819 resultados para Degree in Sport Science
Resumo:
La Expresión Corporal como materia educativa tiene su origen en España, de forma ligada a la Educación Física y su desarrollo en el ámbito universitario, durante la segunda mitad del siglo XX. Pero su corpus teórico no se encuentra definitivamente asentado, dando lugar a diferentes interpretaciones y consideraciones sobre cuáles deben ser considerados contenidos propios de la materia y sobre cómo deben ser estructurados. La presente tesis tiene por objeto de estudio precisamente los contenidos de la Expresión Corporal como materia perteneciente a las Ciencias de la Actividad Física y del Deporte, tratando de dar una respuesta fundamentada al planteamiento anterior. Para lo cual se seleccionaron y analizaron las principales obras de referencia para la materia en base a las cuales establecer una estructura de bloques de contenido y categorías asociadas. Se analizó la oferta formativa que, desde las universidades públicas españolas, se realizaba sobre el título de licenciado en Ciencias de la Actividad Física y del Deporte, comprobando por una parte la heterogeneidad en el tratamiento dado y por otra su adecuación a la estructura generada. Y en tercer lugar se examinó la normativa que articula y desarrolla el tratamiento de la Expresión Corporal en la Ley Orgánica de Educación, concretando el análisis en la etapa de Secundaria, en un proceso de triangulación sobre las fuentes documentales de mayor influencia, constatando una aparente falta de estructura en la selección y planteamiento de los contenidos a desarrollar dentro de la asignatura de Educación Física. En base a estas investigaciones, a la propia experiencia docente del doctorando y a la contribución de diferentes expertos en la materia se desarrolla una propuesta estructurada de contenidos de Expresión Corporal, la cual es implementada en el título de grado en Ciencias de la Actividad Física y del Deporte ofertado por la Universidad Politécnica de Madrid, analizando finalmente el nivel de relevancia que perciben los alumnos respecto de los contenidos de la materia planteados, infiriendo de los resultados obtenidos que se produce un aprendizaje significativo por parte de los futuros titulados. Se organizó la investigación en torno a cinco fases, utilizando en las tres primeras como metodología principal en análisis de contenido de las principales fuentes documentales (obras de referencia, programas docentes universitarios y normativa educativa), la cual es apoyada por otras herramientas como el grupo de discusión. La cuarta fase consistente en la elaboración de una propuesta estructurada de contenidos, contó con la valoración de un grupo de expertos en la materia. Mientras que en la fase de implementación y evaluación se recurrió al formato de entrevista colectiva mediante el empleo de cuestionario auto cumplimentado. La principal contribución de este trabajo es por tanto la presentación de una propuesta de estructuración de contenidos en Expresión Corporal, como parte de las manifestaciones básicas de la motricidad humana y enmarcada en el ámbito de las Ciencias de la Actividad Física y del Deporte; que tiene respaldo en las obras de referencia de la materia, en la formación inicial de los licenciados en Ciencias de la Actividad Física y del Deporte y en el desarrollo normativo de la Ley Orgánica de Educación; y que ha sido implementada en el actual título de Grado en Ciencias de la Actividad Física y del Deporte de la Universidad Politécnica de Madrid con resultados satisfactorios. ABSTRACT Corporal Expression as an educational subject has it origin s in Spain, linked to physical education and its development at University context, during the second half of the twentieth century. But his academic corpus has not been definitively settled, leading to different interpretations and considerations about what should be considered as proper contents of subject and how they should be structured. This thesis aims to study precisely the contents of the Corporal Expression as a subject belonging to Sciences of Physical Activity and Sport, trying to give a reasoned response to the previous approach. Taking this objective into consideration, main reference works were selected and analyzed to set a content structure and associated categories. The training offer of Spanish public universities in the Science of Physical Activity and Sport degree was analyzed, checking on the one hand the heterogeneity in the treatment and on the other their suitability to the structure generated. Thirdly, normative related to the treatment of Corporal Expression in the Ley Orgánica de Educación was examined paying special attention to the Secondary School stage. The process of triangulation which was performed using the most influential documentary sources suggested an apparent lack of structure and approach in the selection of contents to be developed in the subject of Physical Education. Based on these investigations, on the own teaching experience of the candidate and on the contribution of various experts in the field, a structured proposal of Corporal Expression contents is offered. This proposal has been implemented in the bachelor's degree in Sports Science offered by the Technical University of Madrid. Level of importance of the implemented contents perceived by students was analyzed and results suggested the presence of meaningful learning among graduates. Research was split into five phases. In the first three phases content analysis of the main documentary sources (reference books, university programs and educational standards), which was supported by other tools like the discussion group was the principal methodology. The fourth phase consisted in the development of a proposal structured content, involving the assessment of a group of experts in the field. In the implementation and evaluation phase collective interview using self-completed questionnaire was conducted The main contribution of this work is therefore presenting a proposal for structuring content in Corporal Expression, as a part of the basic manifestations of human motorskill and framed in the field of Sciences of Physical Activity and Sport; which draws on the support of reference works, initial training of graduates in Science of Physical Activity and Sport and the development of the normative of the Ley Orgánica de Educación; and has been implemented in the current Degree in Sports Science of the Technical University of Madrid with satisfactory results.
