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What about us? We have careers too! The career experiences of Australian sport scientists

journal contribution
posted on 2014-01-01, 00:00 authored by Rebecca York, Paul Gastin, Andrew DawsonAndrew Dawson
he professionalisation of sport has provided career opportunities for athletes, coaches and sport scientists alike. The career development literature for athletes is well established and the empirical career literature for coaches is growing, but little is known about the careers of sport scientists. The purpose of this investigation was to explore and examine the career experiences of Australian sport scientists. In-depth interviews were conducted with six practicing Australian sport scientists at different career stages. Several themes emerged from the data on careers of sport scientists that are unique to sport. Sport scientists identify strongly with their role in sport success and yet they receive little recognition for what they do. All participants experienced career dissonance as they transitioned from practitioner to another career such as academia or sport management. Feelings of loss were identified by participants as their applied work diminished when they moved away from their early career service roles. All six participants believed that in order to advance their career in sport their options were moving overseas, working in academia, or retraining for a career in sports management. It is recommended that sport scientists be provided with better career education and more structured professional development.

History

Journal

International journal of sports science and coaching

Volume

9

Pagination

1437-1456

Location

Hockley, England

ISSN

1747-9541

eISSN

2048-397X

Language

English

Publication classification

C Journal article, C1 Refereed article in a scholarly journal

Copyright notice

2014, Multi-Science Publishing

Issue

6

Publisher

Multi-Science Publishing Co. Ltd.