Conclusion : Ethics in youth sport : Policy and pedagogical applications
- Authors: Light, Richard , Harvey, Stephen
- Date: 2013
- Type: Text , Book chapter
- Relation: Ethics in youth sport : Policy and pedagogical applications Conclusions p. 203-210
- Full Text: false
- Reviewed:
- Description: The chapters in this volume are written on a range of topics related to the ethical practice of youth sport from different perspectives, and by authors from different cultural settings, but there are some clear common themes that emerge from them. They all suggest that sport has great potential as a medium for fostering children's positive social, moral and ethical development, but confirm previous warnings that this development is not automatically achieved by mere engagement in sport (Siedentop et al. 2004). Many chapters in this book remind us of the countless recurrences of negative issues in youth sport, such as cheating, negative coaching, physical, sexual and emotional abuse, and player/spectator violence. These practices present a constant threat to the ethical practice of youth sport and we must acknowledge that, in part, these may be attributable to an adult-centric verison of youth sport with an overemphasis on winning, particularly by over-zealous adults such as coaches and parents.
Ethics in youth sport : Policy and pedagogical applications
- Authors: Harvey, Stephen , Light, Richard
- Date: 2013
- Type: Text , Book
- Relation: Routledge studies in physical education and youth sport
- Full Text: false
- Reviewed:
- Description: The influence of professional, adult sport on youth sport is now a global concern. Children are involved in high-stakes competitive sport at national and international levels at an increasingly young age. In addition, the use of sport as a medium for positive youth development by governments and within the community has fuelled ambitious targets for young people's participation in sport at all levels. In this important study of ethical issues in and around youth sport, leading international experts argue for the development of strong ethical codes for the conduct of youth sport, and for effective policy and pedagogical applications to ensure that the positive benefits of sport are optimized and the negative aspects diminished.
Introduction : Ethics in youth sport : Policy and pedagogical applications
- Authors: Light, Richard , Harvey, Stephen
- Date: 2013
- Type: Text , Book chapter
- Relation: Ethics in youth sport : Policy and pedagogical applications Introduction p. 1-8
- Full Text: false
- Reviewed:
- Description: Sport as we know it today finds its origins in nineteenth-century schools of the middle classes of England, where it was explicitly articulated as a medium for the socio-moral development of the future leaders of society (Mangan 1982). Despite massive social and economic changes since then, the idea of using sport as a means of developing 'character' and other positive social learning, such as learning to work in a team, has formed an enduring justification for the provision of sport for young people in schools and in sports clubs, in both western and non-western settings (see, for example, Sherington 1983; Light 2000). Despite a more recent and popular view of sport as a useful means of combating lifestyle diseases such as obesity (see, for example, Gard and Wright 2009), and growing awareness of how children's and youth sport can be corrupted by the influence of elite-level professional sport, assumptions about positive socio-moral learning occuring for young people through playing sport have proven to be remarkable resilient (see, for example, Holt 2009).