The Influence of Gender, Race and Intersectionality on Stress in Division I Head Basketball Coaches

abstract: Research in intercollegiate athletics has provided a relatively large body of findings about the kinds of stressors found in high profile intercollegiate athletic environments and their effects on student-athletes. Research is less robust regarding stress and its effects on head coaches in...

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Other Authors: Rousseau, Julie B (Author)
Format: Doctoral Thesis
Language:English
Published: 2019
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/2286/R.I.53927
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spelling ndltd-asu.edu-item-539272019-05-16T03:02:03Z The Influence of Gender, Race and Intersectionality on Stress in Division I Head Basketball Coaches abstract: Research in intercollegiate athletics has provided a relatively large body of findings about the kinds of stressors found in high profile intercollegiate athletic environments and their effects on student-athletes. Research is less robust regarding stress and its effects on head coaches in high profile collegiate athletics. This study focuses on the types, frequencies, and intensities of stress experienced by NCAA, Division I head coaches. The purpose of the study is to identify the types, frequency, and intensity of stress common to 20 head basketball coaches participating in the study, as well as differences in their experiences based on gender, race and the intersectionality of race and gender. The participants in the study are 20 head coaches (five Black females, five Black males, five White females, and White males). The conceptual framework guiding the study is a definition of stress as an interaction between a person and her or his environment in which the person perceives the resources available to manage the situation to be inadequate (Lazarus & Folkman, 1984). The study’s design is an adaptation of prior research conducted by Frey, M., 2007 and Olusoga, P., Butt, J., Hays, K., & Maynard, I., 2009, and Olusoga, P., Butt, J., Maynard, I., & Hays, K., 2011. This study used qualitative and quantitative methods that triangulated results scores on Maslach’s Burn-out Inventory and the Perceived Stress Scale with the thick data collected from semi-structured interviews with the 20 head coaches from each of the three data sources to enhance the validity and reliability of the findings. The researcher analyzed the data collected by placing it in one of two categories, one representing attributes of the participants including race and gender; the second category was comprised of attributes of the Division I environment. Dissertation/Thesis Rousseau, Julie B (Author) Gray, Rob (Advisor) Vega, Sujey (Committee member) Wilson, Jeffrey (Committee member) Arizona State University (Publisher) Psychology Gender studies Sports management Coach Gender Intersectionality Race Stress Transactional eng 228 pages Doctoral Dissertation Human Systems Engineering 2019 Doctoral Dissertation http://hdl.handle.net/2286/R.I.53927 http://rightsstatements.org/vocab/InC/1.0/ 2019
collection NDLTD
language English
format Doctoral Thesis
sources NDLTD
topic Psychology
Gender studies
Sports management
Coach
Gender
Intersectionality
Race
Stress
Transactional
spellingShingle Psychology
Gender studies
Sports management
Coach
Gender
Intersectionality
Race
Stress
Transactional
The Influence of Gender, Race and Intersectionality on Stress in Division I Head Basketball Coaches
description abstract: Research in intercollegiate athletics has provided a relatively large body of findings about the kinds of stressors found in high profile intercollegiate athletic environments and their effects on student-athletes. Research is less robust regarding stress and its effects on head coaches in high profile collegiate athletics. This study focuses on the types, frequencies, and intensities of stress experienced by NCAA, Division I head coaches. The purpose of the study is to identify the types, frequency, and intensity of stress common to 20 head basketball coaches participating in the study, as well as differences in their experiences based on gender, race and the intersectionality of race and gender. The participants in the study are 20 head coaches (five Black females, five Black males, five White females, and White males). The conceptual framework guiding the study is a definition of stress as an interaction between a person and her or his environment in which the person perceives the resources available to manage the situation to be inadequate (Lazarus & Folkman, 1984). The study’s design is an adaptation of prior research conducted by Frey, M., 2007 and Olusoga, P., Butt, J., Hays, K., & Maynard, I., 2009, and Olusoga, P., Butt, J., Maynard, I., & Hays, K., 2011. This study used qualitative and quantitative methods that triangulated results scores on Maslach’s Burn-out Inventory and the Perceived Stress Scale with the thick data collected from semi-structured interviews with the 20 head coaches from each of the three data sources to enhance the validity and reliability of the findings. The researcher analyzed the data collected by placing it in one of two categories, one representing attributes of the participants including race and gender; the second category was comprised of attributes of the Division I environment. === Dissertation/Thesis === Doctoral Dissertation Human Systems Engineering 2019
author2 Rousseau, Julie B (Author)
author_facet Rousseau, Julie B (Author)
title The Influence of Gender, Race and Intersectionality on Stress in Division I Head Basketball Coaches
title_short The Influence of Gender, Race and Intersectionality on Stress in Division I Head Basketball Coaches
title_full The Influence of Gender, Race and Intersectionality on Stress in Division I Head Basketball Coaches
title_fullStr The Influence of Gender, Race and Intersectionality on Stress in Division I Head Basketball Coaches
title_full_unstemmed The Influence of Gender, Race and Intersectionality on Stress in Division I Head Basketball Coaches
title_sort influence of gender, race and intersectionality on stress in division i head basketball coaches
publishDate 2019
url http://hdl.handle.net/2286/R.I.53927
_version_ 1719184175248965632