Moving Motivation: A Mixed-Methods Study of Service Learning to Promote Physical Activity in Under-Resourced Youth
Abstract
1. Introduction
2. Materials and Methods
2.1. Participants and Study Design
2.2. Program
2.3. Quantitative Instruments
2.4. Qualitative Instruments
2.5. Statistical Analysis
3. Results
3.1. Quantitative Results
3.2. Qualitative Results
3.2.1. Impact of ASMT Program on Psycho-Emotional Health
3.2.2. Impact of ASMT Program on PA Enjoyment Through Social Support
3.2.3. Impact of ASMT Program on Learning Preferences
3.2.4. The Impact of ASMT on Physical Health
4. Discussion
4.1. Competence Through PA Behavior and Motor Skill Development
4.2. Relatedness Through Enjoyment of Social Support
4.3. Autonomy Through Self-Selected PA Choices
4.4. Strengths and Limitations
4.5. Future Implications
5. Conclusions
Supplementary Materials
Author Contributions
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Informed Consent Statement
Data Availability Statement
Acknowledgments
Conflicts of Interest
Abbreviations
ASMT | All Stars Moving Together |
PA | Physical Activity |
MVPA | Moderate to Vigorous Physical Activity |
SDT | Self-Determination Theory |
LMM | Linear Mixed Methods |
GMM | Generalized Linear Mixed Methods |
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Characteristic | n (%) |
---|---|
Sex | |
Male | 8 (38) |
Female | 13 (62) |
Ethnicity/Race | |
Hispanic | 14 (66.7) |
Black/African American | 6 (28.6) |
White | 1 (4.7) |
Home Language | |
English Primary | 5 (23.8) |
English not Primary (ESL) | 16 (76.2) |
Socio-economic status | |
Eligible for free/reduced lunch price | 21 (100.0) |
School-Day Type | Total Steps Mean (SD) | % ≥3000 Steps | MVPA Minutes Mean (SD) | % ≥20 min MVPA |
---|---|---|---|---|
Monday (ASMT) | 5072 (2002) | 86% | 18.3 (11.4) | 36% |
Tuesday (control) | 3262 (1568) | 44% | 9.6 (7.5) | 12% |
Wednesday (control) | 2849 (1600) | 35% | 7.6 (6.8) | 6% |
Thursday (control + PE) | 5269 (2253) | 85% | 20.0 (12.4) | 43% |
Friday (control) | 3321 (1602) | 48% | 9.6 (6.6) | 9% |
Thursday + (after-school ASMT) | 7631 (3214) | _ | 31.2 (17.4) | _ |
School-Day Type | Total Steps EMM (95% CI) | MVPA EMM (95% CI) | % ≥3000 Steps (95% CI) | % ≥20 min MVPA (95% CI) |
---|---|---|---|---|
Monday (ASMT) | 5061 (4278–5843) | 18.2 (14.2–22.1) | 86% (74–93) | 36% (17–59) |
Tuesday (control) | 3234 (2455–4012) | 9.5 (5.5–13.4) | 44% (31–58) | 12% (5–25) |
Wednesday (control) | 2784 (1994–3575) | 7.4 (3.2–11.5) | 35% (23–49) | 6% (2–16) |
Thursday (control + PE) | 5228 (4446–6009) | 19.9 (15.9–23.8) | 85% (73–92) | 43% (22–66) |
Friday (control) | 3320 (2518–4122) | 10.4 (5.8–15.1) | 48% (35–62) | 9% (3–21) |
Thursday + afterschool ASMT | 7603 (6816–8391) | 31.1 (27.1–35.1) | _ | _ |
Theme and Subtheme | Brief Description | SDT Construct | Illustrative Quote |
---|---|---|---|
Theme 1. The Program’s Impact on Psychological and Emotional Health | |||
Positive Self-esteem | PA fostered self-efficacy from mastery and goal achievement. | Competence | (ID20) “It makes me feel like I accomplished something”. |
Negative self-esteem | Discouragement when comparing abilities to peers and feelings of social exclusion. | Competence | (ID02) “I fall behind everyone else because I’m not the best at running…“ |
Relatedness | (ID17) “There’s people better than you, or there’s mean people, if you miss a kick, they make fun of you”. | ||
Psychological Arousal | PA increased alertness and focus, and was used as an energy self-regulation strategy. | Competence | (ID08) “…it makes me feel energized and wide awake”. (ID19) “…get your energy out with the activities to focus on other things”. |
Autonomy | |||
Positive emotions | PA generated emotions of happiness, security, and well-being. | Relatedness | (ID07) “...makes you...feel good and secure” |
