Expertise in Coach Development: The Need for Clarity
Abstract
:1. The Nature of Coaching
2. Organizational Views
3. The Need for Consistency
4. Aspirations to Expertise
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- Expertise is domain-specific and developed over time. Therefore, coach developers must have extensive and carefully crafted experiences in specific areas, such as learning strategies, that reflect their deep understanding of the area.
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- Experts are able to structure knowledge for easy access. Coach developers must ‘sift and sort’ their vast knowledge into an organisational structure that enables retrieval with little attentional effort.
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- Experts develop routines for simple tasks to free up working memory. Coach developers need to ‘chunk’ information into small units to enable greater use of short-term memory.
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- Experts recognise patterns faster than novices. Coach developers must to recognise key features of emerging situations based on previous experience and solutions, mostly using schemas.
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- Experts take deeper meaning from cues. Expert coach developers need to notice key features and meaningful patterns of information that can be missed or not recognised as important by non-experts.
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- Experts sort problems into categories based on the features of their solution. Experts categorize problems based on deep meaning and an understanding of the area and tend to work backwards from a solution perspective [28].
5. Epistemological Confusion
6. The Challenges for the Coach Developer
7. Creating the Adaptable and Creatively Thinking Coach
8. Adaptability and Creativity Requires Good-Quality Thinking
9. Creating Coach Developers as Critical Consumers of Coaching Knowledge
10. The ‘R-Word’
11. Thematic Discussion
11.1. Why Do We Need/Not Currently Have Clarity?
- An accepted definition of the coach developer;
- Coherent articulation of the role and aims of the coach developer.
11.2. How Will Clarity Help?
- Clarity provides conceptual and practical understanding;
- Clarity enables focus on the key outcome.
11.3. Why Are We Not Drawing on Research in Other Fields?
- Research in other fields is well-established and evidence-informed;
- We need to be more open to new ideas and approaches.
11.4. Why Are We Not Promoting the Benefits of Reflection and Critical Thinking?
- Reflection and critical thinking are essential to developing expertise;
- Reflection and critical thinking require buy-in and practice to be effective.
11.5. Is Simplicity Helping Coaches?
- Coaching and coach development are complex constructs;
- Breaking elements down into simple components does not reflect the complexity of the coaching role.
11.6. What Is an Expert Coach Developer?
- Expertise is hard to attain but often conferred on those who are very good rather than expert;
- We need coach developers who can encourage adaptive expertise in coaches.
12. In Summary
- We need to re-align our coach development systems to ensure clarity at all levels;
- Coach development systems need to be built on pedagogical, macrocognitive and metacognitive skills;
- We need to develop a coherent framework that supports practice rather than being ideologically wedded to one approach;
- We need coach developers to meet the needs of the coaches in the place they are at;
- We aspire to expertise—this is an approach that needs to be adopted by all;
- Research in this area should support a deepened understanding of coach and coach developer expertise to support all of the above.
Author Contributions
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Informed Consent Statement
Data Availability Statement
Conflicts of Interest
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Developmental Approach | Description |
---|---|
Modelling | A demonstration of the skills, usually by an expert, to enable the learner to develop a mental model of the skill. Often includes verbalising the cognitive processes. |
Coaching | Observing the learner and offering challenges, support and feedback |
Scaffolding | Putting supports in place to enable the learner to carry out the task in their ZPD. Scaffolding must be highly personalised, and if done poorly can have a negative effect on the learner emotionally [69]. |
Articulation | The learner separates, verbalises and demonstrates their understanding of the component knowledge, reasoning and thinking processes in a domain |
Reflection | Learners compare their own thought processes and problem solving with that of others, in particular, that of an expert |
Exploration | Giving learners time and space to problem solve on their own, akin to a problem-based learning approach [70], fading supports and self-setting of goals |
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Nash, C.; Ashford, M.; Collins, L. Expertise in Coach Development: The Need for Clarity. Behav. Sci. 2023, 13, 924. https://doi.org/10.3390/bs13110924
Nash C, Ashford M, Collins L. Expertise in Coach Development: The Need for Clarity. Behavioral Sciences. 2023; 13(11):924. https://doi.org/10.3390/bs13110924
Chicago/Turabian StyleNash, Christine, Michael Ashford, and Loel Collins. 2023. "Expertise in Coach Development: The Need for Clarity" Behavioral Sciences 13, no. 11: 924. https://doi.org/10.3390/bs13110924
APA StyleNash, C., Ashford, M., & Collins, L. (2023). Expertise in Coach Development: The Need for Clarity. Behavioral Sciences, 13(11), 924. https://doi.org/10.3390/bs13110924