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Sport injury prevention in-school and out-of-school? A qualitative investigation of the trans-contextual model
Author(s) -
Alfred Lee,
Martyn Standage,
Martin S. Hagger,
Derwin King Chung Chan
Publication year - 2019
Publication title -
plos one
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.99
H-Index - 332
ISSN - 1932-6203
DOI - 10.1371/journal.pone.0222015
Subject(s) - focus group , thematic analysis , content analysis , psychology , qualitative research , cognition , social cognitive theory , medical education , applied psychology , pedagogy , developmental psychology , medicine , sociology , neuroscience , anthropology , social science
Objective To investigate junior secondary school students’ experiences and perspectives of in-school and out-of-school sport-safety, with a particular focus on the meaning and content that they applied to the motivational and social cognitive factors of sport injury prevention. Design Focus-group interview. Method Participants were 128 junior secondary school students (Form 1 to Form 3) aged between 12 and 16 years from two secondary schools. We organised focus-group interviews by class (group size = six to nine students). Seventeen groups completed semi-structured interviews regarding their experience, beliefs, and motives for injury prevention in-school and out-of-school. We analysed data by thematic content analysis using a typological approach. Results Higher order themes (N = 7) including in-school and out-of-school motives and social cognitive factors and associated lower-order themes (N = 16), emerged from the analysis corresponding to constructs from trans-contextual model tenets. Conclusions The current study is the first qualitative study to explore junior secondary school students’ experience and perspectives on sport injury prevention, using trans-contextual model as a framework for investigation. The findings contribute to a better understanding on their motivational and social cognitive factors in adopting sport injury prevention. The content of the theme behavior also indicated the inadequacy of students’ knowledge of effective sport injury prevention techniques, and underscored the importance of sport safety education.

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