Resumo:
The influence of training in labor risk prevention and the development of the resulting pre-emptive culture are analyzed within this paper. In order to achieve this, a quantitative analysis of the students of Building Degree in the Technic University of Madrid has been developed. This study has been made in all grades, valuating the previous knowledge acquired during compulsory education. It must be kept in mind that the students in 3rd and 4th grade have received general and specific compulsory training in prevention and safety in the building sector.
Resumo:
From Introduction: Career transition issues have become of increasing interest in the field of sport psychology. Confronting the end of an athletic career is an inevitable reality that every athlete will confront in his or her lifetime (Baillie, 1993), regardless of level of competition (Kerr & Dacyshyn, 2000) or the amount of free choice related to the transition. Many athletes are able to cope with the effects of the transition process effectively, and see retirement as an opportunity to pursue new ventures and identity roles in life. However, retirement from sport can be an event that often results in various adjustment difficulties for an athlete involving emotional, social, financial, and vocational conflicts. Some athletes have reported experiencing effects such as depression, eating disorders, decreased self-esteem, increased suicidality, and substance abuse (Kerr and Dacyshyn, 2000). These types of distress can be exacerbated by the fact that many athletes fail to adequately anticipate and prepare for their impending transition (Baillie, 1993), and often embark on the retirement process without any formalized support (Stier, 2007).Typically, the role of a sport psychologist has been to assist in maximizing an athlete's competitive performance during the course of their career. However, as a sport psychologist's primary responsibility is to serve active competitors and athletic organizations, this tends to come at the expense of failing to provide follow-up care for the athlete as he or she retires from sport (Taylor, Ogilvie, and Lavallee, 2006). Since the 1970's, when the efforts of professionals in European sports organizations first received attention, there has been growing interest in academic circles about career transition
Resumo:
This article aims to add to the limited literature related to graduate training in applied sport psychology – specifically from the perspective of a current graduate student. The paper begins with a discussion about the evolving definitions of sport psychology and applied sport psychology as well as a brief history of sport psychology. Next, reasons why graduate students pursue the fields of sport psychology and applied sport psychology along with how this impacts their decisions related to graduate training are examined. Then, literature as well as personal experiences from the author related to education, supervision, practica and internships, mentorship, and certification are explored. Finally, recommendations are provided for students considering graduate training in applied sport psychology.
