Sports at Work: Anticipated and Persistent Correlates of Participation in High School Athletics

Do former high school athletes make better employees than nonathletes? Two studies examine how participation in competitive youth sports appears to be relevant for early-career job prospects as well as late-in-life outcomes. In the short run, Study 1 shows that people expect former student-athletes...

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Veröffentlicht in:Journal of leadership & organizational studies 2015-05, Vol.22 (2), p.217-230
Hauptverfasser: Kniffin, Kevin M., Wansink, Brian, Shimizu, Mitsuru
Format: Artikel
Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Do former high school athletes make better employees than nonathletes? Two studies examine how participation in competitive youth sports appears to be relevant for early-career job prospects as well as late-in-life outcomes. In the short run, Study 1 shows that people expect former student-athletes to display significantly more leadership, self-confidence, and self-respect than those who were active outside of sports—such as being in the band or on the yearbook staff. In the long run, Study 2 uses biodata to discover that men who participated in varsity-level high school sports an average of 60 years earlier appeared to demonstrate higher levels of leadership and enjoyed higher-status careers. Surprisingly, these ex-athletes also exhibited more prosocial behavior than nonathletes—they more frequently volunteered time and donated to charity. These findings open a wide range of possibilities regarding how one’s participation in competitive youth sports might influence the development of important skills and values beyond simply signaling the specific traits examined here. Moreover, this contributes to theoretical debates about the traits of students involved in competitive athletics, and it highlights the need for closer attention to the relevance of sports in the workplace and beyond—including late-in-life charitable giving and voluntarism.
ISSN:1548-0518
1939-7089
DOI:10.1177/1548051814538099