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Lasting Benefits of College Sports for Student Athletes

By BY JESSICA HARLAN, 01/07/21, 11:00AM EST

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WASHINGTON, D.C. -- New research from the National Collegiate Athletic Association (NCAA) and Gallup finds that former NCAA student-athletes who graduated from college between 1975 and 2019 were more likely to be "thriving" in four of the five key areas of wellbeing than nonathletes were. These include the purpose, social, community and physical domains. The two groups were equally likely to be thriving in the fifth element -- financial. Differences in wellbeing between student-athletes and non-athletes are seen among both minority and white alumni.

Gallup's measurement of wellbeing is based on years of global and national research, asking 10 questions to gauge wellbeing in five elements:

Purpose Wellbeing: Liking what you do each day and being motivated to achieve your goals

Social Wellbeing: Having strong and supportive relationships and love in your life

Financial Wellbeing: Effectively managing your economic life to reduce stress and increase security

Community Wellbeing: The sense of engagement you have with the areas where you live, liking where you live and feeling safe and having pride in your community

Physical Wellbeing: Having good health and enough energy to get things done on a daily basis

Using this assessment, Gallup categorizes respondents as "thriving," "struggling" or "suffering" in each element of wellbeing. Someone who is categorized as "thriving" is considered to have strong and consistent wellbeing in that element of their lives.

Gallup's wellbeing research finds that thriving in multiple areas of wellbeing is related to a variety of positive life outcomes, including life evaluation and health. Those who are thriving in all five areas of wellbeing are considered to have holistic wellbeing and experience the greatest benefits. Prior research has found that they are 36% more likely to report a full recovery after an illness, injury or hardship and are also more than twice as likely to say they always adapt well to change. This study found that the percentage of former college athletes who are thriving in all five elements of wellbeing (12%) is also greater than that of non-athletes (9%).

Implications

The Gallup Alumni Survey has previously demonstrated the long-term impacts of the student experience on alumni outcomes. The present work demonstrates that in one key outcome (wellbeing), NCAA athletics participation is related to long-term, positive impacts among alumni.

Data for this study were collected prior to the current COVID-19 pandemic, and thus the extent to which future alumni will have similar outcomes is not known. Increasingly challenging university funding situations may impact multiple student experiences, including opportunities for NCAA athletics participation. While grappling with funding concerns, universities across the U.S. may be considering how to support the wellbeing of their students both during their college education and after graduation. Key experiences that universities may consider targeting both during and after the pandemic are those that communicate caring and belonging. College athletics programs may be one model universities can examine for building a campus-wide sense of caring, belonging and support for wellbeing.

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