Wayfinding: How Ecological Perspectives of Navigating Dynamic Environments Can Enrich Our Understanding of the Learner and the Learning Process in Sport.

Affordance landscape Ecological dynamics Knowledge of/about Learning design Perception-action coupling Wayfinding

Journal

Sports medicine - open
ISSN: 2199-1170
Titre abrégé: Sports Med Open
Pays: Switzerland
ID NLM: 101662568

Informations de publication

Date de publication:
28 Oct 2020
Historique:
received: 12 05 2020
accepted: 14 10 2020
entrez: 28 10 2020
pubmed: 29 10 2020
medline: 29 10 2020
Statut: epublish

Résumé

Wayfinding is the process of embarking upon a purposeful, intentional, and self-regulated journey that takes an individual from an intended region in one landscape to another. This process is facilitated through an individual's capacity to utilise temporally structured, functional actions embedded within a particular environmental niche. Thus, individuals learn of their performance landscapes by experiencing them through interactions, detecting and exploiting its many features to 'find their way'. In this opinion piece, we argue that these ecological and anthropological conceptualisations of human navigation can, metaphorically, deepen our understanding of the learner and the learning process in sport, viewed through the lens of ecological dynamics. Specifically, we consider sports practitioners as (learning) landscape designers, and learners as wayfinders; individuals who learn to skilfully self-regulate through uncharted fields (composed of emergent problems) within performance landscapes through a deeply embodied and embedded perception-action coupling. We contend that, through this re-configuration of the learner and the learning process in sport, practitioners may better enact learning designs that afford learners exploratory freedoms, learning to perceive and utilise available opportunities for action to skilfully navigate through emergent performance-related problems. We conclude the paper by offering two practical examples in which practitioners have designed practice landscapes that situate learners as wayfinders and the learning process in sport as wayfinding.

Identifiants

pubmed: 33113029
doi: 10.1186/s40798-020-00280-9
pii: 10.1186/s40798-020-00280-9
pmc: PMC7593371
doi:

Types de publication

Journal Article

Langues

eng

Pagination

51

Références

Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A. 2001 Nov 20;98(24):13763-8
pubmed: 11698650
Front Psychol. 2019 Nov 05;10:2378
pubmed: 31749732
Front Psychol. 2019 Sep 13;10:2090
pubmed: 31572271
J Exp Psychol Hum Percept Perform. 1984 Oct;10(5):683-703
pubmed: 6238127
Motor Control. 2008 Jul;12(3):181-209
pubmed: 18698105
Res Q Exerc Sport. 2007 Sep;78(4):384-9
pubmed: 17941543
Front Psychol. 2020 Apr 24;11:654
pubmed: 32390904
Annu Rev Psychol. 2019 Jan 4;70:141-164
pubmed: 30256718
Front Psychol. 2019 Oct 09;10:2213
pubmed: 31649579
Front Psychol. 2017 Jan 09;7:1969
pubmed: 28119638
Sports Med Open. 2019 Feb 11;5(1):6
pubmed: 30742241

Auteurs

Carl T Woods (CT)

Institute for Health and Sport, Victoria University, Melbourne, Australia. carl.woods@vu.edu.au.

James Rudd (J)

Research Institute for Sport and Exercise Sciences, Liverpool John Moores University, Liverpool, UK.

Sam Robertson (S)

Institute for Health and Sport, Victoria University, Melbourne, Australia.

Keith Davids (K)

Sport & Human Performance Research Group, Sheffield Hallam University, Sheffield, UK.

Classifications MeSH