Title: Dr' Siobhain McArdle
1- Dr. Siobhain McArdle
- Understanding the Psychological Needs of Children
- December 3rd 2005
2Estimated Number of Participants in Underage
Senior Gaelic Games (2004)
140000
Hurling 78,945 U 29,490 S
120000
100000
80000
of Players
Football 130,950 U 57,360 S
60000
40000
20000
0
Underage
Senior
3Senior Players Represent 59 of Under-Age
Players41 Attrition
Senior Players
Attrition
4Why do Children Participate in Sport??
- Learn new skills
- Fun
- Affiliation
- Competitive challenge/success
5Why do Children Drop-Out of Sport
- Failure to learn new skills
- Lack of fun
- Lack of affiliation
- No challenge/failure
6The Underlying Psychological Motive for
Participation or Withdrawal
- Children who participate and persist in sport
differ from those who drop out or who do not
participate in sport in their level of
PERCEIVED COMPETENCE
7Building the Foundation
- Enjoyment
- Satisfaction
- Self Esteem
- Confidence
- Persistence
- Expectations of Success
- Physical Activity Levels
Perceptions of Competence
8Presentation Overview
- Developing perceptions of competence
- If sport participation peaks between the age of
10 13, how can we as concerned adults develop
perceptions of competence in - A) very young children (under 6)
- B) children aged 7 to 12
9How do very young children (under 6) form their
perceptions of competence in sport?
- What information do they use to determine whether
or not they are good or not so good at a
particular sport or sport skill?
10Early Childhood under 6
- Think they are good at something if they can
successfully complete the task - Overestimate their ability
- Place a lot of emphasis on the effect of their
task performance - Think they are good at something if their
parents, teachers or coaches tell them so
11What We Know..
- Parents coachs beliefs, expectations and
behaviours have an influence on the development
of childrens own belief about their ability
their future expectations of success
12The Role of Parents in Developing Childrens
Perceptions of Competence
Fredericks Eccles, 2002
13The Role of Parents in Developing Childrens
Perceptions of Competence
12
10
8
Academic
Child
6
Competence
Parents
4
2
0
Group A
Group B
(Phillips, 1987)
14Recommendations for Developing Perceptions of
Competence in Children Under 6
- Provide children with many opportunities to feel
they have successfully completed or done
something - All young children need to get positive feedback
from significant adults for their performance
accomplishments
15Recommendations for Developing Perceptions of
Competence in Children Under 6
- Avoid giving feedback that compares one child to
another - If possible highlight the childs task
accomplishment with sensory feedback
16Punt Kick (U-6)
Cone knock with punt kick. Two players active,
one to fix cones THE BUILDER! Rotate
regularly. Begin with standing punt kick. Head
down, toe down, foot pointing to
ground. Practice off both feet. Progress where
player must start at cone Y and walk/slow run to
cone X and then punt kick.
X
Y
With the permission of the GPO of Clontarf GAA
Club
17What We Know
- By 5/6 years children hold sport-based
perceptions about their ability, enjoyment and
usefulness of sport that carry over time
18How do children (ages 7 to 12) form their
perceptions of competence in sport?
- What information do they use to determine whether
or not they are good or not so good at a
particular sport or sport skill?
19Childhood Years (7-12)
- Importance of feedback from parents declines and
importance of feedback from otherscoaches and
peers increases - Feedback is no longer taken at face value
20Childhood Years (7-12)
- Use of peer comparison to judge competence
increases steadily in importance from approx. 6/7
yrs. of age - Accuracy at judging ability improves typically
around 9/10yrs of age - Depending on cognitive maturity level by 11/12
children will make judgements about their ability
success in sport in one of three ways.
213 Different Ways of Perceiving Ability Judging
Success
- Outcome
- being the best
- Use of comparison
- Improvement
- skill mastery
- Increased understanding
- Increased fitness
- Both Outcome Improvement
22Why Place More Emphasis on Mastery of the Game
vs. Winning the Game???
