Coaches' experiences of formal coach education: a critical sociological investigation
journal contribution
posted on 2023-10-18, 07:37 authored by David Piggott<p>According to recent academic reviews, formal coach education courses are rarely considered important or useful events in a broader coach learning process. At present, there is insufficient research to define the nature and extent of this problem which is likely to become more important under the prevailing governing rationalities of modernisation and professional accreditation. The purpose of this paper, therefore, was to explore coaches' experiences of formal coach education to determine the extent to which they are considered useless and to describe their nature. Neo-Foucauldian concepts, specifically 'governmentality' and 'power/knowledge', were drawn on to interpret data from semi-structured interviews with 12 coaches from a range of sports. The findings suggest that, where courses were governed by prescriptive and rigid rationalities, coaches found them useless; whereas, open and discursive courses, though in the minority, were considered more useful. © 2012 Copyright Taylor and Francis Group, LLC.</p>
History
School affiliated with
- School of Sport and Exercise Science (Research Outputs)
Publication Title
Sport, Education and SocietyVolume
17Issue
4Pages/Article Number
535-554Publisher
Taylor & Francis / RoutledgeExternal DOI
ISSN
1357-3322eISSN
1470-1243Date Submitted
2013-07-22Date Accepted
2013-07-22Date of First Publication
2013-07-22Date of Final Publication
2013-07-22ePrints ID
10994Usage metrics
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