Reflection in a high-performance sport coach education program: A Foucauldian analysis of coach developers

Reflection is a contested but taken for granted concept, whose meaning shifts to accommodate the interpretation and interests of those using the term. Subsequently, there is limited understanding of the concept. The purpose of this article was to consider critically the discursive complexities of reflection and their articulation through coach developers` practice. Data were collected from a National High-Performance coach education program. Coach developers responsible for one-to-one support (n=8) and on-program support (n=3) participated in the research. Semistructured interviews were conducted with coach developers, and participant observations were undertaken of a coach developer forum and program workshops (n=9). Foucault`s concepts: power, discourse, and discipline were used to examine data with critical depth. Analysis explored "Discourse of Reflection," "Discipline, Power, and Reflection," and "Coach Developers: Confession, `Empowerment,` and Reflection." Humanistic ideas constructed a discourse of reflection that was mobilized through coach confession. Coach developer efforts to be "critical" and "learner centered" were embroiled with intrinsic and subtle relations of power as "empowering" intent exacerbated rather than ameliorated its exercise. This article makes visible a different destabilized and problematized version of reflection, thus introducing an awkwardness into the fabric of our experiences of reflection.
© Copyright 2020 International Sport Coaching Journal. Human Kinetics. All rights reserved.

Bibliographic Details
Subjects:
Notations:training science academic training and research
Published in:International Sport Coaching Journal
Language:English
Published: 2020
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1123/iscj.2018-0093
Volume:7
Issue:3
Pages:47-359
Document types:article
Level:advanced