- You are teaching them the skill of setting goals
and the belief that ability can be improved
through effort and persistence - By teaching a child to learn that success is
self-improvement as well as winning, odds are
they will have greater opportunity to experience
success
23Recommendations for Developing Perceptions of
Competence in Children 7-12
- The challenge is to create a learning laboratory
where every child regardless of maturational
level motor skill proficiency is given the
opportunity to develop their perceptions of
competence in gaelic games
24Recommendations for Developing Perceptions of
Competence in Children 7-12
- From a long-term perspective it is more important
for children at this age to learn fundamental
motor skills (throwing, catching kicking) than
it is to win - Objective should be to improve every player
25The Role of Coaches in Developing Childrens
Perceptions of Competence
- What research tells us
- Coaches for the most part are unaware of their
behaviour - Coaches, unconsciously tend to interact with low
expectation players differently to high
expectation players
26The Role of Coaches in Developing Childrens
Perceptions of Competence
- What research tells us
- Coaches tend to give low-expectation athletes
poorer quality feedback are less persistent in
teaching them difficult skills - Given less playing time
- Coaches tend to give high-expectation athletes
more instructional feedback are more persistent
in teaching them difficult skills - Given more playing time
27The Role of Coaches in Developing Childrens
Perceptions of Competence
- Low-expectation players exhibit lower levels of
self-confidence and perceived competence over
time - Low-expectation players exhibit poorer
performances because they receive less effective
reinforcement and generally get less playing time - Low-expectation players think they have little
ability. This supports their belief that they
have little chance of future success
28The Role of Coaches in Developing Childrens
Perceptions of Competence
Rosenthal Jacobson (1968)
29Recommendations for Developing Perceptions of
Competence in Children 7-12
- Provide frequent, informational instructions
feedback TO ALL PLAYERS - Good coaching communication skills critical for
players skill development - Avoid information overload
- 1 or 2 pieces of critical information in your
instructions - Use demonstration
30Recommendations for Developing Perceptions of
Competence in Children 7-12
- Phrase instructions using the positivewhat the
child should be doing versus what the child
should avoid doing
31Recommendations for Developing Perceptions of
Competence in Children 7-12
- Provide opportunities for the child to concretely
register that he or she is improving or learning - Set goals for the players skill improvement
- Easier to do if you define practice in terms of
time or number of attempts - Incorporate goals in skill progression
- At approx 11/12 yrs of age more emphasis can be
- placed on understanding of the game.
- Understanding can come in milliseconds
32Recommendations for Developing Perceptions of
Competence in Children 7-12
- Provide children with feedback that is based on
their performance. - Coaches who give praise that is empty risk
losing credibility as information-givers. They
are also potentially decreasing the childs
perceptions of competence
33Recommendations for Developing Perceptions of
Competence in Children 7-12
- To develop perceptions of competence based on
self-improvement important to provide each child
with optimally challenging skill activities - Conditioned Games Training
- of players involved in the game
- Size of pitch
- Modified equipment
- Differential scoring
- Playing time
34Recommendations for Developing Perceptions of
Competence in Children 7-12
- In training small sided games of short duration
recommended - A good learning situation is one that encourages
maximum individual participation - Small sided games increase the odds that the
number of touches for each player increases
35Recommendations for Developing Perceptions of
Competence inChildren 7-12
- Limit playing time of a mini training game
- By time
- By score
- A number of short games gives every player a
chance to be reborn-learn from mistakes try
again
36Recommendations for Developing Perceptions of
Competence inChildren 7-12
- Impose conditions within the game
- Maximises the development enjoyment of all
players - Examples,
- Each player rotates into goals after every minute
- Two players designated only these 2 players can
take a shot on goal rotated - Modified scoring 3 passes 1 pt
- Everybody gets a pass before a shot on goal
- Two players designated and these two players must
touch the ball before a shot is taken on goal
37The Difference Between Playing Engaged in
the Play
Skill Progression
Setting Goals
Instructions/ Feedback
Conditioned Games
PERCEIVED COMPETENCE
38Conclusion
- Early continuing success is a critical element
in the learning process is linked to the
enjoyment of sport - Providing players with opportunities to see
concrete evidence of their improvement increases
perceptions of ability success - Coaches should place greater emphasis on skill
technique, knowledge of the game than on winning
or being the best on the team
39Conclusion
- Long-term objective should always be to improve
every player versus the short-term goal of
winning the next match - Difficult choice but at the heart of a sound
philosophy of sport education - Winning isnt everything, nor is it the only
thing(Smoll Smith, 2002)
40The most powerful drive in the ascent of man is
his pleasure in his own skill. He loves to do
what he does well and, having done it well he
loves to do it better (Jacob Bronowski)