JUNIOR ATHLETES' BEHAVIORAL SELF-REGULATION STYLES WITHIN THE DIMENSIONS OF PSYCHOLOGICAL SAFETY IN THE LEARNING AND TRAINING ENVIRONMENT.
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Date
2025
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Abstract
This study analyzes the prominence of dominant behavioral self-regulation styles among junior athletes within
the context of psychological safety in their learning and training environment. Methods. The randomly
selected sample was representative of the general population and consisted only of junior athletes attending
Olympic Reserve sports schools for children and youth, totaling 89 participants. These junior athletes, aged 14–
19, were educated and trained full-time at sports institutions in Ukraine. Participants included athletes from team
sports (handball and football) as well as individual sports (rhythmic gymnastics, freestyle wrestling, artistic
gymnastics, and weightlifting). The research participants were prize-winners and winners of regional, national,
and European championships and regularly competed in Ukrainian and international tournaments. The
parameters of the main variables (self-regulation styles and psychological safety of the learning and training
environments) and the additional variable (internality in sports activities) were determined using valid,
representative, and reliable methodologies. Results. Fifteen direct correlations between the studied variables
were established. It was empirically proved that the self-regulation style, “modeling”, and the parameter of
psychological safety, “comfort”, are the most dependent and loaded parameters. It was substantiated that creating
behavioral models in the constructive and safe learning and training space is an effective way for junior athletes’
professional growth. It was found that the three self-regulation styles (planning, modeling, and programing), in
combination with pronounced independence and high levels of comfort and social-psychological safety,
constitute a latent resource of the optimal learning and training environment. It was established that a high level
of comfort in the learning and training environment contributes to developing the self-regulation styles –
“programming” and “modeling”. Discussion and conclusions. It was substantiated that the research into junior
athletes’ behavioral self-regulation styles in the dimensions of psychological safety of the learning and training
environment means determining the levels of self-regulatory readiness for relevant activities under the influence
of safety factors combined in the continuum “satisfaction–harmony–comfort”. It was explained that the
dominant styles of junior athletes’ self-regulation reflect juniors’ managerial ability to regulate their psycho-
emotional states, exerting influence on themselves through self-discipline, self-hypnosis, imaginary images,
auto-training technologies, muscle tone management, and breathing techniques. The established psychological
correlations and the identified significant differences in the levels of the studied parameters possess scientific
novelty. They can be implemented in the learning and training process at sports educational institutions.
Description
Popovych, I., Hoi, N., Hrys, A., Yurkiv, Y., Radul, S., Pavliuk, M., & Hoian, I. (2025). Junior athletes' behavioral self-regulation styles within the dimensions of psychological safety in the learning and training environment. Journal of Physical Education and Sport, 25(8), 1629–1639. DOI: 10.7752/jpes.2025.08182.
Keywords
self-actualization, motivation, mental health, safety, academic and professional activity, mental state, stress, independence