Open Access
Positive Youth Development Through Sport
이옥선
- Vol. 19, Iss: 2, pp 273-274
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The article was published on 2012-06-01 and is currently open access. It has received 280 citations till now. The article focuses on the topics: Positive Youth Development.read more
Citations
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Journal ArticleDOI
Youth Sports: What Counts as “Positive Development?”
TL;DR: There is a widespread belief that sport participation inevitably contributes to youth development because sport's assumed essential goodness and purity is passed on to those who partake in it as mentioned in this paper. But sport participation does not always contribute to the development of children.
Journal ArticleDOI
A grounded theory of positive youth development through sport based on results from a qualitative meta-study.
Nicholas L. Holt,Kacey C. Neely,Linda Slater,Martin Camiré,Jean Côté,Jessica Fraser-Thomas,Dany J. MacDonald,Leisha Strachan,Katherine A. Tamminen +8 more
TL;DR: A model that distinguishes between implicit and explicit processes to PYD is presented and results of an inductive meta-data analysis produced three categories: PYD climate, life skills program focus, and PYD outcomes.
OtherDOI
Positive Youth Development Through Sport
TL;DR: Holt et al. as discussed by the authors proposed an integrated model of positive youth development through sport and found that children's positive and negative experiences in sport were associated with their positive development and negative experience in sport.
Journal ArticleDOI
Physical activity: an underestimated investment in human capital?
TL;DR: A novel framework for understanding the relationships between physical activity and different aspects of human development is introduced, proposing that the outcomes of physical activity can be framed as differential 'capitals' that represent investments in domain-specific assets.
Journal ArticleDOI
Parenting in youth sport: A position paper on parenting expertise.
TL;DR: In this article, the authors proposed that sport parenting expertise is dependent on the degree to which parents demonstrate a range of competencies; namely, parents, (a) select appropriate sporting opportunities and provide necessary types of support, (b) understand and apply appropriate parenting styles, (c) manage the emotional demands of competitions, (d) foster healthy relationships with significant others, (e) manage organizational and developmental demands associated with sport participation, and (f) adapt their involvement to different stages of their child's athletic career.
References
More filters
Journal ArticleDOI
Youth Sports: What Counts as “Positive Development?”
TL;DR: There is a widespread belief that sport participation inevitably contributes to youth development because sport's assumed essential goodness and purity is passed on to those who partake in it as mentioned in this paper. But sport participation does not always contribute to the development of children.
Journal ArticleDOI
A grounded theory of positive youth development through sport based on results from a qualitative meta-study.
Nicholas L. Holt,Kacey C. Neely,Linda Slater,Martin Camiré,Jean Côté,Jessica Fraser-Thomas,Dany J. MacDonald,Leisha Strachan,Katherine A. Tamminen +8 more
TL;DR: A model that distinguishes between implicit and explicit processes to PYD is presented and results of an inductive meta-data analysis produced three categories: PYD climate, life skills program focus, and PYD outcomes.
OtherDOI
Positive Youth Development Through Sport
TL;DR: Holt et al. as discussed by the authors proposed an integrated model of positive youth development through sport and found that children's positive and negative experiences in sport were associated with their positive development and negative experience in sport.
Journal ArticleDOI
Physical activity: an underestimated investment in human capital?
TL;DR: A novel framework for understanding the relationships between physical activity and different aspects of human development is introduced, proposing that the outcomes of physical activity can be framed as differential 'capitals' that represent investments in domain-specific assets.
Journal ArticleDOI
Parenting in youth sport: A position paper on parenting expertise.
TL;DR: In this article, the authors proposed that sport parenting expertise is dependent on the degree to which parents demonstrate a range of competencies; namely, parents, (a) select appropriate sporting opportunities and provide necessary types of support, (b) understand and apply appropriate parenting styles, (c) manage the emotional demands of competitions, (d) foster healthy relationships with significant others, (e) manage organizational and developmental demands associated with sport participation, and (f) adapt their involvement to different stages of their child's athletic career.