10. Self-confidence and its impact on performance and participation and in raising self-esteem
- Created by: Amy Parkinson
- Created on: 19-04-15 14:53
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- Self-confidence and its impact on performance and participation and in raising self-esteem
- Self-confidence
- Self-esteem refers to a consistent degree of confidence that a person displays across a wide range of situations
- Self-confidence describes a general disposition which is both stable and global
- It influences motivation and determined the decision to participate in a chosen physical activity
- BANDURA
- As participants become competent in specific skills they develop a positive self-belief that they can excel in a particular skill
- A person who has acquired this self-belief is said to have high self-efficacy
- Self-efficacy
- This is a specific type of self confidence
- Relates to a person's perception of their ability
- It tends to be unstable and changeable
- BANDURA
- People with high self-efficacy tend to adopt approach behaviour
- Those with high self-efficacy also tend to attribute success to internal factors
- These attributions increase confidence and increase expectation of future success
- People with low self-efficacy tend to adopt avoidance behaviour
- Those with low self-efficacy tend to attribute success to external factors and failure to internal factors
- These attributions reduce expectation of future success and induce learned helplessness
- The level of self-efficacy determines efficacy expectations, which directly influence the choice and commitment an individual makes regarding sporting activities
- Self-efficacy theory
- Efficacy expectations can be change by an input of 4 types of information
- By applying these 4 sub-process the coach can turn negative efficacy expectations amongst performer into positive ones and therefore increase self-efficacy
- 1. Performance accomplishment: reminders of past accomplishments increases self-efficacy as its based on personal mastery experiences
- 2. Vicarious experiences: Watching others of equal ability perform the skill successfully develops confidence
- 3. Verbal persuasion: Positive talk attempts to increase self-belief and reassure the performer
- 4. Control of arousal: The evaluation the performer makes of their internal feelings and physiological state
- High self-efficacy is essential at the elite stage of performance
- High self-efficacy is equally important amongst those pursuing a health, active lifestyle at a recreational level
- DISHMAN ET AL
- The degree of self-efficacy is the major motivating factor that encourages engagement in fitness activites
- McAULEY
- If people can develop high self-efficacy expectations in relation to exercise programmes, they are more likely to persist in a healthy lifestyle by taking up physical activity
- Self-confidence
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