INTRODUCTION TO SPORT PSYCHOLOGY - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

1 / 49
About This Presentation
Title:

INTRODUCTION TO SPORT PSYCHOLOGY

Description:

INTRODUCTION TO SPORT PSYCHOLOGY Damon Burton & Andy Gillham University of Idaho * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * COLLEGE TEACHING Professional Competencies ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

Number of Views:8759
Avg rating:3.0/5.0
Slides: 50
Provided by: educUidah
Category:

less

Transcript and Presenter's Notes

Title: INTRODUCTION TO SPORT PSYCHOLOGY


1
INTRODUCTION TO SPORT PSYCHOLOGY
  • Damon Burton Andy Gillham
  • University of Idaho

2
SPORT PSYCHOLOGY BASICS
  • What is sport psychology?
  • What do sport psychologists do?
  • How old is the profession?
  • What are the key events in the history of sport
    psychology?
  • What career options are available?

3
ORIGINS OF SPORT PSYCHOLOGY
  • Psychology has a Greek derivation
  • Psyche means mind or spirit
  • Logos means sayings or speakings of
  • Literally means speakings of the mind
  • Definitions of Psychology
  • William James (1890) The science of mental
    life
  • Current Definition The study of behavior
  • Scope of Discipline
  • from animals to humans
  • from nerve cells to attitudes and personality

4
ACADEMIC ORIGINS OF SPORT PSYCHOLOGY
Biological Sciences
Social Sciences
Physical Sciences
Biomechanics
Psychology
Exercise Physiology
Sport SociologyCultural Anthropology
Sports PsychologySocial Psychology of
SportMotor LearningMotor DevelopmentMotor
Control
5
SPORT PSYCHOLOGY QUESTIONS
  • We all know something about sport psychology, and
    youve probably wondered about different things
    related to the mental side of sport and exercise.
  • Write down 2 questions about sport and exercise
    psychology that youd like to have answered in
    this course?

6
TWO TYPES OF QUESTIONS
  • How do psychological factors impact sport and
    exercise?
  • How do sport and exercise influence psychological
    development?

7
HOW PSYCHOLOGICAL FACTORS IMPACT SPORT
  • How does anxiety affect a basketball players
    free-throw shooting accuracy?
  • Does self-confidence influence a childs ability
    to learn to swim?
  • How does coach reinforcement and punishment
    influence team cohesion?
  • Does imagery training facilitate the recovery
    process in injured athletes and exercisers?

8
IMPACT OF SPORT ON PSYCHOLOGICAL DEVELOPMENT
  • Does running reduce anxiety and depression?
  • Do young athletes learn aggression from
    participating in youth sports?
  • Does PE class participation facilitate
    childrens self-esteem development?
  • Does participation in college athletics enhance
    character development?

9
HISTORY OFSPORT PSYCHOLOGY
  • Early Years (1895-1924)
  • Griffith Era (1925-1938)
  • Dark Ages (1939-1964)
  • Contemporary Era (1965-present)

10
BASICS OF ACADEMIC DISCIPLINES
Research
Consultation
Teaching
11
EARLY YEARS (1895-1924)
  • Research
  • Triplett (1899) 1st social psychology
    experiment,
  • lab based procedures,
  • topics focused on personality and motor learning
  • Teaching none
  • Consultation -- none

12
GRIFFITH ERA (1925-1938)
  • Research
  • conducted a systematic program of theoretical and
    applied research
  • lab-based
  • topics focused on motor learning and sport
    performance (e.g., football stance)
  • Teaching
  • developed sport psychology class and taught
    principles in several class

13
GRIFFITH ERA (1925-1938)
  • Consulting
  • wrote books
  • Psychology of Coaching
  • Psychology and Athletics
  • outlined functions of sport psychologists
  • consulted with a wide variety of Illinois
    athletic teams
  • consulted with 1938 Chicago Cubs to improve
    hitting

14
GOALS FOR SPORT PSYCHOLOGISTS
  • Observe the best coaches and teachers, record the
    psychological principles they use and convey
    these principles to new teachers and coaches.
  • Adapt the information gained in the psychological
    lab to sport.
  • Use the scientific method and the experimental
    lab to discover principles which will aid in
    answering specific problems of teachers and
    coaches.

15
DARK AGES (1939-1964)
  • Research
  • little systematic lab-based research
  • Alan Slater-Hammel -- motor learning
  • Emma McCloy -- motor abilities
  • Teaching
  • John Lawther (1951) Psychology and Coaching
  • Consultation
  • minimal consultation being conducted

16
CONTEMPORARY ERA (1965-PRESENT)
  • Research
  • In 1965, 1st International Congress of Sport
    Psychology in Rome
  • Research mushroomed to help develop a strong
    knowledge base
  • In 1967, North American Society for the
    Psychology of Sport and Physical Activity
    (NASPSPA) founded.
  • In 1979, Journal of Sport Psychology started to
    publish research

17
CONTEMPORARY ERA (1965-PRESENT)
  • Research
  • In 1981, Martens Smocks to Jocks articles
    promoted field research
  • In 1986, Association for the Advancement of
    Applied Sport Psychology (AAASP) founded,
  • In 1987, APA Division 47 Sport Exercise
    Psychology founded
  • In 1987, The Sport Psychologist started

