Skip to main content

Store

Adulteration of Children’s Sports: Waning Health and Well-Being in the Age of Organized Play

$76.50

Description

The Adulteration of Children’s Sports explores current behavioral and physiological research about how children’s organized sport has changed; how adults’ goals and needs are at the heart of those changes; and the consequences of those changes on children’s enjoyment of sport and on their autonomy, creativity, and moral reasoning outside of sport. Adult introduction of early competition, extrinsic rewards, early sport specialization, and year-round participation has thwarted children’s intrinsic motivation and contributed to children’s attrition from sport. Kristi Erdal explores concerns about the future of sport itself, as adult-mediated selection practices whittle down young athletes earlier on shakier criteria. Parents’ and coaches’ complicity in these practices, however, is based on intermediaries poorly interpreting (or ignoring) the research literature. Thus, the final chapters of this book are about translating the research into applied ideas for change. Erdal provides an essential introduction to evidence-based research about children’s health and well-being in sport and debunks myths along the way. Adults built the problems compiled in this text. We can dismantle them as well.

Author: Erdal, Kristi

Topic: Psychology
Media: Book
ISBN: 1498571514
Language: English
Pages: 136

Additional information

Weight 1.05 lbs
Dimensions 9.1 × 6.2 × 0.7 in

Reviews

There are no reviews yet.

Be the first to review “Adulteration of Children’s Sports: Waning Health and Well-Being in the Age of Organized Play”