Sport is a creative endeavour. It is simultaneously complex and simple, it forces participants to actualise tactics from training sessions and, ultimately, create opportunities for success. Contrastingly, many aspects of sport are quite measurable. Statistics and probabilities have sport scholars leaning heavily to quantitative research as opposed to qualitative. Sport is arguably both a science and an art, but related research is hardly reflective of this. The purpose of this chapter is to evidence and discuss the creative ways in which sport has been studied qualitatively. We first consider digital methods, including the use of social media and smartphone applications as ways to collect meaningful data. Next, we present design and artbase...
The aim of this research was to examine: (1) the nature of scientific thought in sport science (elit...
Sport research should systematically advance knowledge about the discipline and thus be relevant to ...
In this article we draw on our varied experiences of conducting feminist sport and leisure scholarsh...
Despite a growing interest in the sociology of the body, there has to date been a lack of scholarly ...
This research paper centres on a pilot study where a/r/tography, an arts based methodology was imple...
To understand and more creatively capture the social world, visual methods have increasingly become ...
The multidimensional concept of creativity has a much wider scope of application than disclosed by p...
The appeal of an embodied approach to the study of sport and movement cultures is in its accommodati...
This research paper centres on a pilot study where a/r/tography, an arts-basedmethodology, was imple...
When investigating the diverse, complex and changing contemporary field of sport, we recognize there...
Purpose: The purpose of this chapter is to assess the social significance of digital technologies fo...
How best to summarise the professional work of sport scientists? What if we were to view them as art...
This resource is part of "Research methods" module. This module is designed primarily for students t...
Mixed methods studies are been increasingly applied to a diversity of fields. In this paper, we disc...
We conducted a qualitative study involving twelve expert sports coaches to explore and compare the r...
The aim of this research was to examine: (1) the nature of scientific thought in sport science (elit...
Sport research should systematically advance knowledge about the discipline and thus be relevant to ...
In this article we draw on our varied experiences of conducting feminist sport and leisure scholarsh...
Despite a growing interest in the sociology of the body, there has to date been a lack of scholarly ...
This research paper centres on a pilot study where a/r/tography, an arts based methodology was imple...
To understand and more creatively capture the social world, visual methods have increasingly become ...
The multidimensional concept of creativity has a much wider scope of application than disclosed by p...
The appeal of an embodied approach to the study of sport and movement cultures is in its accommodati...
This research paper centres on a pilot study where a/r/tography, an arts-basedmethodology, was imple...
When investigating the diverse, complex and changing contemporary field of sport, we recognize there...
Purpose: The purpose of this chapter is to assess the social significance of digital technologies fo...
How best to summarise the professional work of sport scientists? What if we were to view them as art...
This resource is part of "Research methods" module. This module is designed primarily for students t...
Mixed methods studies are been increasingly applied to a diversity of fields. In this paper, we disc...
We conducted a qualitative study involving twelve expert sports coaches to explore and compare the r...
The aim of this research was to examine: (1) the nature of scientific thought in sport science (elit...
Sport research should systematically advance knowledge about the discipline and thus be relevant to ...
In this article we draw on our varied experiences of conducting feminist sport and leisure scholarsh...