Comprendre et intervenir : les connaissances des entraîneurs experts en gymnastique

The article presents and discusses the results of a study on the knowleThis paper presents and discusses the results of a study of the knowledge being used by coaches while teaching and correcting athletes’ technical skills in high-level artistic gymnastics. The scientific literature in the field sh...

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Main Authors: Cathy Rolland, Marc Cizeron
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Association Recherche et Pratique sur les Activités 2011-10-01
Series:Activités
Subjects:
Online Access:http://journals.openedition.org/activites/2586
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spelling doaj-67189c3d2f554b27b86b6f576197904d2021-09-02T06:34:12ZengAssociation Recherche et Pratique sur les ActivitésActivités1765-27232011-10-018210.4000/activites.2586Comprendre et intervenir : les connaissances des entraîneurs experts en gymnastiqueCathy RollandMarc CizeronThe article presents and discusses the results of a study on the knowleThis paper presents and discusses the results of a study of the knowledge being used by coaches while teaching and correcting athletes’ technical skills in high-level artistic gymnastics. The scientific literature in the field shows that this knowledge is shaped by the coaching situations, in particular their high degree of uncertainty. The study specifically focused on work activity of high-level coaches in gymnastics who must comply with an exacting code of technical, complex skills and their deployment in time and space. The results indicate that for each situation, coaches devise a "diy" theory of individual athletes’ movements and overall activity. Thanks to these cognitive constructs, they achieve an understanding of the complex situations they face and can intervene in ways which integrate that complexity. The implications of these results in terms of designing a coach training setting are discussed, and especially the relevance of case studies to making the requirements of knowledge formalisation compatible with those of the action in context.http://journals.openedition.org/activites/2586coachingcognitive anthropologygymnasticsknowledge
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Cathy Rolland
Marc Cizeron
spellingShingle Cathy Rolland
Marc Cizeron
Comprendre et intervenir : les connaissances des entraîneurs experts en gymnastique
Activités
coaching
cognitive anthropology
gymnastics
knowledge
author_facet Cathy Rolland
Marc Cizeron
author_sort Cathy Rolland
title Comprendre et intervenir : les connaissances des entraîneurs experts en gymnastique
title_short Comprendre et intervenir : les connaissances des entraîneurs experts en gymnastique
title_full Comprendre et intervenir : les connaissances des entraîneurs experts en gymnastique
title_fullStr Comprendre et intervenir : les connaissances des entraîneurs experts en gymnastique
title_full_unstemmed Comprendre et intervenir : les connaissances des entraîneurs experts en gymnastique
title_sort comprendre et intervenir : les connaissances des entraîneurs experts en gymnastique
publisher Association Recherche et Pratique sur les Activités
series Activités
issn 1765-2723
publishDate 2011-10-01
description The article presents and discusses the results of a study on the knowleThis paper presents and discusses the results of a study of the knowledge being used by coaches while teaching and correcting athletes’ technical skills in high-level artistic gymnastics. The scientific literature in the field shows that this knowledge is shaped by the coaching situations, in particular their high degree of uncertainty. The study specifically focused on work activity of high-level coaches in gymnastics who must comply with an exacting code of technical, complex skills and their deployment in time and space. The results indicate that for each situation, coaches devise a "diy" theory of individual athletes’ movements and overall activity. Thanks to these cognitive constructs, they achieve an understanding of the complex situations they face and can intervene in ways which integrate that complexity. The implications of these results in terms of designing a coach training setting are discussed, and especially the relevance of case studies to making the requirements of knowledge formalisation compatible with those of the action in context.
topic coaching
cognitive anthropology
gymnastics
knowledge
url http://journals.openedition.org/activites/2586
work_keys_str_mv AT cathyrolland comprendreetintervenirlesconnaissancesdesentraineursexpertsengymnastique
AT marccizeron comprendreetintervenirlesconnaissancesdesentraineursexpertsengymnastique
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