SPCO201-15S2 (D) Semester Two 2015 (Distance)

Athlete-Centred Coaching

15 points

Details:
Start Date: Monday, 13 July 2015
End Date: Sunday, 15 November 2015
Withdrawal Dates
Last Day to withdraw from this course:
  • Without financial penalty (full fee refund): Sunday, 26 July 2015
  • Without academic penalty (including no fee refund): Sunday, 11 October 2015

Description

This course will explore alternative perspectives within sport coaching and as part of an evolving coaching philosophy students will conceptualise and evaluate the concept of athlete-centred coaching. Students will explore functionalist, humanist and critical perspectives of sport coaching and evaluate these in relation to the coach-athlete power relationship. Understanding is enhanced through micro-coaching sessions that further explore and evaluate these concepts.

This course engages students with cutting edge research in the development of exciting and effective innovations in coaching that are athlete-centred, inquiry-based and growing in popularity across the globe. Students will gain a working knowledge of the philosophical assumptions, contemporary learning theory and pedagogical developments underpinning this coaching approach. Theory and practice is linked in the learning process by having students critically reflect upon their own experiences as coaches and learners, engage in dialogue as active learners and reading the relevant literature.

Want to take your coaching to another level and enjoy a challenge? Athlete-centred coaching is one of the most exciting and innovative developments over the past decade aimed at developing high quality coaching, at any level of coaching. It is now gaining recognition as an effective alternative approach with researchers in the School of Sport and Physical Education deeply involved in its development. This paper draws on cutting edge research in this area to inform learning but locates it in practice through active learning, critical reflection and dialogue to develop knowledge-in-action.

Learning Outcomes

At the end of this paper students will be able to:
  * Articulate sound comprehension of what athlete-centred coaching is, its aims, and the principles underpinning it, and compare and contrast it with other approaches.
  * Authentically implement the athlete-centred approach and evaluate it by comparing to other approaches through critical reflection on experiences as coach and learner informed by the relevant literature.
  * Articulate and discuss the importance of, and challenges involved with, questioning in athlete-centred approaches and compare this to the way feedback is used in other approaches or models.
  * Identify and discuss the learning theory and assumptions about human learning that underpin athlete-centred approaches to coaching and compare to motor learning theory and other theory that more traditional approaches draw on.
  * Plan and implement a series of activities and/or practice games in a particular sport that increase in complexity and skill demand by building upon developing knowledge and ability and which demonstrates an ability to analyse and adjust coaching to performance and learning.

Prerequisites

Course Coordinator / Lecturer

Glenn Fyall

Lecturer

Richard Light

Assessment

Assessment Due Date Percentage 
Comparing Personal Experiences of Being Coached with Athlete-Centred Coaching 24 Jul 2015 10%
Athlete-Centred Coaching (ACC) from the Athlete's Perspective 11 Sep 2015 40%
Athlete-Centred Coaching from teh Coach's Perspective 30 Oct 2015 50%

Textbooks / Resources

Required Texts

Light, Richard; Game sense : pedagogy for performance, participation and enjoyment ; Routledge, 2013.

Recommended Reading

Jones, Robyn L. , Armour, Kathleen M., Potrac, Paul; Sports coaching cultures : from practice to theory ; Routledge, 2004.

Jones, Robyn L. , Hughes, M., Kingston, Kieran; An introduction to sports coaching : from science and theory to practice ; Routledge, 2008.

Light, Richard , Ebooks Corporation; Advances in rugby coaching : an holistic approach ;

Recommended Journal articles

Cassidy, T. (2010). Coaching insights: Holism in sports coaching: Beyond humanistic psychology. International Journal of Sports Science and Coaching, 5(4), 439-443.

Evans, John, R. (2014). The nature and importance of coach–player relationships in the uptake of Game Sense by elite rugby coaches in Australia and New Zealand. In Richard L Light, John Quay, Stephen Harvey & Amanda Mooney (Eds), Contemporary developments in games teaching, London & New York: Routledge, pp. 133-146.

Light, R. L. (2014) Learner-centred pedagogy for swim coaching: A complex learning theory informed approach. Asia-Pacific Journal of Health, Sport and Physical Education, 5(2), 167-180. DOI:10.1080/18377122.2014.906056.

Light, R. L. & Kentel, J. A. (2013). Mushin:  Learning in technique-intensive sport as uniting mind and body through complex learning theory. Physical Education and Sport Pedagogy. DOI:10.1080/17408989.2013.868873

Light, R. L., & Evans, R. J. (2010). The impact of Game Sense pedagogy on Australian rugby coaches' practice: a question of pedagogy. Physical Education and Sport Pedagogy, 15(2), 103-115.

Mouchet, Alain (2014). Subjectivity as a resource for improving players’ decision making in team sport. In  Richard L Light, John Quay, Stephen Harvey & Amandsa Mooney (Eds), Contemporary developments in games teaching, London & New York: Routledge, pp. 149-166.

