An exploratory investigation of junior-elite football coaches´’ behaviours during video-based feedback sessions
Metadata
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Raya Castellano, Pablo Eduardo; Reeves, Matthew J.; Littlewood, Martin; McRobert, Allistair P.Editorial
Taylor &Francis
Materia
Coaching learning analysis
Date
2020-06-24Referencia bibliográfica
Raya-Castellano, P. E. (AC*), Reeves, M. J., Littlewood, M., & McRobert, A. P. (2020). An exploratory investigation of junior-elite football coaches' behaviours during video-based feedback sessions. International Journal of Performance Analysis in Sport,20(4), 729–746. https://doi.org/10.1080/24748668.2020.1782717
Abstract
Despite the growing qualitative research examining the complexities
underlying the delivery of video-feedback, no study has yet
explored coaches’ actual behaviours within this environment. Thus,
this study aimed to explore junior coaches´ behaviours and their
underlying rationales during team-based video-feedback. Twentytwo
in-season sessions delivered by four junior-elite coaches were
filmed and analysed. Following previous studies and advised by
a panel of experts, the tool employed was adapted from the Coach
Analysis and Intervention System and the Arizona State University
Observation Instrument, to represent the study context.
Subsequently, semi-structured stimulated recall interviews were
conducted to elucidate coaches´ thinking, understanding, and
rationalising of their behaviours. Data indicated a prescriptive
approach to coaching within the video-feedback environment.
Feedback was the most employed behaviour of all coaches, followed
by silence, player participation, convergent, and divergent
questioning. One coach had player participation as their second
most utilised behaviour. Findings demonstrated varied levels of
understanding for each coach and evidenced three different types
of cognitive dissonance or epistemological gap between coaches´
behaviours and understanding. Therefore, future coach development
programmes, specific to video-based feedback, would need
to consider each individual coach baseline behaviour and cognitions
before intervening.