| Literature DB >> 33868134 |
Meredith Flaherty1, Michael Sagas1.
Abstract
To examine the impact of the relationship between agency and structure on sustained participation in youth sport, semi-structured interviews were conducted with male college soccer players. The participants' accounts (N = 20) of their youth careers were analyzed through the lens of Structuration Theory (ST) framed in a constructivist paradigm. ST supports the significance of the recursive relationship between agent and structure in-context in the co-construction of experiences, and provides a framework for analyzing effects of compounding experiences gained across time and space as they influence sport continuation. Clarity of expectations imposed in-context and the athlete's perceived impact on the structure evidenced, through deductive thematic analysis, as the most salient determinants of the perceived valence of the youth sport environment. The agent's perceived holding of authoritative resources across time and contexts was a critical dimension of the participants' continuation in youth sport, substantiating ST as a theoretical lens, situated in a constructivist paradigm, that might add depth to understanding patterns in participation and attrition.Entities:
Keywords: Structuration Theory; agency; attrition; participation; resources; structure; youth sport
Year: 2021 PMID: 33868134 PMCID: PMC8047073 DOI: 10.3389/fpsyg.2021.660080
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Psychol ISSN: 1664-1078
Exemplar data segments characterizing the patterns in the Individual Impact on Environment theme.
| Impact on Play | Jay: “I felt that I was better than the kids and I felt that I was here, at the big-time club and I can actually play. I was good at it and that is what made me work hard and made me feel in my mind that I was better than some of the kids who were playing… So, being good, it made me…I liked it.” |
| Oliver: “In basketball I felt like I wasn't as big a part of the game, there wasn't as much meaning, just running back and forth and throwing the ball. With soccer, I could get the ball, I could score, I could pass, I could do all this stuff. I enjoyed it more.” | |
| Ryan: “In football I wasn't like a quarterback, so I wasn't leading the team or touching it all the time. I felt like I didn't have as much of an impact, so I just didn't like it.” | |
| Willis: “There would be games where we wouldn't have been in the game if I wasn't in goal. You can tell when everything is really easy for you, when the shots are easy, play is really easy. It was really easy for me. The shots were not challenging, the training was not challenging, the games were not challenging. I could do what I want.” | |
| Impact on Structure | Domingo: “We just understood one another and if I would disagree with him, we would argue. It wasn't like a brotherly relationship because he was older than me but we understood there was respect there so I was never going to state something that was out of line to him but I would voice my opinion and we just understood each other. In my mind I could tell him what I think. He understands that I am a good player, I can do both things and I won't go against what he says. I just might not agree with it.” |
| Edwin: “One of the reasons I left was the head coach was just a jerk. He would promise playtime to people and then bench them. He would tell them they were doing well and then not play them. He played his favorites game hard. Those players who stuck around from the [former team] were put on a pedestal and it was hard to knock them off.” | |
| Willis: “I felt like we were isolated because we weren't in the group. But I knew I could play with those kids. So that sucked that I didn't. I felt like I wasn't getting the opportunity I deserved. The coaches would focus on the best team, the A team.” | |
| Oscar: “So, it was a way to make me step up into a leadership role and take on the responsibility. It was, all right, I am an example, so now I have to play well, I have to push myself harder so that everyone else knows that if I am trying harder, then they should be trying harder too. So, I think I was definitely an impact player on that team. I think that by the time I was a junior and a senior I was one of 2 or 3 guys on the team who the coaches really looked to as the leaders on the team.” | |
Exemplar data segments characterizing the patterns in the Environmental Structure theme.
| Coach Demands | Damon: “The other thing was their coaching style was harsh like my old coach, but they didn't really care as much individually. I wasn't getting as much attention and I wasn't used to that and I didn't know how to deal with not getting the attention I had gotten since I was 11. I could deal with the harsh coaching when I was getting the attention before but now that it was like that, without it, I was getting pissed off.” |
| Oscar: “He wasn't afraid to get into you. He was always really clear about what he expected from everyone. If you weren't meeting it, he would tell you and would tell you how to fix it. He would not just say, ‘you’re not doing this, do it better'. He would say, ‘this is what you need to do now I will show you how to do it’. ‘If this happens, you need to do this, you need to be thinking about this’.” | |
| Willis: “He knew what to say and how to say it. Sometimes you don't say something to a player, you allow him to figure it out on his own because you know he can. Whereas other times they have done the same thing several times and you say hey, do this or don't do that. During games and in practice, he knew when to let us work it out as a team internally and when to voice his opinion. I think he balanced that really well.” | |
| Ryan: “Screaming. Whenever he was mad, say we had played a bad half, we would go into the locker room and we would know it was coming. He would come in and knock over the water, punch a locker and scream at us. If it was going good, he would relax but most of the time he was intense. It was never, hey you messed that up, next time you need to do this. It was more like, you seriously messed this up, what are you doing? We have worked on this before, how can you not get it?” | |
| Coach Expectations | Ira: “Easy, they were really clear on what they wanted, where some other coaches were more emotional rather than clearly laying out what they want. I clearly knew the system, what he was looking for, everyone knew their roles, style of play. All really level-headed, nothing ever got to him really, ever.” |
| Brian: “The new training was good, it got much more intense. This new coach, who I am still really close to today, he demanded a lot more, which was good. It wasn't too big of a jump, but you could tell that the demands he made of some kids was a lot, some kids couldn't handle it and some kids could. He was the guy who really pushed me, he was the first person who I met in soccer who was going to really be hard on me, wouldn't let things slip. If he wanted me to do something different, he would let me know, real stern. There were a few times in practice where I would cry.” | |
| Damon: “If it was a big game, he would be positive, not on your back. But if it was a lesser team and we were messing up, he would get really pissed off, shouting and stuff. We played a bunch of big games, State cups and national games and those games it was like nothing negative. Because I think he didn't want us to crack under pressure. But when it came to a bad team we were playing and we started messing around he would get really pissed off.” | |
| Ryan: “I was probably the closest one to him because again I was kind of like the leader on that team. If he ever needed anything, he would come to me and say make sure this gets changed on the team, or if someone needed to change their attitude, he would come to me and tell me to talk to this kid and help him out.” | |