Resumo:
Examining a team’s performance from a physical point of view their momentum might indicate unexpected turning points in defeat or success. Physicists describe this value as to require some effort to be started, but also that it is relatively easy to keep it going once a sufficient level is reached (Reed and Hughes, 2006). Unlike football, rugby, handball and many more sports, a regular volleyball match is not limited by time but by points that need to be gathered. Every minute more than one point is won by either one team or the other. That means a series of successive points enlarges the gap between the teams making it more and more difficult to catch up with the leading one. This concept of gathering momentum, or the reverse in a performance, can give the coaches, athletes and sports scientists further insights into winning and losing performances. Momentum investigations also contain dependencies between performances or questions if future performances are reliant upon past streaks. Squash and volleyball share the characteristic of being played up to a certain amount of points. Squash was examined according to the momentum of players by Hughes et al. (2006). The initial aim was to expand normative profiles of elite squash players using momentum graphs of winners and errors to explore ‘turning points’ in a performance. Dynamic systems theory has enabled the definition of perturbations in sports exhibiting rhythms (Hughes et al., 2000; McGarry et al., 2002; Murray et al., 2008), and how players and teams cause these disruptions of rhythm can inform on the way they play, these techniques also contribute to profiling methods. Together with the analysis of one’s own performance it is essential to have an understanding of your oppositions’ tactical strengths and weaknesses. By modelling the oppositions’ performance it is possible to predict certain outcomes and patterns, and therefore intervene or change tactics before the critical incident occurs. The modelling of competitive sport is an informative analytic technique as it directs the attention of the modeller to the critical aspects of data that delineate successful performance (McGarry & Franks, 1996). Using tactical performance profiles to pull out and visualise these critical aspects of performance, players can build justified and sophisticated tactical plans. The area is discussed and reviewed, critically appraising the research completed in this element of Performance Analysis.
Resumo:
The Evidence-Based Practice (EBP) aims to combine a form methodological process of professional experience in health with the most current information on the clinical situation. The professional novice can make better decisions despite lacking sufficient years in clinical practice. We then train the student in correct habits within the methodological process by which you can strengthen both their knowledge and their attitude and ability, allowing secure customs, where all of your work is based on PBE.
Resumo:
Reviews of the sport psychology literature have identified a number of models of athlete development in sport (Alfermann & Stambulova, 2007; Durand-Bush &Salmela, 2001). However, minimal research has investigated the origins of knowledge from which each model was developed. The purpose of this study was to systematically examine the influential texts responsible for providing the basis of athlete development models in sport. A citation path analysis of the sport psychology literature was used to generate a knowledge development path of seven athlete development models in sport. The analysis identified influential texts and authors in the conceptualization of athlete development. The popula-tion of 229 texts (articles, books, book chapters) was selected in two phases. Phase1 texts were articles citing seven articles depicting models of athlete development(n 75). Phase 2 included texts cited three or more times by Phase 1 articles (n 154). The analysis revealed how the scholarship of Benjamin Bloom (1985) has been integrated into the field of sport psychology, and how two articles appearing in 1993 and 2003 helped shape present conceptualizations of athlete development
Resumo:
Background: Studies suggest that expert performance in sport is the result of long-term engagement in a highly specialized form of training termed deliberate practice. The relationship between accumulated deliberate practice and performance predicts that those who begin deliberate practice at a young age accumulate more practice hours over time and would, therefore, have a significant performance advantage. However, qualitative studies have shown that a large amount of sport-specific practice at a young age may lead to negative consequences, such as dropout, and is not necessarily the only path to expert performance in sport. Studies have yet to investigate the activity context, such as the amount of early sport participation, deliberate play and deliberate practice within which dropout occurs. Purpose: To determine whether the nature and amount of childhood-organized sport, deliberate play and deliberate practice participation influence athletes' subsequent decisions to drop out or invest in organized sport. It was hypothesized that young athletes who drop out will have sampled fewer sports, spent less time in deliberate play activities and spent more time in deliberate practice activities during childhood sport involvement. Participants: The parents of eight current, high-level, male, minor ice hockey players formed an active group. The parents of four high-level, male, minor ice hockey players who had recently withdrawn from competitive hockey formed a dropout group. Data collection: Parents completed a structured retrospective survey designed to assess their sons' involvement in organized sport, deliberate play and deliberate practice activities from ages 6 to 13. Data analysis: A complete data-set was available for ages 6 through 13, resulting in a longitudinal data-set spanning eight years. This eight-year range was divided into three levels of development corresponding to the players' progress through the youth ice hockey system. Level one encompassed ages 6–9, level two included ages 10–11 and level three covered ages 12–13. Descriptive statistics were used to report the ages at which the active and dropout players first engaged in select hockey activities. ANOVA with repeated measures across the three levels of development was used to compare the number of sports the active and dropout players were involved in outside of hockey, the number of hours spent in these sports, and involvement in various hockey-related activities. Findings: Results indicated that both the active and dropout players enjoyed a diverse and playful introduction to sport. Furthermore, the active and dropout players invested similar amounts of time in organized hockey games, organized hockey practices, specialized hockey training activities (e.g. hockey camps) and hockey play. However, analysis revealed that the dropout players began off-ice training at a younger age and invested significantly more hours/year in off-ice training at ages 12–13, indicating that engaging in off-ice training activities at a younger age may have negative implications for long-term ice hockey participation. Conclusion: These results are consistent with previous research that has found that early diversification does not hinder sport-specific skill development and it may, in fact, be preferable to early specialization. The active and dropout players differed in one important aspect of deliberate practice: off-ice training activities. The dropout players began off-ice training at a younger age, and participated in more off-ice training at ages 12 and 13 than their active counterparts. This indicates a form of early specialization and supports the postulate that early involvement in practice activities that are not enjoyable may ultimately undermine the intrinsic motivation to continue in sport. Youth sport programs should not focus on developing athletic fitness through intense and routine training, but rather on sport-specific practice, games and play activities that foster fun and enjoyment.
