ABSTRACT
Despite the numerous reported benefits of implementing technology-enhanced learning (TEL) strategies in sport coaching, and advancements in the ‘user-friendliness’ of technologies available to human movement educators, learner perceptions of such pedagogies are yet to be fully understood. In an effort to address this, the current article employed a phenomenographic methodology to present the variation of conceptions, or understandings, of athletes involved in a ‘Video Coach (VC)’ project – whereby a coach and athletes connected regularly via video calling technology during a preparation phase for high performance competition. The current article builds on a procedural account of the VC project by exploring the ways in which participants’ discerned the various elements of the encounter. Here, phenomenography, an emerging research methodology in the sport coaching literature, offered the advantage of providing different understandings to a contemporary coaching approach. Upon interpreting the individual ways in which the phenomenon (the VC encounter) was experienced, the outcome space demonstrates the interrelatedness of athletes’ perceptions by showing that it was considered a necessary, albeit an ‘authoritative’ observation tool, beneficial in absence of alternative arrangements or conventional (read: face-to-face) coaching approaches. In this sense, the VC project was a ‘needs-must’ approach for participants, and was valued as such. This study provides a starting point for future research, where coaches and researchers could explore the benefits and drawbacks of a VC in a range of other human movement contexts according to athlete perception(s).
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No potential conflict of interest was reported by the author.
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Blake C. Bennett
Blake C. Bennett (Ph.D., University of Canterbury, New Zealand) is a lecturer in the Bachelor of Sport, Health, and Physical Education degree in the School of Curriculum and Pedagogy at the University of Auckland. Dr. Bennett completed his Doctoral degree in 2016, the field of sport coaching with a focus on the pedagogies of rugby coaches in New Zealand and Japanese secondary schools. He completed his Master’s Degree in Sport Sciences at the Osaka University of Health and Sport Sciences, Japan, regarding aggression and violence in the Japanese martial art of Kendo. Dr. Bennett has coached for over 20 years, leads the Education Task Force of the New Zealand Kendo Federation, and is currently coach of the Men’s New Zealand Kendo Team.