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Showing 2 results for Moral Development

Dr Hamid Salehi, Mr Ali Bahrami Nia,
Volume 8, Issue 16 (12-2018)
Abstract

The purpose of the present investigation was to develop and initial validation of a measure for assessing the athletes perceptions of coaches’ behaviors that promote fairplay behaviors. A three-step procedure was undertaken to develop the questionnaire. In the initial step, the literature review provided theoretical and empirical perspectives on how youth sport coaches can influence athletes’ fairplay behaviors. In step 2, a pool of 191 items worded and content validity was assessed. In the final step, 252 teenage male athletes (age range 14-19; mean age =15.88±1.34 years) who were participating in a variety of team sports (i.e., volleyball, basketball, soccer, futsal) completed a revised 164-item questionnaire. Principal components analyses further reduced the number of items to 30 and suggested a four-factor structure (i.e., modeling, instruction, pressure, and dialogue dimensions). The results revealed that the final 30-item version of the Coaching Fairplay Behaviors Inventory possesses a good psychometric basis with adequate internal consistency and which explain 57.80% of the total variance. Collectively, this study provides a new valid and reliable instrument for assessing the specific mechanisms by which coaches promote fairplay behaviors among teenagers, although more investigations are needed to validate this tool.
Hamid Salehi, Neda Amirpour Najafabadi,
Volume 15, Issue 30 (12-2025)
Abstract

 Aims: This study examined the relationship between young athletes’ perceptions of their coaches’ achievement goal orientations—specifically task-involving and ego-involving motivational climates—and coaches’ fair play behaviors.
Methods: A total of 318 Iranian adolescent athletes (M_age = 16.60 ± 4.10 years; both male and female) from team sports (basketball and volleyball), each with at least six months of continuous training under their current coach, voluntarily participated in the study. Participants completed two subscales of the Perceived Motivational Climate in Sport Questionnaire-2 (PMCSQ-2)—assessing task-involving and ego-involving climates—and the Coaching Fair Play Behaviors Inventory (CFBI), which measures six dimensions of fair play behaviors: teaching, modeling, expectations/pressure, reinforcement/reward, communication, and punishment.
Results: A significant negative relationship emerged between perceived task-involving and ego-involving motivational climates. The task-involving climate was positively associated with all six CFBI dimensions (teaching, modeling, expectations/pressure, reinforcement/reward, communication, and punishment). In contrast, the ego-involving climate demonstrated negative associations with three CFBI dimensions: teaching, modeling, and expectations/pressure.
Conclusion: Coaches who actively engage in fair play behaviors—particularly through teaching, modeling, and setting clear expectations—tend to foster a task-involving motivational climate that supports athletes’ ethical development and sportsmanship. Conversely, the absence of such behaviors is linked to an ego-involving climate. These findings highlight the importance of implementing task-involving coaching strategies to integrate moral development with athletic performance, thereby fostering a positive and ethical team environment.


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