Ashley Allanson - Everyday Realities of Coach Education
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Transcript Ashley Allanson - Everyday Realities of Coach Education
Exploring the Everyday
Realities of Coach Education:
A Case Study of a FA Level 2
Coach Education Course
Mr Ashley Allanson
Dr Lee Nelson and Dr Paul Potrac
University of Hull
Department of Sport, Health & Exercise Science
Introduction
Coaches play an important role in maximising athletic learning,
development and experience.
(Cassidy et al., 2004)
Increasing importance attached to coach education.
(Cassidy et al., 2006; Cushion et al., 2003)
Significant investment into and re-development of the FA coach
education programme.
(Football Development Department Discussion Document for Coaching 2008-2012)
Paucity of published research into FA coach education programmes.
(Chesterfield et al., 2010)
Coach Perceptions
Empirical coaching studies have provided a ‘snapshot’ of football coaches’
perceptions of coach education programmes.
Steve Harrison in
Jones et al. (2004)
Chesterfield et al.
(2010)
Hope Powell in
Jones et al. (2004)
Academic Critique
Gold standard: One size ‘fits all’.
(Abraham & Collins, 1998)
“Straightforward, bio-scientific, unproblematic process”.
(Cushion & Jones, 2006; Potrac et al., 2002, p. 188)
‘Clean’ and ‘rationalistic’ programmes that fail to consider the
HUMAN COMPLEXITY involved within coaching.
(Cassidy et al., 2004; Jones et al., 2004)
‘Knowledge-for-Action’ (Jones & Wallace, 2005)
Coaching scholars have offered a range of theoretically informed
alternative pedagogical approaches.
Communities of
Practice
Problem-based
(Jones & Turner, 2006)
(Culver & Trudel, 2006)
Issue-based
(Trudel & Gilbert, 2006)
‘Solutions’
Reflection
(Knowles et al., 2006)
Mentoring
(Cushion, 2006)
‘Knowledge-for-Understanding’ (Jones & Wallace, 2005)
“Offer a more secure foundation on which knowledge-for
action projects could build to yield more realistic practical
guidance and, ultimately, greater sporting success”
(Jones & Wallace, 2005, p. 123)
Social Complexity Surrounding Coaching
Messy Realities of a Level 2 Course?
The Coach Educators’ Perspective (?)
IMPACT
What do they do?
How do they do it?
Why do they do the things in
the way that they do?
How do they experience their
role?
The Coach Learners’ Perspective (?)
IMPACT
IMPACT
How do they experience
the content, delivery and
assessment?
Why do they respond in
the ways that they do?
Academy Coach
How does it impact upon
their understanding
practice?
Community Coach
Summary
Increased recognition towards the importance of coach education.
Criticisms of coach education have driven ‘knowledge-for-action’.
Need for ‘knowledge-for-understanding’ of coach education:
- Describe the contextual realities of coach education courses.
- Consider how ‘life histories’ shape coach educators’ and coach
learners’ experiences, perceptions, engagement and practices.
Any Questions???
References
Abrahams, A., & Collins, D. (1998). Examining and extending research in coach development. Quest, 50, 59-79.
Cassidy, T., Jones, R., & Potrac, P. (2004). Understanding Sports Coaching: The Social, Cultural and
Pedagogical Foundations of Coaching Practice. New York, NY: Routledge.
Cassidy, T., Potrac, P., & McKenzie, A. (2006). Evaluating and reflecting upon a coach education initiative: The
CoDe of rugby. The Sport Psychologist, 20, 145-161.
Chesterfield, G., Potrac, P., & Jones, R. (2010). Studentship and impression management in an advanced soccer
coach education award. Sport, Education and Society, 15 (3), 299-314.
Culver, D., & Trudel, P. (2006). Cultivating coaches’ communities of practice: Developing the potential for
learning through interactions. In R.L. Jones (Ed.), The Sports Coach as Educator: Re-Conceptualising Sports
Coaching (p. 97-112). London, UK: Routledge.
Cushion (2006). Mentoring. In R.L. Jones (Ed.), The Sports Coach as Educator: Re-conceptualising Sports
Coaching (p. 113-127). New York, NY: Routledge.
Cushion, C., Armour, K., & Jones, R. (2003). Coach education and continuing professional development:
Experience and learning to coach. Quest, 55, 215-230.
Cushion, C., & Jones, R.L. (2006). Power, Discourse, and Symbolic Violence in Professional Youth Soccer: The
Case of Albion Football Club. Sociology of Sport Journal, 23, 142-161.
References
Demers, G., Woodburn, A.J., & Savard, C. (2006). The development of an undergraduate competency-based
coach education program. The Sport Psychologist, 20, 162-173.
Jones, R.L., Armour, K.M., & Potrac, P. (2004). Sports Coaching Cultures: From Practice to Theory. London,
UK: Routledge.
Jones, R.L., & Turner, P. (2006). Teaching coaches to coach holistically: The case for a problem-based learning
(PBL) approach. Physical Education and Sport Pedagogy, 11(2), 181-202.
Jones, R.L., & Wallace, M. (2005). Another bad day at the training ground: Coping with ambiguity in the
coaching context. Sport, Education and Society, 10 (1), 119-134.
Knowles, Z., Tyler, G., Gilbourne, D., & Eubank, M. (2006). Reflecting on reflection: Exploring the practice of
sports coaching graduates. Reflective Practice, 7 (2), 163-179.
Potrac, P., Jones, R., & Armour, K.M. (2002). It’s all about getting respect: the coaching behaviours of an expert
English soccer coach. Sport, Education, and Society, 7 (2), 183-202.
TheFA.com (2011). Developing World-Class Coaches and Players: Football Development Discussion Document
for Coaching 2008-2012. Retrieved June 5th, 2011, from
http://www.thefa.com/~/media/10BDB69F3D8543BEB4EFEB969055809F.ashx
Trudel, P., & Gilbert, W.D. (2006). Coaching and Coach Education. In D. Kirk, M. O’Sullivan & D. McDonald
(Eds.), Handbook of Physical Education, (p. 516-539) Sage, London.