Competence | (ID17) “…you actually try hard, and you feel good”. | ||
Theme 2. The Program’s Impact on Social Support | |||
College Coaches | College coaches’ involvement increased motivation and connection. | Relatedness | (ID16) “I liked to be with coach Blank and Blank and they really understand me and I enjoy being with them”. |
Peers and friends | Enjoyment from playing with peers and friends. | Relatedness | (1D16) “…and like to play with friends to feel better”. |
Family | Enjoyment from family involvement in PA. | Relatedness | (ID02) “…and started playing with brothers more”. |
Loneliness | Reduced enjoyment when being physically active alone. | Relatedness | (ID19) “…I don’t have anyone to be with”. |
Theme 3. The Program’s Impact on Learning and Activity Preferences | |||
Motor skills preferences | Development of motor skills and preferences for certain skills. | Competence | (ID19) “...it was kind of hard to kick the ball, and it was really hard to throw the ball”. |
Autonomy | (ID07) “…didn’t want to touch the ball, just wanted to score”. | ||
Sport skills preferences | Development of sport-specific skills and preferences for certain sports. | Competence | (ID14) “I liked badminton and tennis because they were new skills I never learned before”. (ID16) “I liked soccer because I like to be goalie…” |
Autonomy | |||
Skill acquisition engagement | Enjoyment of knowledge Acquisition | Competence | (ID21) “Liked learning to do stuff…” |
Theme 4. The Program’s Impact on Physical Health | |||
Acute response to vigorous PA | Mixed feelings of increased heart rate and fatigue due to increased PA intensity. | Competence | (ID14) “…heart is beating faster, want it to beat fast because it makes us energetic”. |
Autonomy | (ID01) ” … if you’re tired, take a break and you can get your energy back, drink water, and then you can play again”. | ||
Injury and Safety | Concern and awareness of injury or pain limiting enjoyment, and of safety. | Autonomy | (ID12) “…Cramps, hurts my ribs, and when you want to keep playing but you need a break”. |
Competence | (ID15) “…playing safe and trying hard”. | ||
Health and Physical Fitness Improvements | Perception of improvements and awareness of PA regularity for fitness and health gains | Competence | (ID17) “I got faster and jumped way higher than before…” |
Autonomy | (ID19) “…doing it, it might seem hard, but you can make it easier on yourself”. | ||
PA behavior | Encouragement and understanding of increased PA levels during school or after-school hours. | Autonomy | (ID17) “…and it encouraged me to exercise more”. |
Competence | (ID15) “...to be more active to get your body moving...” |
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Rial Rebullido, T.; Hope, A.; Milano, R.J.; Drewson, S.R. Moving Motivation: A Mixed-Methods Study of Service Learning to Promote Physical Activity in Under-Resourced Youth. Appl. Sci. 2025, 15, 10489. https://doi.org/10.3390/app151910489
Rial Rebullido T, Hope A, Milano RJ, Drewson SR. Moving Motivation: A Mixed-Methods Study of Service Learning to Promote Physical Activity in Under-Resourced Youth. Applied Sciences. 2025; 15(19):10489. https://doi.org/10.3390/app151910489
Chicago/Turabian StyleRial Rebullido, Tamara, Andrea Hope, Robert J Milano, and Staci R Drewson. 2025. "Moving Motivation: A Mixed-Methods Study of Service Learning to Promote Physical Activity in Under-Resourced Youth" Applied Sciences 15, no. 19: 10489. https://doi.org/10.3390/app151910489
APA StyleRial Rebullido, T., Hope, A., Milano, R. J., & Drewson, S. R. (2025). Moving Motivation: A Mixed-Methods Study of Service Learning to Promote Physical Activity in Under-Resourced Youth. Applied Sciences, 15(19), 10489. https://doi.org/10.3390/app151910489