Task and ego goal orientations in competitive sport: A quantitative review of the literature from 1989 to 2016

Marc Lochbaum, Z. Kazak Çetinkalp, K. Graham, T. Wright, R. Zazo

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

Abstract

© 2016, University of Zagreb - Faculty of Kinesiology. All rights reserved.Achievement goal theory (AGT) is a dominant theoretical framework. The purposes of this review were (1) to provide a summary of the task and ego goal orientations literature in competitive sport as measured by the Task and Ego Orientations in Sport Questionnaire (TEOSQ) or the Perceptions of Success in Sport Questionnaire (POSQ), (2) to test the interdependence of the two goal orientations, and (3) to provide the estimated means for both orientations across a number of historically examined moderator variables. 260 studies met inclusion criteria totaling 80,959 unique participants across 39 countries and 32 sports. Youth samples were nearly 50% of all included studies. The meta-analyzed intercorrelations (rw=.18, z=9.96, p<.000) supported the conceptualized interdependence of the two goal orientations. The estimated mean values were 4.15±.30 (task) and 3.04±.51 (ego). However, differences, POSQ compared to TEOS
Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)3-29
JournalDefault journal
StatePublished - Jun 1 2016

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