TY - JOUR
T1 - Coaching practice as discovering performance
T2 - the wild contingencies of coaching
AU - Corsby, Charles L.T.
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© 2023 The Author(s). Published by Informa UK Limited, trading as Taylor & Francis Group.
PY - 2023/11/2
Y1 - 2023/11/2
N2 - While an enduring concern within coaching research has been to duly appreciate the importance of context, the tendency has been to treat context merely as a resource for analysis, rather than as irredeemably tied to situated practices of members. It is from this latter ethnomethodological position this study respecifies discovery work in coaching as an ordinary organisational achievement of coaches. To detail the artful practices of coaches’ discovery work, the study draws upon a corpus of approximately 20-hours of audio-visual recordings of football training sessions and match-day footage, combined with first-person embodied accounts of coaching. The examples comprise creating joint attention, accelerations of established problems, improving discovery, and silence in discovery. In this sense, rather than treat coaching as an imposed system, discovery work remains an ordinarily structured yet locally emergent and on-going procedure that coaches use to collaboratively establish a shared perception of the athletes’ performance and development.
AB - While an enduring concern within coaching research has been to duly appreciate the importance of context, the tendency has been to treat context merely as a resource for analysis, rather than as irredeemably tied to situated practices of members. It is from this latter ethnomethodological position this study respecifies discovery work in coaching as an ordinary organisational achievement of coaches. To detail the artful practices of coaches’ discovery work, the study draws upon a corpus of approximately 20-hours of audio-visual recordings of football training sessions and match-day footage, combined with first-person embodied accounts of coaching. The examples comprise creating joint attention, accelerations of established problems, improving discovery, and silence in discovery. In this sense, rather than treat coaching as an imposed system, discovery work remains an ordinarily structured yet locally emergent and on-going procedure that coaches use to collaboratively establish a shared perception of the athletes’ performance and development.
KW - Coaching
KW - discovery
KW - discovery practices
KW - ethnomethodology
KW - instruction
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=85179742521&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1080/21640629.2023.2275394
DO - 10.1080/21640629.2023.2275394
M3 - Article
AN - SCOPUS:85179742521
SN - 2164-0629
VL - 13
SP - 37
EP - 59
JO - Sports Coaching Review
JF - Sports Coaching Review
IS - 1
ER -