Coaching is inherently a reflective process. Constructivist theories of learning are well established and greatly inform thinking on coaching. The coaching practitioner literature promotes activities and offers many tools to aid reflection. While psychology provides some very pertinent theory, a review of practitioner literature finds little to help coaches understand how reflection actually works. This paper proposes a simple four-cornered model of the mechanism of reflection in coaching. The outcomes are illustrated in application to first hand accounts of reflection in a coaching context. This model is intended to have distinct practical utility, while being embedded in underlying theory
Although there has been considerable growth in coaching as a field of practice, there is much concer...
This autoethnographic project extends the work of Argyris and Schön (1974); Houchens (2008); Houchen...
The focus of this chapter is upon workplace coaching, one of the deepest forms of communication wher...
Introduction Reflective practice has become increasingly popular as a framework for professional le...
Many coaches develop their skills and expertise through their experiences and by watching other coac...
This chapter examines the practice of a case study UKCC Level 4 qualified coach and coach educator i...
The purpose of the present study was to describe the process of how youth team sport coaches develop...
Introduction: Reflection is established as important in coaching and coach development, however, no ...
Reflection is a contested but taken-for-granted concept, privileged in the vocabulary of coaches and...
Reflection and reflective practice is seen as an established part of coaching and coach education pr...
Reflection is now advocated by coach education programmes around the world as a framework for coache...
A(nother) conceptual model for coach learning: revisiting and revising Schön’s ‘reflective practitio...
Beginner coaches are thought to have less than three years of experience whereby they lack a sense ...
The purpose of this paper was to gain insight into how coaches problematized their coaching practice...
The aim of the research reported in this paper was to discover if and how transformative learning th...
Although there has been considerable growth in coaching as a field of practice, there is much concer...
This autoethnographic project extends the work of Argyris and Schön (1974); Houchens (2008); Houchen...
The focus of this chapter is upon workplace coaching, one of the deepest forms of communication wher...
Introduction Reflective practice has become increasingly popular as a framework for professional le...
Many coaches develop their skills and expertise through their experiences and by watching other coac...
This chapter examines the practice of a case study UKCC Level 4 qualified coach and coach educator i...
The purpose of the present study was to describe the process of how youth team sport coaches develop...
Introduction: Reflection is established as important in coaching and coach development, however, no ...
Reflection is a contested but taken-for-granted concept, privileged in the vocabulary of coaches and...
Reflection and reflective practice is seen as an established part of coaching and coach education pr...
Reflection is now advocated by coach education programmes around the world as a framework for coache...
A(nother) conceptual model for coach learning: revisiting and revising Schön’s ‘reflective practitio...
Beginner coaches are thought to have less than three years of experience whereby they lack a sense ...
The purpose of this paper was to gain insight into how coaches problematized their coaching practice...
The aim of the research reported in this paper was to discover if and how transformative learning th...
Although there has been considerable growth in coaching as a field of practice, there is much concer...
This autoethnographic project extends the work of Argyris and Schön (1974); Houchens (2008); Houchen...
The focus of this chapter is upon workplace coaching, one of the deepest forms of communication wher...