Method: 179 middle school students enrolled in PE in USA volunteered to participate in the study. They completed a package of surveys including demographics, 42-item perceptions of caring, and two 4-item subscales of effort and enjoyment from Intrinsic Motivation Index (McAuley et al., 1989). It took participants about 30 minutes to complete the surveys. An exploratory factor analysis was conducted to validate the measurement of perceptions of caring. Pearson-product correlations were conducted to examine the relationships among perceptions of caring, effort and enjoyment.
Analysis/Results: The initial exploratory factor analysis indicated the measurement of perceptions of caring had four factors. However, the scree plot and the rotated factor patterns showed evidence supporting a single factor structure. The findings from our further factor analysis with a single factor showed that factor loadings for all items were high ranging from .49 to 90. The model accounted for 24.66% of the total variance. The Cronbach’s alpha coefficient for all items was .98. The correlation analysis indicated perceptions of caring were positively associated with effort, r(164)=.44, p<.0001, and enjoyment, r(164)=.67, p<.0001, in PE.
Conclusions: The results showed that the measurement of perceptions of caring in PE was valid and reliable. Participants with higher levels of perceptions of caring were likely to put more effort and exhibit more enjoyment in PE. It is suggested that teachers create a caring climate to motivate students to be engaged in PE.