Title: PSYCHOLOGY OF SPORT
1PSYCHOLOGY OF SPORT EXERCISE
- Sport the Individual
- MOTIVATION IN SPORT
2What we already know
- Remember this guy?
- B F Skinner
- Operant conditioning
- Motivation comes through reinforcement
- Positive (adding nice rewards)
- Negative (withholding nasty punishments)
- Positive is best
- BEHAVIOURISM
3Lepper Green (1975)
- Children in nursery spend time colouring with
felt pens - Very motivated
- Some children promised Good Player certificate
for playing with pens - 1 week later, these children spend less time
drawing! - Rewards can damage motivation?
4Different types of reward
- Edward Deci (1975)
- INTRINSIC vs EXTRINSIC motivations
- INTRINSIC behaviours which a person engages
in to feel competent and self-determining - SPONTANEOUS not provided by others persistent
5Deci et al. (1981)
- Participants all given an interesting task
- Half told to try and beat the others (competitive
condition) - Everyone allowed to win
- Later, given choice of activities
- Less motive to continue for competitive group
- Especially females!
6COGNITIVE EVALUATION THEORY
- Deci says behaviourism is not enough
- Must look at cognitions
- Depends on MEANING of reward
- Extrinsic rewards SOMETIMES reduce
self-determination - Im only doing this to impress the coach
- But sometimes add to it
- Hey! If he complimented me I must be doing
something right!
7SELF DETERMINATION THEORY (SDT) 1
- Edward Deci Richard Ryan, University of
Rochester, New York (2000) - Drawing together Cognitive Evaluation Theory and
later research - A new model of motivation
- Importance of encouraging INTRINSIC motivation
8SELF DETERMINATION THEORY (SDT) 2
- 3 psychological needs that affect INTRINSIC
MOTIVATION - COMPETENCE we need to feel we can succeed
- Improved by positive feedback and challenging
tasks - AUTONOMY we need to feel able to choose and be
in control - Improved by giving people freedom and
acknowledging their feelings - RELATEDNESS we need to care for others and be
cared for in return - Improved by being in a caring group
9SELF DETERMINATION THEORY (SDT) 3
- Importance of SELF-REGULATION how deeply do you
relate to the task you have to do? - Stages going from completely extrinsic to
completely intrinsic - EXTERNAL REGULATION
- You do it because youre made to or being paid to
and no other reason - Ive got to go to training or coach will kill
me!
10SELF DETERMINATION THEORY (SDT) 4
- INTROJECTED REGULATION
- You have some choice and the rewards are a bit
more internal - Ive got to go to training cos all my friends
will be there - IDENTIFIED REGULATION
- The task is personally important to you
- Ive got to go to training so I can have a shot
at being a regional finalist
11SELF DETERMINATION THEORY (SDT) 5
- INTEGRATED REGULATION
- The task is something you completely identify
with - Training for this years competition is really
important to me - INTRINSIC REGULATION
- This is completely intrinsic motivation with no
thought of reward or obligation - I just love my sport and wish I could be doing
it all the time - TECHNIQUE ? move players up the scale, making
their self-regulation less external, more internal
12Putting this into practice
- Ronald Smith Frank Smoll (1979) designed a
COACH EFFECTIVENESS TRAINING (CET) programme - Tested it on Little League Baseball teams
coaches - Out Winning is everything!
- In team-building, self-esteem
- CET group report more enthusiasm motivation
- Especially low self-esteem children!
13What would Freud say?
- Motivation boils down to sex!
- This PSYCHOSEXUAL energy is called LIBIDO
- It needs to be channelled
- DISPLACEMENT
- SUBLIMATION
- Other EGO DEFENCE MECHANISMS
14What would Freud say?
- Conflicts between ID and SUPER-EGO block libido
- Sabotage our own efforts
- Eg dread of success
- Secrets of motivation are in the unconscious
not the environment
15Dan Jansen
- American speed skater tipped for gold in 1988
Olympics - On day of competition, his sister died
- 10 seconds into 500m race, he fell
- Fell again in 1000m
- 4 years later, competed again fell again
- 1994 games lost balance in 500m
- BUT won 1000m
- Why the falls? Unconscious guilt?
- Winning betraying his feelings for his sister?
16What would Freud say?
- RORSCHACH TEST
- Unreliable, subjective
- PSYCHOANALYSIS
- Time-consuming, expensive
- Resolves unconscious conflicts
- Doesnt work for everyone
17Achievement Motivation 1
- David McClelland researched our NEED FOR
ACHIEVEMENT (N-Ach) - High N-Ach people are independent and seek out
challenges - They seek recognition
- Praised/rewarded in childhood
- Attribute success to skill, not luck
- Associate achievement with positive feelings
18Achievement Motivation 2
- Diagnosed nAch by getting Ps to complete a
THEMATIC APPERCEPTION TEST (TAT) - Projective test, 30 images
- Whats going on in the picture?
- Story you tell reveals a lot about you
- Very Freudian
19Achievement Motivation 3
- Tested range of ages, background (test takes
hours) - N-Ach rises with occupational level managers,
businessmen, professionals have highest scores - High n-Ach people prefer tasks with a 50 chance
of success - Prefer working alone or with other high n-Ach
- Demand regular feedback
20McClelland-Atkinson Model (1953)
- John William Atkinson developed the idea of n-Ach
- Personality trait ACHIEVEMENT MOTIVATION
- desire to succeed fear of failure
- High achiever ? desire to succeed greater than
fear of failure - Modified by situation
- Probability of success cognition
- Incentive for succeeding reinforcement
21McClelland-Atkinson Model - evaluate
- Diane Gill (1986) reviewed research on motivation
- Supports idea that HIGH ACHIEVERS prefer
difficult tasks, LOW ACHIEVERS prefer easy ones - BUT does not predict performance
- (high achievers not more likely to win)
22Fear of Success (FoS)
- What about gender differences?
- Matina Horner (1972) suggests 3rd motive besides
desire to succeed and fear of failure - FEAR OF SUCCESS
- Women have greater FoS?
- Influenced by gender stereotypes, cultural norms
- Other research suggests males just as affected by
FoS
23Sport-specific theories of motivation
- More emphasis on goals and intentions
- Diane Gill defines 3 types
- (1) COMPETITIVENESS the desire to succeed in
sport - (2) WIN ORIENTATION success means beating the
opposition - (3) GOAL ORIENTAION success means achieving
personal goals - Similar to intrinsic/extrinsic motivation?
24Sport Orientation
- Win-orientated people prefer weaker or stronger
opponents - Guaranteed win or no-blame defeat
- Goal-orientated people prefer realistic opponents
- Dont see losing as a setback
- Can this be measured?
25Sport Orientation Questionnaire
- Diane Gil Thomas Deeter (1988)
- 25 questions
- Assesses win vs goal orientation
- Overall competitiveness
- Men score high for win competitiveness
- Women score high for goal
- Athletes score higher than non-athletes on
everything - Athletes more concerned about performance than
winning compared to non-athletes
26Summing Up
- Traditional motivation carrot stick (OPERANT
CONDITIONING) - Need to focus more on INSTRINSIC motivations
(SDT, Deci Ryan) - Or possibly unconscious motives (Freud)
- More empirical approach ACHIEVEMENT MOTIVATION
(McClelland Atkinson) and TAT - Sport specific approach SPORTS ORIENTATION
(Gill) and SOQ (Gill Deeter)