18
CONTEMPORARY ERA (1965-PRESENT)
  • Research
  • In 1989, Journal of Applied Sport Psychology
    founded
  • Teaching
  • Specialized courses and graduate programs
    developed in late 1960s
  • In 1972, 6 grad programs in U.S.
  • Today, over 140 grad programs
  • Textbooks and supplemental materials developed
    (e.g., over 30 texts today)

19
CONTEMPORARY ERA (1965-PRESENT)
  • Consultation
  • In 1967, Ogilvie and Tutko wrote Problem Athletes
    How to Handle Them
  • In 1981, Martens pioneered psychological skills
    concept
  • In 1983, USOC developed Sport Psychology Registry
    to deal with quality control
  • In 1983, Burton 1st paid sport psychologist in
    university athletic program

20
CONTEMPORARY ERA (1965-PRESENT)
  • Consultation
  • In 1984, NASPSPA certification vote prompted
    development of AAASP
  • In 1989, AAASP approved certification of sport
    psychology consultants
  • Today, most professional and Olympic teams have
    sport psychologists
  • Only about 20 universities have full-time sport
    psychologists.

21
EDUCATIONAL VERSUS CLINICAL SPORT PSYCHOLOGY
Clinical Sport Psychology
Educational Sport Psychology
X
NormalBehavior
Supernormal Behavior
Abnormal Behavior
develop mental skills
solve problems
22
CLINICAL SPORT PSYCHOLOGISTS (CSP)
  • Trained as clinical or counseling psychologists
    (i.e., licensed by state).
  • CSPs deal with clients who have some type of
    psychological problem (i.e., neuroses
    psychoses),
  • Their goal is to help person function normally in
    daily life by overcoming psychological
    problem(s).
  • Therapy often lasts months, and even years, using
    intense, one-on-one psychotherapy sessions to
    identify and correct problems (i.e.,
    psychoanalysis).

23
EDUCATIONAL SPORT PSYCHOLOGISTS (ESP)
  • Trained in sport/exercise science programs to
    teach mental skills,
  • Deal with clients who are psychologically normal
    but have to perform in ultra intense,
    pressure-packed situations (i.e., Superbowl,
    Olympics, Masters or Wimbleton),
  • ESPs are mental coaches whose goal is to help
    athletes develop super normal mental skills
    necessary to (a) perform optimally in challenging
    situations, (b) experience personal highlights
    and (c) develop to their full potential.

24
FOCUS OF SPORT PSYCHOLOGY CONSULTATION
  • achieve optimal performance or Flow play your
    best when your best is needed
  • maximize personal development in sport and life
    by optimizing mental skills develop the athlete
    and the person
  • promote optimal experiences create personal
    highlights


25
SPORT PSYCHOLOGY ORGANIZATIONS
  • Association of Applied Sport Psychology (AASP)
  • APA Division 47 Sport Exercise Psychology
    (DIV-47)
  • North American Society for the Psychology of
    Sport and Physical Activity (NASPSPA)

26
ASSOCIATION OF APPLIED SPORT PSYCHOLOGY (AASP)
  • This organization is designed to promote research
    and practice in applied sport and exercise
    psychology. Three speciality areas focus on
  • health/ exercise psychology,
  • intervention-performance enhancement,
  • social psychology

27
APA DIVISION 47 - SPORT EXERCISE PSYCHOLOGY
  • The American Psychological Association (APA) is
    the largest professional psychology organization
    in the U.S. Division 47 is one of the newest of
    APAs over 50 divisions. Division 47 emphasizes
    both research and practice in sport psychology.

28
NORTH AMERICAN SOCIETY FOR THE PSYCHOLOGY OF
SPORT PHYSICAL ACTIVITY
  • NASPSPA is the oldest organization focusing on
    the psychological aspects of sport and physical
    activity. The organizations main focus is on
    research in the subdisciplines of
  • motor development,
  • motor learning and control, and
  • sport and exercise psychology.

29
SPORT PSYCHOLOGY JOURNALS
  • Journal of Applied Sport Psychology (JASP)
  • Journal of Sport and Exercise Psychology (JSEP)
  • The Sport Psychologist (TSP)

30
SPORT PSYCHOLOGY JOURNALS
  • Journal of Applied Sport Psychology
  • Begun in 1989, JASP is the official journal of
    AASP and publishes applied sport psychology
    research and professional practice articles
  • Journal of Sport and Exercise Psychology
  • JSEP publishes basic and applied sport and
    exercise psychology research. Begun in 1979,
    it is the oldest and most-respected research
    journal in the field.

31
SPORT PSYCHOLOGY JOURNALS
  • The Sport Psychologist
  • TSP began publication in 1987 and publishes both
    applied research and professional practice
    articles designed to facilitate the delivery of
    psychological services to coaches and athletes.

