The big idea: Leisure is the free time people have once paid work, study and chores are done. Sport is one kind of active leisure — organised physical activity.
Participation means who takes part, how much, and in what — and it is very uneven. The amount of leisure time you have, and what you do with it, depends on your affluence, age (lifecycle), gender, health, culture and where you live.
The central Option E skill is to explain why participation varies — between rich and poor, men and women, young and old, and from country to country.
Key terms for participation
- Leisure — the free time left after work, study and chores; can be passive (TV) or active (sport).
- Participation rate — the share of a group that takes part in a leisure activity or sport.
- Affluence — wealth / disposable income; raises the time, money and access to take part.
- Lifecycle stage — your age and life stage (student, working parent, retired) — it reshapes free time.
- Human development — a country's wealth, health and education (e.g. its HDI), which sets the leisure baseline.
- Accessibility — how easily people can reach facilities (cost, distance, transport, disability access).
Time AND access both matter: Participation needs two things: free time to take part, and the money, facilities and acceptance to actually do it.
A poorer worker may have little leisure time and little money for it; a wealthy retiree often has plenty of both — which is why participation varies so much.
How this is tested: The stimulus figure is usually a stacked bar graph of leisure hours split by activity, age or income, or a triangular graph showing participation shares across three age groups. Your job is to read it accurately, not explain it.
The data parts are low-mark and precise: Estimate [1] a value off the axis, Identify [1] a labelled point or year, or work out a proportion (e.g. the share of leisure that is non-screen). Always quote the units and check which bar or row you are reading.
Read the key first. Each bar splits one group's leisure into screen-based (lower block) and active (upper block).
Interactive diagram
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| Group | Screen-based leisure | Active / outdoor leisure | Total leisure |
|---|---|---|---|
| 15-24, lower income | 3.0 | 1.5 | 4.5 |
| 15-24, higher income | 2.0 | 2.5 | 4.5 |
| 25-44, lower income | 2.5 | 0.5 | 3.0 |
| 25-44, higher income | 1.5 | 1.5 | 3.0 |
| 65+, lower income | 4.5 | 1.0 | 5.5 |
| 65+, higher income | 3.0 | 2.5 | 5.5 |
Using the graph: (a) estimate the total leisure time per day of the 65+ higher-income group; (b) identify which 15-24 income band spends more of its leisure on active pursuits.
Model answer plan
See the mark-by-mark plan — for / against / judgement, with marking guidance — in study mode.
A proportion = the part over the whole: To find a share (e.g. the % of leisure spent on active pursuits), read the part and the total off the same row, then divide: active / total x 100. Keep both figures in the same units.
Using the table above for the 15-24 lower-income group: (a) state the total leisure time per day; (b) estimate the share of that leisure spent on active or outdoor pursuits; (c) state which 65+ income band spends more time on active leisure.
Model answer plan
See the mark-by-mark plan — for / against / judgement, with marking guidance — in study mode.
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Participation is shaped by a bundle of factors, not just age and education. The exam reward is naming a factor AND developing how it raises or lowers participation — the mechanism, with a real example where you can.
| Factor | Raises participation when... | Lowers participation when... |
|---|---|---|
| Affluence / income | high disposable income buys time, kit, club fees | low income means cost is a barrier |
| Lifecycle stage | students and retirees have most free time | working parents are time-squeezed |
| Gender | equal rights and role models open access | cultural norms exclude women |
| Health / disability | good health + accessible facilities enable it | ill-health or no disabled access blocks it |
| Culture / tradition | a sport is socially valued and popular | an activity is frowned on or unfamiliar |
| Place of residence | cities have stadiums, pools and clubs nearby | remote / poor areas lack facilities |
Why human development lifts participation
- More wealth — disposable income pays for equipment, travel and club membership.
- More leisure time — shorter legal working hours and pensions free up time to take part.
- Better health + facilities — public pools, parks and stadiums make activity easy to reach.
- Changing attitudes — gender-equality laws and disability access widen who can take part.
Real participation drivers: London 2012 Olympics ran a legacy programme to lift grassroots sport participation across the UK — new and upgraded facilities and school schemes.
Title IX (USA, 1972) required equal funding for women's sport, and female participation in school and college sport rose sharply in the decades that followed.
Norway funds a low-cost sport-for-all model — cheap local clubs and floodlit pitches — giving it some of the world's highest participation rates.
Explain three factors, other than education and age, that influence how much people take part in sport.
Model answer plan
See the mark-by-mark plan — for / against / judgement, with marking guidance — in study mode.
Always give the mechanism: Don't just name a factor - explain how it changes participation. Low income -> cannot afford fees and kit -> takes part less. A named example (Title IX, London 2012, Norway) earns the top of the mark.
How this is tested - the [10] essay: Paper 1 Option E ends with a 10-mark Examine / To-what-extent essay, marked on markbands. The recurring versions all weigh economic factors (affluence, human development, wealth) against social and cultural factors (gender, lifecycle, culture, government, place) in shaping participation.
Top band needs: accurate terms, named examples, a two-sided argument (economic AND non-economic), a weighing of relative importance, and a justified conclusion.
To what extent does a country's level of economic development, rather than social and cultural factors, decide how its people take part in leisure and sport?
Model answer plan
See the mark-by-mark plan — for / against / judgement, with marking guidance — in study mode.
Markband marks: (1) Argue both sides - economic AND social/cultural (one-sided answers cap mid-band).
(2) Anchor each side to a named example (Norway, Title IX, London 2012, India).
(3) End on an explicit judgement that answers 'to what extent' - e.g. development matters most between countries, culture within them.