Roberts, S. J. (2011). Teaching Games for Understanding: The difficulties and challenges experienced by participation cricket coaches. Physical Education and Sport Pedagogy, 16(1), 33-48.


The required text for this course is available at the University Book Shop. The recommended texts are available through the UC libraries with required readings to be made available through the online Learn (Moodle) site but students are encouraged to read beyond this reading list.

Additional Course Outline Information

Academic integrity

All forms of cheating and dishonest practice are taken seriously and penalties will result. Students should refer to General Course and Examination Regulation J: Dishonest Practice and Breach of Instructions in the University of Canterbury Calendar and the Assessment Guidelines for Students: Assessment, Referencing and Written Assignment Preparation for Physical Education and BSpC Courses 2013 in the BSpC coursebook.

Assessment and grading system

Grading Scale
Grade    GPA Value        Marks

A+              9            90 – 100
A                8            85 – 89.99
A-               7            80 – 84.99
B+              6            75 – 79.99
B                5            70 – 74.99
B-               4            65 – 69.99
C+              3            60 – 64.99
C                2            55 – 59.99
C-               1            50 – 54.99
D                0            40 – 49.99
E               -1             0 – 39.99

Attendance

We strongly advise that you participate in all the course learning activities provided on Learn. We also suggest that you communicate with the course lecturer on a regular basis as required to ensure that you are able to demonstrate an understanding of all the learning outcomes. Insufficient participation in the course may jeopardise your ability to pass the course.

Evaluation

Students will be asked to complete course and teacher evaluations, using the Centre for Evaluation and Monitoring surveys.  Survey responses are conducted electronically and are confidential. The Faculty of Education will conduct regular graduate surveys.

Grade moderation

All course assessments in the Bachelor of Sport Coaching are internally moderated.  A sample of your work may be used as part of this moderation process. Regular examiners meetings monitor the distribution of final grades in courses and adjustments are made if necessary to ensure reasonable consistency and comparability of course grades.

Late submission of work

An assessment is late if it is handed in after the due date, without a formal extension.  If an assessment is submitted after the due date, 5% will be deducted from the final grade for every day the assessment is late.  No assessments will be accepted after a period of 3 days after the due date, unless an extension has been granted.

Notes

Students should refer to the BSpC coursebook: Assessment Guidelines for Students: Assessment, Referencing and Written Assignment Preparation for Physical Education and BSpC for further information on course assessment. Also, further information can be found in the UC calendar. The UC calendar is available online at: http://www.canterbury.ac.nz/publications/calendar.shtml.

Other specific requirements

All written assessment tasks and presentations must be referenced according to APA convention. (Information relating to APA referencing can be obtained from both the Central and Education Libraries.)  Notes on APA referencing can also be found in the BSpC course handbook. Each assessment submission requires a completed cover sheet (available on-line).

Requests for extensions

Students who cannot complete assessments by the due date should discuss their situation with the course lecturer and complete the appropriate extension form. Where circumstances are known in advance, the student should discuss these with the course lecturer at least one week days prior to the assessment due date. In circumstances where this is not appropriate, the student should discuss their situation with the course lecturer as soon as possible.

Resubmissions

To pass this course you are required to gain an overall average grade of C- (50%) or better across all assessments. No resubmits are available for this course. This assessment procedure applies from 2015 onwards.

Aegrotat Considerations

Students should refer to General Course and Examination Regulation H: Aegrotat Consideration and Aegrotat Consideration: Procedures in the UC Policy Library.

Partial Exemption from Assessment

If you are wishing to apply for partial exemption from assessment in a course (e.g. if you are repeating a course and you have have previously passed one or more assessments from within the course, and do not wish to write this assessment again) you may apply for this using the form: Application for Partial Exemption from Assessment

Where to submit and collect work

Hard Copy Submission for ON Campus Students
On campus students assignments are to be submitted with a cover sheet to the School of Sport & Physical Education office, (behind the Rec Centre) by 5.00pm, or time directed by course lecturer, on or before the due date. Please use the drop box placed at the entrance to School office.

Marked assignments will be returned directly from the lecturer.  
Electronic Submission via LEARN (all on campus and distance students)

All students must submit their assessment via the online assessment system in the Learn (Moodle) class site, on or before the due date.  All submitted assessment work will be screened by the software Turnitin, to check for plagiarism.  There is opportunity for student to submit a draft report to monitor levels of plagiarism prior to the final submission for marking.

It is the responsibility of the students to check their Internet access and ability to submit their work via the online system.  Any technical difficulties should be notified well in advance of the due date so that assistance can be provided or alternative arrangements can be negotiated. If you require assistance, please email ictservicedesk@canterbury.ac.nz, or phone 366 7001 ext 6060.

Indicative Fees

Domestic fee $697.00

International fee $2,913.00

* All fees are inclusive of NZ GST or any equivalent overseas tax, and do not include any programme level discount or additional course-related expenses.

For further information see School of Sport and Physical Education .

All SPCO201 Occurrences

  • SPCO201-15S2 (C) Semester Two 2015
  • SPCO201-15S2 (D) Semester Two 2015 (Distance)