Competitive Performance Effects of Psychological Skill Training for Youth Swimmers
Autor: | Mark A. Chen, Jennifer Meggs |
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Jazyk: | angličtina |
Rok vydání: | 2019 |
Předmět: |
Male
Youth Sports 05 social sciences Applied psychology education Mental toughness Experimental and Cognitive Psychology Convenience sample 030229 sport sciences Athletic Performance 050105 experimental psychology Sensory Systems C800 03 medical and health sciences Skills training 0302 clinical medicine Humans Female 0501 psychology and cognitive sciences Child Psychology Goals Goal setting Swimming Intrapersonal communication |
ISSN: | 0031-5125 |
Popis: | This study assessed the effect of two different psychological methods of skills training—self-talk and goal setting—on the swimming performance of youth swimmers. We allocated a convenience sample of club and county level youth swimmers ( N = 49; Mage = 10.8, SD = 1.25) to one of the three groups: self-talk, goal setting, or a control group engaged in no systematic psychological method of skills training. The groups were balanced in terms of competitive performance ability, age, and gender. Participants in the experimental conditions (self-talk and goal setting) completed a 5-week psychological skills intervention program and were measured on pre- and post-200-m swimming time in competition. After controlling for level of engagement in the program, analysis of covariance revealed a significant omnibus effect ( p = .006, [Formula: see text] = .20) with post hoc pairwise comparisons using magnitude-based statistics demonstrating that goal setting had a small positive effect compared with self-talk ( η2 = .40; ± 0.45). Both self-talk ( η2 = .50; ±0.48) and goal setting ( η2 = .71; ±0.4) showed a small and moderate positive effect, respectively, relative to the control group. A social validation check confirmed that the swimmers found the intervention to be relevant, beneficial, and meaningful for improving performance. Psychological skills training may be effective in improving youth swimming performance; specific mechanisms underlying these benefits need further exploration. |
Databáze: | OpenAIRE |
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