Parents are known to influence the athlete sport experience through motivational climates. Athletes' perception of motivational climates and their own motives for sport participation influence enjoyment and long-term sport commitment. It is unknown, however, the extent parent motives for initially enrolling their child in a year-round sports program associate with children's sport participation enjoyment and commitment. The purposes of this study were to (a) determine parent motives for enrolling their child (5-8 years) in year-round swimming and (b) explore the relationships of parent motives and motivational climates with child enjoyment and commitment. Parents ( = 40) completed questionnaires on enrollment motives and motivational climate, while children ( 40) answered questions on enjoyment and commitment. Of the seven motives measured, parents enrolled children in swimming primarily for fitness benefits ( = = ) followed by skill mastery ( = 4.31, = .48) and fun ( = 4.10, = .51) reasons. Findings revealed the fitness motive was moderately, negatively correlated with the success-without-effort facet of a performance climate ( = -.50, < .01). The fun motive was moderately, positively associated with commitment ( = .43, < .01). Parent motives for enrolling their child in sport may impact the young child sport experience and long-term sport continuation via motivational climates, enjoyment, and commitment.

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http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9987520PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.70252/OTNY1657DOI Listing

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