Research has linked youth activity involvement to positive development. However, past studies have confounded at least two separable dimensions of involvement: breadth (number of activities) and intensity (participation frequency). Theory and the limited available evidence suggest that these dimensions may make independent contributions to development. Based on self-reports from 7430 high school students, this study assessed whether breadth and intensity dimensions were related to each other, to a typical aggregate measure of involvement, and to various indicators of positive development. Breadth and intensity were moderately interrelated and, in combination, they explained the majority of the variance in the typical involvement measure. Both dimensions were positively related to each development index. When examined simultaneously, only breadth had a unique relation with each developmental index. Further, evidence of nonlinear effects was found. Findings were consistent across age levels. Implications for measurement of involvement and interpretations of the extant research are discussed.
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Gender was also explored as a potential moderating variable. To do so, hierarchical regression models were tested for each developmental index entering age, gender, and parental education as predictors in step 1, breadth and intensity measures in step 2, and five nonlinear terms (breadth2, intensity2, breadth by intensity, gender by breadth, gender by intensity) in step 3. In each regression model, the interactions involving gender were nonsignificant. Similarly, results were nonsignificant when social class (using the parental education variable as a proxy indicator) was tested as a moderator instead of gender.
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ACKNOWLEDGMENTS
This research was supported by grants from the Social Sciences and Humanities Research Council of Canada, Human Resources Development Canada, and the Health Canada Centre of Excellence for Youth Engagement Program (The opinions expressed in this manuscript do not necessarily reflect those of the funding agencies). We thank participating schools and students for their contribution to this research.
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Rose-Krasnor, L., Busseri, M.A., Willoughby, T. et al. Breadth and Intensity of Youth Activity Involvement as Contexts for Positive Development. J Youth Adolescence 35, 365–379 (2006). https://doi.org/10.1007/s10964-006-9037-6
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DOI: https://doi.org/10.1007/s10964-006-9037-6