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Physical Fitness, Exercise Behaviors, and Sense of Self-Efficacy Among College Students: A Descriptive Correlational Study

Shanshan Han, Bo Li, Guangxu Wang, Youzhi Ke, Shuqiao Meng, Ya-xing Li, Zhong-lei Cui, Wenxia Tong

2022Frontiers in Psychology63 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Background: Self-efficacy is an important component of the mental well-being of college students. This study aimed to evaluate the development and the correlation between physical fitness (PF), exercise behavior, and self-efficacy in college students. To examine whether PF in individual college students can predict self-efficacy, and whether exercise behavior mediates this relationship. Methods: This was an observational study of 1923 randomly selected college students (50.5% girl). Measures included the Physical Activity Rating Scale, the Self-Efficacy Scale, and PF testing. Results: = 0.248). In regression analysis, PF explained 24.7% of the variance in self-efficacy, increasing to 29.4% when exercise behavior was considered. Therefore, the predictive effect of PF on self-efficacy is partially realized through healthy exercise behavior. Conclusion: Physical fitness can predict self-efficacy among college students, with exercise behavior being an important mediation of this relationship. Strategies to improve positive exercise behaviors and PF could improve students' self-efficacy and overall mental health.

Topics & Concepts

Self-efficacyPsychologyClinical psychologyMediationScale (ratio)Descriptive statisticsObservational studyPhysical fitnessRegression analysisCorrelationMultilevel modelDevelopmental psychologySocial psychologyPhysical therapyMedicineInternal medicineMachine learningComputer sciencePhysicsGeometryPolitical scienceStatisticsQuantum mechanicsMathematicsLawPhysical Activity and HealthEating Disorders and BehaviorsMotivation and Self-Concept in Sports
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