1 / 6

‘ Reflective Practice for Sports Development Professionals: Notes from the Field’ Dr. Marc Keech,

‘ Reflective Practice for Sports Development Professionals: Notes from the Field’ Dr. Marc Keech, Chelsea School, University of Brighton Studying Sports Development: Researching, teaching and writing in the field 25-26th April, 2008 Brunel University, West London. Aim and Context.

neal
Download Presentation

‘ Reflective Practice for Sports Development Professionals: Notes from the Field’ Dr. Marc Keech,

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. ‘Reflective Practice for Sports Development Professionals: Notes from the Field’ Dr. Marc Keech, Chelsea School, University of Brighton Studying Sports Development: Researching, teaching and writing in the field 25-26th April, 2008 Brunel University, West London

  2. Aim and Context • To identify and evaluate key issues which current professionals face in working as sports development professional using reflective practice as a professional tool of learning. • MA Sport Development at the University of Brighton. The course contains a module entitled ‘Reflective Practice for Sport Development Professionals’. • Increasing divergence of sport development professionals and their work.

  3. Reflective Practice • Reflective practice highlights the importance that, to be a ‘highly qualified, adaptable, competent professional’ (Taks, 2003; 97) sports development professionals must ‘continually readdress their skills and abilities through the process of reflective and critically reflective practice’ (Smith and Stewart, 1999: 10). • ‘It should be possible to reflect critically upon the social, political and economic context of practice’ (Edwards, 1999: 75). • ‘Context-based competence’?

  4. Methodological Issues • ‘Dealing with persons, in the ‘real world’, is typically not repeatable, as exactly the same situation rarely recurs. Therefore one cannot readily ‘cancel out’ either what is common or what is different. The central difficulty here lies in identifying the relevant aspects of the situation’ • The ability to analyse personal practice, problem-solving through one’s actions and understanding the ‘application of critical theory to the examination of professional practice’ (Edwards, 1999: 70)

  5. 5 key themes for sports development professionals • The application of reflective practice to professional working environments 2. Strategic Planning, Management and Leadership 3. Equity 4. Responding to Policy in Practice 5. Future of the Profession and what it means to be a Sport Development Professional

  6. Conclusions • Benefits • Advantages • Problems and problem based learning • The possible place of RP in professional development frameworks • ‘The space to discuss wider, generic issues is very limited in the professional world and it has been invaluable to do this. It is so easy to get bogged down with “delivery” and these discussions help to remind me that I am really inspired by the profession in which I work’.

More Related