A narrative investigation of adult latina's life experience of physical activity adherence

The purpose of this study was to explore the lifelong physical activity (PA) stories of Latinas to determine motives that contribute to exercise adherence behaviors. Using an interview process, life histories were collected from six self-identified PA adherents of Hispanic descent. Three narrative a...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Wagner, Susan Allison
Other Authors: Young-Hawkins, LaVerne
Format: Others
Language:en_US
Published: 2010
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/1969.1/ETD-TAMU-2710
http://hdl.handle.net/1969.1/ETD-TAMU-2710
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spelling ndltd-tamu.edu-oai-repository.tamu.edu-1969.1-ETD-TAMU-27102013-01-08T10:39:49ZA narrative investigation of adult latina's life experience of physical activity adherenceWagner, Susan AllisonNarrativeLatinaPhysical ActivityAdherenceThe purpose of this study was to explore the lifelong physical activity (PA) stories of Latinas to determine motives that contribute to exercise adherence behaviors. Using an interview process, life histories were collected from six self-identified PA adherents of Hispanic descent. Three narrative analysis techniques were used to analyze the interviews and the transcript of a follow-up focus group meeting. In the first technique, the Holistic-Content perspective and Labovian transcription were used to identify major themes common in the interviews. Adherence themes that emerged were: 1) culture and family, 2) being pushed, 3) health, 4) role models, and 5) competence. A review of these themes resulted in several suggestions for teaching practitioners: 1) including enjoyment as a criteria for planning activities, 2) focusing on positive reinforcement from teachers and families, 3) providing early opportunities for success, and 4) interacting with strong female role models. A second analysis technique, Lakoff and Johnson's linguistic studies using metaphor to understand one idea in terms of another, yielded the concept of love as health. Study participants frequently used the terms love and addiction in connection with PA. Participants suggested the following as characteristics of healthy love relationships: loyalty, community, positive results, and variety. The term addiction, while not specifically a metaphor, emerged during this process as a powerful exercise adherence motivator. Euphoria and "not feeling right unless I exercise" were cited as primary reasons for adherence behavior. The third technique used was Borman's Symbolic Convergence Theory in which a rhetorical community is formed around a fantasy theme. The theme "perfect body" was identified in the stories as common to four of the participants. Via the media and pop culture, the rhetorical community communicates that a "perfect body" can be achieved with PA and diet. The oppressive gendered message here is that a woman's worth is largely determined by the look of her body, and having the perfect body is the way to success. Facilitating the shift from solely external motivators to a more balanced internal/external set of motivators and from solely negative motivators to positive reasons for exercise adherence is the recommended goal for teaching practitioners.Young-Hawkins, LaVerne2010-01-15T00:12:14Z2010-01-16T00:51:39Z2010-01-15T00:12:14Z2010-01-16T00:51:39Z2008-052009-05-15BookThesisElectronic Dissertationtextelectronicapplication/pdfborn digitalhttp://hdl.handle.net/1969.1/ETD-TAMU-2710http://hdl.handle.net/1969.1/ETD-TAMU-2710en_US
collection NDLTD
language en_US
format Others
sources NDLTD
topic Narrative
Latina
Physical Activity
Adherence
spellingShingle Narrative
Latina
Physical Activity
Adherence
Wagner, Susan Allison
A narrative investigation of adult latina's life experience of physical activity adherence
description The purpose of this study was to explore the lifelong physical activity (PA) stories of Latinas to determine motives that contribute to exercise adherence behaviors. Using an interview process, life histories were collected from six self-identified PA adherents of Hispanic descent. Three narrative analysis techniques were used to analyze the interviews and the transcript of a follow-up focus group meeting. In the first technique, the Holistic-Content perspective and Labovian transcription were used to identify major themes common in the interviews. Adherence themes that emerged were: 1) culture and family, 2) being pushed, 3) health, 4) role models, and 5) competence. A review of these themes resulted in several suggestions for teaching practitioners: 1) including enjoyment as a criteria for planning activities, 2) focusing on positive reinforcement from teachers and families, 3) providing early opportunities for success, and 4) interacting with strong female role models. A second analysis technique, Lakoff and Johnson's linguistic studies using metaphor to understand one idea in terms of another, yielded the concept of love as health. Study participants frequently used the terms love and addiction in connection with PA. Participants suggested the following as characteristics of healthy love relationships: loyalty, community, positive results, and variety. The term addiction, while not specifically a metaphor, emerged during this process as a powerful exercise adherence motivator. Euphoria and "not feeling right unless I exercise" were cited as primary reasons for adherence behavior. The third technique used was Borman's Symbolic Convergence Theory in which a rhetorical community is formed around a fantasy theme. The theme "perfect body" was identified in the stories as common to four of the participants. Via the media and pop culture, the rhetorical community communicates that a "perfect body" can be achieved with PA and diet. The oppressive gendered message here is that a woman's worth is largely determined by the look of her body, and having the perfect body is the way to success. Facilitating the shift from solely external motivators to a more balanced internal/external set of motivators and from solely negative motivators to positive reasons for exercise adherence is the recommended goal for teaching practitioners.
author2 Young-Hawkins, LaVerne
author_facet Young-Hawkins, LaVerne
Wagner, Susan Allison
author Wagner, Susan Allison
author_sort Wagner, Susan Allison
title A narrative investigation of adult latina's life experience of physical activity adherence
title_short A narrative investigation of adult latina's life experience of physical activity adherence
title_full A narrative investigation of adult latina's life experience of physical activity adherence
title_fullStr A narrative investigation of adult latina's life experience of physical activity adherence
title_full_unstemmed A narrative investigation of adult latina's life experience of physical activity adherence
title_sort narrative investigation of adult latina's life experience of physical activity adherence
publishDate 2010
url http://hdl.handle.net/1969.1/ETD-TAMU-2710
http://hdl.handle.net/1969.1/ETD-TAMU-2710
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