"You're made to feel like you're the crazy one": an interpretive description of former college student-athletes' views of emotional abuse.

IF 2.3 Q2 SPORT SCIENCES
Frontiers in Sports and Active Living Pub Date : 2024-10-28 eCollection Date: 2024-01-01 DOI:10.3389/fspor.2024.1428682
Kat V Adams, Katherine N Alexander, Travis E Dorsch
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引用次数: 0

Abstract

Many normalized coaching behaviors are often abusive yet are seen by coaches and athletes as instrumental in achievement and competition. The current study was designed to extend past research and theory by subjectively exploring how and why former intercollegiate athletes identified their head coach as emotionally abusive. Twenty former intercollegiate student-athletes (M age = 26.0 years) from nine sports participated in semi-structured interviews ranging from 65 to 189 min (M = 105.8, SD = 58). Interpretive description methodology was used with reflexive thematic analysis to generate a coherent conceptual description of the themes and shared experiences that characterized emotionally abusive coaching. The themes that associated with an athlete labeling a coach as emotionally abusive fall under two aspects of Stirling and Kerr's 2008 definition: non-contact coach behaviors and the resulting harmful outcomes experienced by the athletes. Non-contact behaviors were ones that diminished performance, neglected holistic development, and were inconsistent. The harmful effects were the negative emotional responses and dehumanization experienced by athletes. Finally, participants felt that a coach's desire for power and control over athletes explained the coach's behaviors generally. Based on these results, we put forth the conceptual claim that emotional abuse, and psychological violence more broadly, cannot be defined or identified based solely on the perpetrator's behaviors. The athlete's cognitions, perceptions, emotions, and behaviors are critical in determining whether emotional abuse occurred, and these interpretations are shaped by an athlete's existing relationship with the coach.

"你会觉得自己是个疯子":前大学生运动员对情感虐待的解释性描述。
许多常态化的教练行为往往具有虐待性,但却被教练和运动员视为有助于取得成绩和参加比赛。本研究旨在通过主观探索前校际运动员如何以及为何将他们的主教练认定为情感虐待者,从而扩展过去的研究和理论。来自九个运动项目的 20 名前校际学生运动员(平均年龄 26.0 岁)参加了半结构式访谈,访谈时间从 65 分钟到 189 分钟不等(平均年龄 105.8 岁,平均年龄 58 岁)。我们采用了解释性描述方法和反思性主题分析法,以对具有情感虐待特征的教练主题和共同经历进行连贯的概念描述。在 Stirling 和 Kerr 2008 年的定义中,与运动员将教练称为情感虐待相关的主题有两个方面:非接触式教练行为和运动员经历的有害结果。非接触行为是指降低成绩、忽视全面发展和不一致的行为。有害后果是运动员经历的负面情绪反应和非人化。最后,参与者认为,教练对运动员的权力欲和控制欲是教练行为的主要原因。基于这些结果,我们提出了一个概念性主张,即情感虐待和更广义的心理暴力不能仅根据施暴者的行为来定义或识别。运动员的认知、看法、情绪和行为对于确定是否发生了情感虐待至关重要,而这些解释是由运动员与教练的现有关系决定的。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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来源期刊
CiteScore
2.60
自引率
7.40%
发文量
459
审稿时长
15 weeks
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