2017
DOI: 10.14198/obets2017.12.1.14
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Satisfacción de las personas jóvenes con las actividades de ocio entre pares

Abstract: Resumen El artículo parte de la hipótesis de que aquellas personas jóvenes que tienen un mayor grado de responsabilidad en la organización de sus actividades de ocio presentan mayores niveles de satisfacción con la práctica, favoreciendo que estas sean actividades relevantes en sus vidas. Los objetivos de este trabajo son: (a) identificar las prácticas de ocio más significativas que tienen lugar

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Cited by 3 publications
(4 citation statements)
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“…To this conclusion is added the fact that these family-shared leisure experiences are felt to be more important than those that are not shared. Although previous studies (Kleiber et al, 2017) show that leisure activities organized and practiced with the peer group achieve higher levels of well-being in young people, there are no conclusive results linking personal satisfaction to family-shared leisure activity. This is a limitation of this investigation, and we recommend continuing this line of study in the future.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 82%
See 1 more Smart Citation
“…To this conclusion is added the fact that these family-shared leisure experiences are felt to be more important than those that are not shared. Although previous studies (Kleiber et al, 2017) show that leisure activities organized and practiced with the peer group achieve higher levels of well-being in young people, there are no conclusive results linking personal satisfaction to family-shared leisure activity. This is a limitation of this investigation, and we recommend continuing this line of study in the future.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 82%
“…There is currently a growing interest in examining the possible relationships between young peoples self-management of leisure and their personal satisfaction and in determining whether such an association is present when leisure activities are shared with the family. In this line are studies on youth satisfaction with the organization of leisure practices with peer groups (Kleiber et al, 2017), but there are very few works focusing on the relationships between youth well-being and the self-organization of leisure when shared with the family, an institution that plays an essential role in young peoples development and well-being (Juang and Silbereisen, 1999; Jackson and Warren, 2000; Demaray and Malecki, 2002; Elzo, 2004; Brazelton and Greenspan, 2005; Álvarez and Rodríguez, 2008; Badenes and López, 2011; Valdemoros et al, 2014).…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The TB was originally an instrument designed to record activities carried out at a given time (Andorka, 1987;Codina, 1999Codina, , 2004Steinbach, 2006). Its introduction in leisure studies counted on the essential contribution of Neulinger (1986), who incorporated the evaluation of activities attending to psychological variables such as perceptions of freedom, satisfaction and intrinsic motivation, basic to the understanding of the leisure experience (Codina et al, 2016;Kleiber et al, 2017;Webb and Karlis, 2017). The TB used here -Theatrical Time Budget or T-TB -recorded the activities carried out during the three days of the workshop, specifying two valuations of them: participants' perceptions of freedom and satisfaction (ranging from 0 to 100, from "not at all by choice/not at all satisfied" to "totally by choice/totally satisfied") in each workshop activity.…”
Section: Instrumentsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Although Batchelor et al's (2020) study focuses on a slightly older demographic than ours (16-25 years), the concept of 'precarious leisure' is equally applicable to younger age groups, especially adolescents (Figure 1). Adolescence is a time of transition in which young people break with the leisure habits of their childhood and start to develop new, more autonomous patterns, focused on their relationship with their peers rather than on the values and routines of family life (Kleiber et al, 2017). Often, this includes passing up leisure activities they enjoy in favour of other, more utilitarian pursuits, owing to their and their family's sense of the need to use their free time 'productively'.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%