Presentation is loading. Please wait.

Presentation is loading. Please wait.

ERIN MCDONOUGH, ALEC BOOKER, LANCE CLINE, AND ALEXA GARDNER “I Want to Be a Macho Man” A proposal for understanding men’s rationale for physical fitness.

Similar presentations


Presentation on theme: "ERIN MCDONOUGH, ALEC BOOKER, LANCE CLINE, AND ALEXA GARDNER “I Want to Be a Macho Man” A proposal for understanding men’s rationale for physical fitness."— Presentation transcript:

1 ERIN MCDONOUGH, ALEC BOOKER, LANCE CLINE, AND ALEXA GARDNER “I Want to Be a Macho Man” A proposal for understanding men’s rationale for physical fitness.

2 The Problem Minimal research on male body image (Sohn, 2009) Unrealistic portrayal of ideal male body (Derenne, 2006) Wellness is not the main objective

3 Literature Review Primary Sources: Body Image Obsession in Men (Olivardia, 2002) Sex Differences in Social Comparison (Sohn, 2010) I’m Not Dieting, I’m Doing it for Science: Masculinities and the Experience of Dieting (Mallyon, Holmes, Coveney & Zadoroznyj, 2010)

4 Social Comparison Theory Focuses on uniformity Pressures of achieving what others have People automatically compare themselves to items in the media without even realizing they are doing it (Sohn, 2009)

5 Additional Theories Adonis Complex Theory  Young men obsessed with bulk/muscle mass Hegemonic Masculinity Theory  Refers to current ways of understanding manliness  Meanings around masculinity often conflict/change

6 Theories Cont. These theories influence different groups of males differently  Athletes vs. Non-athletes  Straight men vs. Gay men  From culture to culture

7 The Effects Ryan & Morrison (2009)  Negative body image Filiauat & Drummond (2010)  Anabolic steroid use Sohn (2009)  Eating disorders  Bulimia  Anorexia Nervosa  Excessive exercising

8 Hypothesis & Research Questions H 1 : Physical fitness is dependent upon either the desire for health and wellness or personal vanity. H 2 : Men with positive body image concentrate on wellness and exercise for health reasons, while men with negative body image concentrate on wellness and exercise for personal vanity. RQ 1 : What other motivators, besides influential media, cause such a serious concern for one’s health and overall well-being and drive men to desire the perfect body?

9 Variables Dependent  Physical Fitness Independent  Health and Wellness  Personal Vanity

10 Quantitative Methodology Participants  300 adult males  College students  Private Central Florida School Provides variance in cultural and socioeconomic backgrounds  Volunteer sample

11 Data Collection Method Dependent variables:  Open-ended questionnaire Moderating variables:  Markland and Hart’s Exercise Motivations Inventory (1993)  51 Reasons for Exercise  Measures personal vanity, social comparison, and health and wellness motives  6 point Likert Scale

12 Treatment Material Relevant Treatment Review  16 page packet  8 high body awareness  8 health and wellness Derived from a Mini-Content Analysis  50 advertisements  Men’s Health, Men’s Fitness, Runner’s World, Muscle and Fitness

13 Irrelevant Treatment Review 16 images of outdoor imagery  4 from each season of the year

14 Procedure 3 groups (randomly assigned upon arrival)  1- Relevant Treatment  2- Control: Irrelevant Treatment  3- Control: No Treatment

15 Procedure cont. Male escorts groups to prospective locations and moderates throughout procedure  Eliminates experimenter influences Consent Form Confidentiality Statement Treatment Distribution  10 minutes for Review Response Packet Distribution

16 Data Reduction Mini-Content Analysis  Chose top 16 out of 50 advertisements (treatment packet)  Ads displaying extremely physically fit men & men being highly active serve as unit of analysis 1-way ANOVA  SPSS – differences between physical fitness (independent) and health and wellness/personal vanity (moderating) Large Content Analysis  Based off participants’ answers to open ended questions  Key words: muscular, lean, thin, tall, as well as words related to specific body parts (arms, abs, shoulders, etc.)

17 Survey Designed to recruit participants/divide groups for qualitative methods 8 short questions Surveys distributed by:  Mail to all men (18-35) in the Central Florida area  Available in gymnasiums and student lounges of local colleges  Available in local gyms

18 Survey Use Divided into 2 groups by similar responses These 2 groups then are divided by age  18-25  26-35 8 participants randomly selected from each of the 4 groups for focus groups

19 Qualitative Methodology 4 Focus groups; 8 men per group  Group 1: Men (18-25); exercise consistently; lead healthy lifestyles; consider themselves in “good shape”  Group 2: Men (26-35); exercise consistently; lead healthy lifestyles; consider themselves in “good shape”  Group 3: Men (18-25); do not work out consistently; do not consider themselves in “good shape”  Group 4: Men (26-35) ; do not work out consistently; do not consider themselves in “good shape”

20 Focus Groups cont. Male moderator separate from the researchers Focus on health and exercise in participants’ daily lives Questions revolve around:  Men’s view of males in the media  How males in the media influence body image  Potential factors influencing a desire for peak physical fitness

21 Analysis All focus groups will be recorded and transcribed  Tapes destroyed after use Look for reoccurring themes between quantitative and qualitative responses Isolate motivational themes for exercise Used as a pioneer study  Hope to find same results in other geographical areas


Download ppt "ERIN MCDONOUGH, ALEC BOOKER, LANCE CLINE, AND ALEXA GARDNER “I Want to Be a Macho Man” A proposal for understanding men’s rationale for physical fitness."

Similar presentations


Ads by Google