Project SCORE! Coaches’ Perceptions of an Online Tool to Promote Positive Youth Development in Sport
Resumo:
Research points to the potential of youth sport as an avenue to support the growth of particular assets and outcomes. A recurring theme in this line of research is the need to train coaches to deliberately deliver themes relating to positive youth development (PYD) consistently in youth sport programs. The purpose of the study was to design and deliver a technology-based PYD program. Project SCORE! (www.projectscore.ca) is a series of 10 lessons to help coaches integrate PYD into sport. Four youth sport coaches completed the program in this first phase of this research and were interviewed. The goal of this study was to gain some insights from coaches as they completed the program. Positive comments about the program (i.e. ease of use, success of particular lessons, coach’s personal growth) and challenges regarding teaching positive skills to youth are discussed. These results helped to shape the program and make necessary changes so that it may be used for a larger research study. Other implications and future research directions are discussed.
Resumo:
The purpose of the present study was to describe patterns in the dynamics of families of talented athletes throughout their development in sport. Four families, including three families of elite rowers and one family of an elite tennis player were examined. The framework provided by Ericsson, Krampe, and Tesch- Römer (1993) to explain expert performance served as the theoretical basis for the study. Ericsson et al. suggested that the acquisition of expert performance involves operating within three types of constraints: motivational, effort, and resource. In-depth interviews were conducted with each athlete, parent, and sibling to explore how they have dealt with these three constraints. A total of 15 individual interviews were conducted. Results permitted the identification of three phases of participation from early childhood to late adolescence: the sampling years, the specializing years, and the investment years. The dynamics of the family in each of these phases of development is discussed
Resumo:
The study of conflict has been of primary interest in various fields such as organisational psychology for decades (e.g. Barki & Hartwick, 2004). In sport psychology, however, conflict research has been almost nonexistent (Lavoi, 2007) with few exceptions (e.g. Holt et al., 2012; Sullivan & Feltz, 2001). The importance of understanding conflict in sport and in groups, however, has been acknowledged because it has potentially serious implications for group outcomes (Lavoi, 2007). The present study investigated competitive sport athletes’ perceptions of intra-group conflict in sport. Ten intercollegiate athletes: (N=5 males, N=5 females; Mage=25.00, SD=2.87) participated in semi-structured interviews. Athletes perceived the nature of conflict to manifest itself in several ways including: (a) disagreements; (b) negative emotions; and (c) interference/antagonistic behaviors. In addition, conflict episodes were perceived to arise in task and social situations. The findings are discussed in terms of their contributions to current perspectives on intra-group conflict in sport.
Resumo:
A meta-analysis of team building interventions in sport was completed. Seventeen studies containing 180 effect sizes were retrieved. The overall effect (Hedges g) was .427. Analyses of possible moderator variables showed the largest effect sizes were in interventions where: (a) non-experimental designs were used (g=.474); (b) the data were unpublished (g=.539); (c) goal setting only was used (g=.714); (d) the coach/manager directed the delivery (g=.446); and (e) the teams were at the university level (g=.482). Finally, team building had the greatest influence on cognitions (g=.799