ABSTRACT

The facilitation of learning is a central feature of coaches’ and coach educators’ work. Coaching students and practitioners are, as a result, being expected to give increasing levels of thought towards how they might help to develop the knowledge and practical skills of others. Learning in Sports Coaching provides a comprehensive introduction to a diverse range of classic, critical, and contemporary theories of learning, education, and social interaction and their potential application to sports coaching. Each chapter is broadly divided into two sections. The first section introduces a key thinker and the fundamental tenets of his or her scholarly endeavours and theorising. The second considers how the theorist’s work might influence how we understand and attempt to promote learning in coaching and coach education settings. By design this book seeks to promote theoretical connoisseurship and to encourage its readers to reflect critically on their beliefs about learning and its facilitation. This is an essential text for any pedagogical course taken as part of a degree programme in sports coaching or coach education.

chapter |5 pages

Introduction

Towards a theoretical connoisseurship of learning in sports coaching

part Section 1|27 pages

Behaviourist and social cognitivist theorists

chapter 2|13 pages

Burrhus Frederic Skinner

Environmental reinforcement in coaching

chapter 3|12 pages

Albert Bandura

Observational learning in coaching

part Section 2|25 pages

Experiential theorists

chapter 4|12 pages

John Dewey

Experience, inquiry, democracy, and community in coaching

chapter 5|11 pages

Donald Schön

Learning, reflection, and coaching practice

part Section 3|26 pages

Humanist theorists

chapter 6|12 pages

Abraham Maslow

Hierarchy of coach and athlete needs

chapter 7|12 pages

Carl Rogers

Person-centred learning in coaching

part Section 4|47 pages

Constructivist theorists

chapter 8|12 pages

Jean Piaget

Learning and the stages of athlete development

chapter 9|12 pages

Lev Vygotsky

Learning through social interaction in coaching

chapter 11|11 pages

Ivor Goodson

Narrative coach learning and pedagogy

part Section 5|39 pages

Critical and post-structural theorists

chapter 12|13 pages

Paulo Freire

Problem-posing coach education

chapter 13|11 pages

Jack Mezirow

Transformative coach and athlete learning

chapter 14|13 pages

Robin Usher

A post-structuralist reading of learning in coaching

part Section 6|63 pages

Social and ethical theorists

chapter 15|12 pages

Herbert Blumer

Coaching and learning as symbolic interaction

chapter 16|13 pages

Jean Lave

Learning in coaching as social praxis

chapter 17|13 pages

Peter Jarvis

Lifelong coach learning

chapter 18|12 pages

Nel Noddings

Caring, moral learning and coaching

chapter 19|11 pages

Conclusion

Recognizing the dimensions and tensions of learning in coaching