32
SPORT PSYCHOLOGY CAREER FIELDS
  • college teaching
  • performance enhancement consulting
  • health and exercise psychologist
  • sports medicine psychologist

33
COLLEGE TEACHING
  • Position Availability - 200 positions in U.S.
  • Salary Range - 35-100,000
  • Job Responsibilities
  • teach grad and undergrad courses
  • conduct and publish research
  • mentor graduate students
  • secure grants to fund research
  • consult with coaches athletes

34
COLLEGE TEACHING
  • Professional Competencies
  • good teaching skills
  • good research skills
  • good helping skills
  • ability to juggle a variety of projects and roles.

35
PERFORMANCE ENHANCEMENT CONSULTANT
  • Position Availability 3-5,000 PE consultants in
    U.S.
  • Salary Range - 35-300,000
  • Job Responsibilities
  • see clinical patients 6-8 hours daily
  • be on call for clients in crisis
  • may travel with junior players
  • consult with high school, college and pro
    athletes and teams (50 practice)

36
PERFORMANCE ENHANCEMENT CONSULTANT
  • Professional Competencies
  • good helping skills
  • enjoy helping others solve their problems
  • independence self-sufficiency
  • business skills to run practice

37
HEALTH EXERCISE PSYCHOLOGIST
  • Position Availability 1000s of private and
    corporate fitness facilities in U.S.
  • Salary Range - 20-200,000
  • Job Responsibilities
  • develop programs to attract new clients
  • modify existing programs to minimize dropouts
  • provide workshops on psych factors that influence
    exercise health

38
HEALTH EXERCISE PSYCHOLOGIST
  • Job Responsibilities (contd)
  • train other personnel to enhance sensitivity of
    psych factors
  • conduct applied exercise psych research
  • consult with high school, college and pro
    athletes and teams (50 practice)

39
HEALTH EXERCISE PSYCHOLOGIST
  • Professional Competencies
  • good teaching skills
  • well-developed consultation and helping skills,
  • skill to develop programs that will appeal to a
    broad range of clients
  • ability to juggle a variety of projects and roles

40
SPORT MEDICINE PSYCHOLOGIST
  • Position Availability 1000s of private clinics
    and hospitals in U.S.
  • Salary Range - 25-250,000
  • Job Responsibilities
  • promote psych aspects of rehabilitation
  • teach clients the value of health and exercise in
    quality of life
  • teach pain management strategies
  • promote injury and disease prevention

41
SPORTS MEDICINE PSYCHOLOGIST
  • Professional Competencies
  • good consultation helping skills
  • ability to work with other members of sports
    medicine team
  • understanding of how mental factors influence
    illness injury
  • strong desire to help others

42
BEST SPORT PSYCHOLOGY CONSULTANTS
  • likeable and perceived as having something very
    applied and concrete to offer
  • flexible and knowledgeable enough to meet
    individual needs by soliciting athlete input
  • accessible enough to establish a rapport with
    individual athletes and to care about what
    happens to them

43
BEST SPORT PSYCHOLOGY CONSULTANTS
  • started working with a team at least 9 months
    prior to the Olympics and most had begun an
    ongoing mental training program 2-3 years prior
  • had multiple contacts with individual athletes,
    usually beginning with the first training camp of
    the year
  • conducted several follow-up sessions with
    individual athletes before and during the
    competitive season

44
WORST SPORT PSYCHOLOGY CONSULTANTS
  • poor interpersonal skills (e.g., not liked by
    athletes, viewed as wimpy or domineering, wanted
    the athlete to carry their bags, turned people
    off with their personality, didnt fit in)
  • ineffectively applied psychology to sport (e.g.,
    not applied enough or didnt fit the sport or
    situation in training or competition)

45
POOR SPORT PSYCHOLOGY CONSULTANTS
  • lacked sensitivity or flexibility to individual
    needs (did not adapt input to meet the needs of
    different individuals on the team, werent
    flexible to individual needs, imposed own
    methodology on everyone)
  • limited contact with athletes (too much group
    work, too many lectures, not enough one-on-one
    time)

46
POOR SPORT PSYCHOLOGY CONSULTANTS
  • demonstrated inappropriate application of
    consulting skills on-site at a competition or
    inappropriate behavior on site (e.g., crowding
    athlete, staring at athletes, getting athlete to
    fill out forms or answer questions just before
    competing), thereby altering the athletes
    familiar pre-event preparation pattern

47
POOR SPORT PSYCHOLOGY CONSULTANTS
  • had bad timing (i.e., their involvement began too
    close to major international event, or in some
    cases even at an international event, without
    knowing athletes beforehand)
  • did not provide enough consultant input or
    feedback (i.e., contact with athlete was too
    infrequent, particularly ongoing feedback was too
    limited to make a difference)

48
SPORT PSYCHOLOGY BASICS
  • What type of training is required to become a
    sport psychologist?
  • How do students find out about graduate school?
  • How do I find out more about sport psychology?

49
SPORT PSYCHOLOGY BASICS
  • What type of training is required to become a
    sport psychologist?
  • masters
  • Ph.D.
  • How do students find out about graduate school?
  • AASP Graduate Directory
  • How do I find out more about sport psychology?
  • Books, journals, conferences
Write a Comment
User Comments (0)
About PowerShow.com