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Effective Goal Setting: Strategies for Athletes and Coaches

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'Once I lock, practice going right, left 20x ea pr for next two weeks' ... 7. Lack of commitment to the process over time (lose steam) ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Effective Goal Setting: Strategies for Athletes and Coaches


1
(Effective) Goal SettingStrategies for
Athletes and Coaches
  • Association for Applied Sport Psychology EXPO
  • Salt Lake City, UT
  • September 2006

Kirsten Peterson, Ph.D. Senior Sport
Psychologist U.S. Olympic Committee
2
Introduction
  • Why Goal Setting?
  • Key Definitions
  • Elements of (Effective) Goal Setting
  • Obstacles and Strategies for Implementing a GS
    Program that Works

3
Why Use (Effective) Goal Setting?
  • Directs and changes behavior
  • Increases individual control
  • Provides means to motivate and evaluate progress
    in absence of competition
  • Great life skill as well as sport performance
    enhancement skill

4
Goal Terminology
  • Outcome versus Performance versus Process Goals
  • Long-term versus Short Term Goals
  • Are SMART

5
Making SMART Goals
  • S
  • S
  • M
  • A
  • R
  • T

6
Specific Goals
  • Goals should be straightforward and emphasize
    what you want to happen.
  • WHAT are you going to do?
  • Action worlds that reflect behavior, not just
    intent.
  • Not I will try or I intend but I will DO
  • WHY is this important to do at this time?

7
Measurable Goals
  • If you can't measure it, you can't manage it.
  • A good goal shows when it has been reached.
  • The goal should be stated with that endpoint in
    mind.
  • Establish concrete criteria for measuring
    progress toward the attainment of each goal you
    set.
  • Work 10 minutes a day on my technique ??

8
Achievable (but Challenging) Goals
  • A goal needs to stretch you slightly so you feel
    you can do it and it will need a real commitment
    from you.
  • The feeling of success which this brings helps
    you to remain motivated.
  • I will get out of bed this morning! ??
  • I will win every sprint workout in 2009 ??

9
Relevant Goals
  • Make sure your goal takes you where you want to
    go
  • Hand-make 20 holiday gifts by December 24 may
    be a great goal, but during an Olympic year?

10
Time-Limited Goals
  • Putting an end point on your goal gives you a
    clear target.
  • I will come in an extra half-hour to drill
    before practice. ??

11
Goal Strategies
  • The goal tells you what you will do.
  • The strategy tells you how.
  • I will increase my squat strength by 20 pounds
    by 3/1/2010
  • How? Create a plan with my strength/conditioning
    staff, increasing reps and weight according to
    that plan, beginning on 1/1/2010.

12
Goals Strategies, II
  • Some sport skills harder to define than others
  • Sometimes it can take a long time to see
    improvement
  • Break down the skill to key components
  • Determine a timeframe for practicing the skill
  • Examples of technique and strategies?

13
Goal Commitment
  • If it doesnt change your behavior in some way,
    it isnt a good goal.
  • How will you remember?
  • Who will help you stay on track?
  • How will you reward yourself?

14
Goal-Setting Progression Exercise
15
Step 1. Write down one long-term or dream
outcome goal
  • Examples
  • Winning a specific event or tournament
  • Achieving a specific time or score in an event
  • Getting a desired ranking
  • Making a team
  • Dont edit thislet yourself dream!!

16
Step 2. In order to give yourself the best
chance of reaching your outcome goal, are there
any performance goals you will need to meet to
accomplish that step?Write down at least
one.Example To be eligible to enter some
tournaments, you must achieve a standard of
performance.
17
Step 3. Pick that first performance goal. What
are the key process goals you will need to have
in your arsenal to increase the probability of
having that performance come out the way you
want?
These should be behavioralthings you do.
Example as a swimmer, if you identified your
performance goal as the time you wanted to be
under in your race, your process goals may
include the need to work on your flip turn,
stroke technique, and conditioning.
18
Step 3 ½. Make those process goals EFFECTIVE
  • Make sure they are SMART
  • Make sure they each contain specific goal
    achievement strategies
  • Example wrestling offense on mat
  • Practice getting my lock tight 20x each practice
    for next two weeks
  • Once I lock, practice going right, left 20x ea
    pr for next two weeks

19
Step 4. Take one process element. How will you
begin working on that element regularly in
practice?
  • Example
  • Will these goals require you to spend extra
    training time?
  • Do you need to consult with your coach? about
    different technique drills, etc.?
  • List what you need to do start working on this
    element

20
Step 5. Committing
  • Marriage, not dating ?
  • When will you start to work on this?
  • How will you reward yourself?
  • Goal progressions are rarely a straight line of
    progress.
  • Examples of things that will set you back?
  • What are strategies to deal with these?

21
Using (Process Goal) Goal Setting in Training
  • Technique learning and refinement
  • Improving endurance
  • Competition simulations practicing competition
    strategies
  • Developing quality practice behaviors
  • Dealing with distractions
  • Train like you compete,
  • compete like you train

22
Making Training Goals Work(coaches)
  • Reserve some time at the beginning/end of
    practice for your athletes to remind themselves
    of their goals and to evaluate how their work
    went.
  • Devote a portion of training time to allowing
    your athletes an opportunity to work on their
    goals.
  • Take advantage of opportune moments in practice
    to remind an athlete that a particular training
    situation or practice drill would be a great time
    to work on a specific goal.

23
Making Training Goals Work(athletes)
  • Take time before/after practice to remind
    yourself of your goals and grade yourself on how
    you did working on them.
  • Take advantage of times in practice to work on
    your goals
  • Create extra opportunities outside practice time
    to work on your goals.

24
Using (Process Goal) Goal Setting in Competition
  • Train like you compete,
  • compete like you train
  • Good competition process goals can focus
    attention, reduce distractions, increase
    confidence
  • Develop process goals that define HOW you want to
    compete what will you do?
  • Focus on behaviors, not just intent
  • Include refocusing strategies

25
Whats My Job? Exercise
  • In competition, helps athletes to focus on what
    they can control.
  • Is outcome your job?
  • What are 2-3 behaviors that coincide with your
    best performances?
  • How will you remember to focus on them?
  • How will you train that?

26
Top 10 Reasons Goal-Setting Programs Fail
  • Drumroll, please!
  • 10. Lack of understanding of the process
  • 9. Lack of commitment to the goal (not seen as
    relevant)

27
Top 10 Reasons Goal-Setting Programs Fail
  • 7. Lack of commitment to the process over time
    (lose steam)
  • 6. Lack of knowledge about what makes a good
    goal
  • 5. No time spent reinforcing the process (whos
    on your team?)

28
Top 10 Reasons Goal-Setting Programs Fail
  • 4. Failure to reward goal accomplishment
  • 3. Lack of flexibility built into the program
  • 2. Goals set that are too easy or too hard

29
Top 10 Reasons Goal-Setting Programs Fail
  • 1. Goals that dont make it out of this room to
    training or field of play.

30
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