Tuesday, April 16, 2013

A VIEW OF AGGRESSIVE LANGUAGE IN COACHING

The following is an excerpt written by Brad Wolverton to The Chronicle of Higher Education.  You can read the entire article here.  Here are some excerpts:

To what extent can coaches use negative tactics to motivate athletes? And what impact does that approach have on coaches’ credibility?

Those questions, which have taken on new meaning in the aftermath of the Mike Rice firing at Rutgers University, are the subject of research to be published this summer in the International Journal of Sport Communication.

The main takeaway: Verbally aggressive language doesn’t work, even in an environment where athletes have been conditioned to expect it, the researchers found.

According to the study, which focused on feedback from 130 Division I college athletes, players who were exposed to a verbally aggressive coach reported significantly less motivation to perform, and viewed such coaches as significantly less competent, than did athletes who played for coaches with a more affirming style.

“This study shows that extra amounts of verbal aggression in the coach-athlete relationship is a negative thing—it’s not productive, and many athletes find it to be unacceptable,” says Joseph P. Mazer, an assistant professor of communication studies at Clemson University and the lead author of a report on the study.

The report, “Coach Verbal Aggression: A Case Study Examining Effects on Athlete Motivation and Perceptions of Coach Credibility,” was also written by Katie Barnes, Alexia Grevious, and Caroline Boger, all Clemson undergraduates.

The professor hopes that the study’s findings can help raise awareness of the effects of verbally aggressive conduct and lead colleges to look more critically at how athletes are treated.

“Coaches, in many ways, are teachers,” he says. “And if we hold teachers to high standards with respect to communication, we need to do it for coaches as well.”

3 comments:

  1. Coach Starkey,

    I believe the blog misrepresents the Brad Wolverton article.

    The dominate miss is in "extra amounts" of verbal aggression phase.

    JJ Butler

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  2. I don't doubt that today's athlete has a problem with aggressive language... I think the key sentence was that they viewed the verbally aggressive coach as less competent (try this theory out in one of Coach K's practices)! Kids today have no respect and are weak as all get out. They have been smothered & over protected all their lives & thus can't handle being handled. The helicopters are no longer hovering they have landed!

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  3. It is considered that saying aggressive words with aggressive expressions can motivate people to do their tasks. However, it is not so. To motivate, even decent words in a slow voice can also work wonders for many.

    Regards,
    Mark Duin
    Motivational Speaker

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