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Coaching Science: Oceania. Cliff Mallett PhD. 12th World Congress of Sport Psychology, Marrakesh, Morocco - 2009. Coaching Science: Oceania. Coaching Science: Oceania. Coaching Science: Oceania. Introduction Lack of critical mass Isolated ‘pockets’ of research in coaching
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Coaching Science: Oceania Cliff Mallett PhD 12th World Congress of Sport Psychology, Marrakesh, Morocco - 2009
Coaching Science: Oceania • Introduction • Lack of critical mass • Isolated ‘pockets’ of research in coaching • UQ plus UWA, Deakin (Aust) + Otago (NZ) • Australian government review supports coaching in principle • UQ/ASC postgraduate sports coaching programs providing a base for an emerging critical mass • NZ - prevailing view is coaching science = biological science therefore little coaching science (Gilbert & Trudel, 2004).
Coaching Science: Oceania • Introduction • Reviewed 29 peer-reviewed articles + 13 theses published between 2004 & 2009 on coaching science: • Key areas of research: • sport psychology • motivation (SDT), autonomy-supportive coaching (SDT), mental toughness; sport & business • sport pedagogy • high performance coach development, game sense
Coaching Science: Oceania • Introduction • Key publication outlets (29 articles 2004-2009): • International Journal of Sport Science & Coaching (12) • International Journal of Coaching Science (4) • The Sport Psychologist (4) • Physical Education and Sport Pedagogy (2) • Coaching: An International Journal of Theory, Research, & Practice (2) • Journal of Sports Sciences (1) • Journal of Applied Sport Psychology (1) • Sport, Education, and Society (1) • Journal of Physical Education (NZ) (1) • Australian Psychologist (1)
Coaching Science: Oceania • Major Themes • Much of the research in Oceania has shifted from what coaches need to know (content) and what they do (behaviour) to how coaches develop their craft (learning), especially how HP coaches learn in a highly contested environment. • Moreover, research has shifted to the how and why of coaching practice rather than the what. • NZ - coaching as a pedagogical process (coach learning)
Coaching Science: Oceania • Dominant Approaches to Research • Mostly interpretivist approach to examining coaching and the coaching process • qualitative in nature (e.g., semi-structured interviews; action research) • Lack of positivist research due to lack of appropriate measures (e.g., coach motivation; motivational climate using SDT)
Coaching Science: Oceania • Dominant Theoretical Frameworks • Self-determination theory (SDT; Deci & Ryan, 1985) • Autonomy-supportive coaching (Mageau & Vallerand, 2003) • Ahlberg et al., 2008; Byrne et al., 2009 • Coach Motivation Scale (CMS; McLean & Mallett) • Workplace learning (Billett, 2006; Mallett, Rynne et al.) • Social-cognitive learning theories that examine the interdependency between agency and structure • Coach development (life histories); (Mallett, Rynne et al.)
Coaching Science: Oceania • Collaborations • We are keen to collaborate with international institutions! • Within Oceania is limited • Minor collaborations: • Gilbert (UC-Fresno) & Côté (Queen’s) - life histories • Cassidy (Otago) coaches’ learning • Future collaborations: • Bochum (Germany) - coaches’ learning, MT
Coaching Science: Oceania • Research Funding • Australia: • Competitive Grants • Federal Government (ARC - Linkage) • 3 projects funded in the past 3 years • Industry • National & State Institutes (AIS & QAS) • Individual sports (AFL; FFA showing interest) • New Zealand: • SESNZ/Sport Academies ONLY source • ONLY swim, aths, row, cycling, yachting, triathlon
Coaching Science: Oceania • Coach Education/Accreditation • In NZ, SPARC developed the Coach Development Framework in 2006, which gave autonomy to individual sports to govern themselves including coach education/accreditation • In Australia, the ASC (Coaching & Officiating) provides support & guidance to NSO similar to NZ. • Potential links with coach accreditation and education with postgraduate programs in sports coaching (UQ/ASC)
Coaching Science: Oceania • Key Issues • NZ: • Geographical isolation, limited funds, & lack of critical mass of coaching science scholars limits output • Australia: • Research agendas driven by individual scholars and institutions - need for a more strategic approach to coaching science
Coaching Science: Oceania • Future Directions • Interested in international collaborations in coaching science research • X-cultural research on coaching • Faculty exchange &/or visiting academics to UQ • Greater links with sports industry - professional and Olympic sports - some Unis are linked with AFL clubs
Coaching Science: Oceania • Conclusions • vvvv