Perception of coaching efficacy : a comparison between athletes of individual and team-based sports

This study aimed to identify if athletes' perception of their coach's effectiveness had an effect on the following athlete-related outcomes- enjoyment and commitment in sports, as well as perception of their own physical abilities. It also aimed to establish if there is a difference in how...

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Main Author: Gan, Sharleen Hui Ling
Other Authors: Koh Koon Teck
Format: Final Year Project
Language:English
Published: 2017
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/10356/70558
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Institution: Nanyang Technological University
Language: English
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spelling sg-ntu-dr.10356-705582020-09-27T20:19:49Z Perception of coaching efficacy : a comparison between athletes of individual and team-based sports Gan, Sharleen Hui Ling Koh Koon Teck National Institute of Education Coral Lim DRNTU::Science This study aimed to identify if athletes' perception of their coach's effectiveness had an effect on the following athlete-related outcomes- enjoyment and commitment in sports, as well as perception of their own physical abilities. It also aimed to establish if there is a difference in how individual and team-based sports athletes perceive coaching effectiveness. Participants were 204 competitive athletes (individual = 100, team = 104) who completed a questionnaire measuring their perception of their coach's effectiveness in four subscales, as well as their enjoyment and commitment in sport, and their perceived physical ability. Correlation tests were carried out to determine if there was a relationship between the athletes' perception of coaching effectiveness and the athlete-related outcomes. A Mann-Whitney U test was run to determine if there was a difference in how individual and team sport athletes score their coaches' effectiveness. There was a significant, positive relationship between athletes' perceptions of coaching effectiveness and the measured athlete-related outcomes but no significant differences in the scores of coaching effectiveness between individual and team sport athletes. Perception of coaching effectiveness had the strongest impact on the enjoyment of athletes out of the measured athlete-related outcomes. In conclusion, perception of athletes regarding the effectiveness of their coaches can implicate the enjoyment; commitment, and perceived physical ability of athletes but the type of sport may not influence an athlete's perception of their coach's effectiveness. Bachelor of Science (Sport Science and Management) 2017-04-27T07:39:06Z 2017-04-27T07:39:06Z 2017 Final Year Project (FYP) http://hdl.handle.net/10356/70558 en 41 p. application/pdf
institution Nanyang Technological University
building NTU Library
country Singapore
collection DR-NTU
language English
topic DRNTU::Science
spellingShingle DRNTU::Science
Gan, Sharleen Hui Ling
Perception of coaching efficacy : a comparison between athletes of individual and team-based sports
description This study aimed to identify if athletes' perception of their coach's effectiveness had an effect on the following athlete-related outcomes- enjoyment and commitment in sports, as well as perception of their own physical abilities. It also aimed to establish if there is a difference in how individual and team-based sports athletes perceive coaching effectiveness. Participants were 204 competitive athletes (individual = 100, team = 104) who completed a questionnaire measuring their perception of their coach's effectiveness in four subscales, as well as their enjoyment and commitment in sport, and their perceived physical ability. Correlation tests were carried out to determine if there was a relationship between the athletes' perception of coaching effectiveness and the athlete-related outcomes. A Mann-Whitney U test was run to determine if there was a difference in how individual and team sport athletes score their coaches' effectiveness. There was a significant, positive relationship between athletes' perceptions of coaching effectiveness and the measured athlete-related outcomes but no significant differences in the scores of coaching effectiveness between individual and team sport athletes. Perception of coaching effectiveness had the strongest impact on the enjoyment of athletes out of the measured athlete-related outcomes. In conclusion, perception of athletes regarding the effectiveness of their coaches can implicate the enjoyment; commitment, and perceived physical ability of athletes but the type of sport may not influence an athlete's perception of their coach's effectiveness.
author2 Koh Koon Teck
author_facet Koh Koon Teck
Gan, Sharleen Hui Ling
format Final Year Project
author Gan, Sharleen Hui Ling
author_sort Gan, Sharleen Hui Ling
title Perception of coaching efficacy : a comparison between athletes of individual and team-based sports
title_short Perception of coaching efficacy : a comparison between athletes of individual and team-based sports
title_full Perception of coaching efficacy : a comparison between athletes of individual and team-based sports
title_fullStr Perception of coaching efficacy : a comparison between athletes of individual and team-based sports
title_full_unstemmed Perception of coaching efficacy : a comparison between athletes of individual and team-based sports
title_sort perception of coaching efficacy : a comparison between athletes of individual and team-based sports
publishDate 2017
url http://hdl.handle.net/10356/70558
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