercise in a Sample of College Sorority and Fraternity Members
PURPOSE: To provide 1) a description of the levels of physical activity and social support for exercise for fraternity and sorority members; 2) a comparison of gender differences in physical activity levels among fraternity and sorority members; and 3) to determine a relationship between levels soci...
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2008
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ndltd-UTENN-oai-trace.tennessee.edu-utk_gradthes-14432011-12-13T16:12:20Z Physical Activity and Social Support for Exercise in a Sample of College Sorority and Fraternity Members Minton, Jennifer Autumn PURPOSE: To provide 1) a description of the levels of physical activity and social support for exercise for fraternity and sorority members; 2) a comparison of gender differences in physical activity levels among fraternity and sorority members; and 3) to determine a relationship between levels social support for exercise and physical activity in fraternity and sorority members. METHODS: Three hundred thirty-seven members of fraternities and sororities completed an online survey (74.8% female). The online survey included the International Physical Activity Questionnaire (IPAQ), the Social Support for Exercise Survey, and demographic questions. RESULTS: According to the IPAQ, the majority of fraternity and sorority members (90%) were engaged in moderate or high volumes of activity. However, the majority of members (62.3%) were not vigorously active 3 days per week for at least 20 minutes per session. Males were significantly more likely to report being active than females (p < 0.001). There were moderate correlations between social support for exercise from friends and the combination of moderate and vigorous activity (0.42); moderate activity (0.41); and vigorous activity (0.44). Social support for exercise from friends and gender predicted approximately 20% of the variance in moderate and vigorous physical activity. DISCUSSION: Approximately 40% of fraternity and sorority members reported engaging in vigorous activity. Fraternity members were more likely to report participation in vigorous activity than sorority members. Social support for exercise from friends was higher in students with structured exercise including moderate and vigorous activity. All significant correlations between social support for exercise and physical activity variables were positive. The strongest predictors of vigorous exercise were social support from friends and gender. 2008-05-01 text http://trace.tennessee.edu/utk_gradthes/410 Masters Theses Trace: Tennessee Research and Creative Exchange Sports Sciences |
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Sports Sciences |
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Sports Sciences Minton, Jennifer Autumn Physical Activity and Social Support for Exercise in a Sample of College Sorority and Fraternity Members |
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PURPOSE: To provide 1) a description of the levels of physical activity and social support for exercise for fraternity and sorority members; 2) a comparison of gender differences in physical activity levels among fraternity and sorority members; and 3) to determine a relationship between levels social support for exercise and physical activity in fraternity and sorority members. METHODS: Three hundred thirty-seven members of fraternities and sororities completed an online survey (74.8% female). The online survey included the International Physical Activity Questionnaire (IPAQ), the Social Support for Exercise Survey, and demographic questions. RESULTS: According to the IPAQ, the majority of fraternity and sorority members (90%) were engaged in moderate or high volumes of activity. However, the majority of members (62.3%) were not vigorously active 3 days per week for at least 20 minutes per session. Males were significantly more likely to report being active than females (p < 0.001). There were moderate correlations between social support for exercise from friends and the combination of moderate and vigorous activity (0.42); moderate activity (0.41); and vigorous activity (0.44). Social support for exercise from friends and gender predicted approximately 20% of the variance in moderate and vigorous physical activity. DISCUSSION: Approximately 40% of fraternity and sorority members reported engaging in vigorous activity. Fraternity members were more likely to report participation in vigorous activity than sorority members. Social support for exercise from friends was higher in students with structured exercise including moderate and vigorous activity. All significant correlations between social support for exercise and physical activity variables were positive. The strongest predictors of vigorous exercise were social support from friends and gender. |
author |
Minton, Jennifer Autumn |
author_facet |
Minton, Jennifer Autumn |
author_sort |
Minton, Jennifer Autumn |
title |
Physical Activity and Social Support for Exercise in a Sample of College Sorority and Fraternity Members |
title_short |
Physical Activity and Social Support for Exercise in a Sample of College Sorority and Fraternity Members |
title_full |
Physical Activity and Social Support for Exercise in a Sample of College Sorority and Fraternity Members |
title_fullStr |
Physical Activity and Social Support for Exercise in a Sample of College Sorority and Fraternity Members |
title_full_unstemmed |
Physical Activity and Social Support for Exercise in a Sample of College Sorority and Fraternity Members |
title_sort |
physical activity and social support for exercise in a sample of college sorority and fraternity members |
publisher |
Trace: Tennessee Research and Creative Exchange |
publishDate |
2008 |
url |
http://trace.tennessee.edu/utk_gradthes/410 |
work_keys_str_mv |
AT mintonjenniferautumn physicalactivityandsocialsupportforexerciseinasampleofcollegesororityandfraternitymembers |
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