Transcript Document
Personal Development Health
and Physical Education
HSC Enrichment Day
2014
Core 2
Factors Affecting Performance
Presentation Overview
Focus Question
Student Learn To
Student Learn About
Explain how an elite athlete uses
psychology to improve
performance in competition
• Psychological strategies to
enhance motivation and
manage anxiety
- Concentration/attention skills
(focusing)
- Mental
rehearsal/visualisation/
imagery
- Relaxation techniques
- Goal setting
• Research case studies of
athletes from different sports
and ascertain the nature of
their motivation and the
psychological strategies they
employ
Explain how nutritional
supplementation affects the
performance of athletes
• Supplementation
- Vitamins/minerals
- Protein
- Caffeine
- Creatine products
• Critically analyse the
evidence for and against
supplementation for
improved performance
Explain how characteristics of
the learner affect the acquisition
of skill
• Characteristics of the learner
- Personality
- Heredity
- Confidence
- Prior experience
- Ability
• Describe how the
characteristics of the learner
can influence skill acquisition
and the performance of skills
Psychological Strategies
Concentration/attention skills (focusing)
Mental rehearsal/visualisation/imagery
Mental rehearsal/visualisation is
the technique of picturing the
performance or skill before the
execution
Increases mind’s
familiarity with desired
motion
Concentration/attention skills is
the ability to focus on the task at
hand
Encourages
athlete to adapt
to changing
situations and
block out
irrelevant stimuli
Improves
concentration,
achieves optimal
arousal, clears mind,
provides additional
practice
Must maintain
uninterrupted
connection with the
task
Psychological Strategies
Relaxation Techniques
Goal Setting
Goal setting provides an athlete
with reason to persevere with
training.
Relaxation includes techniques that
assist in controlling high levels of
arousal
Decreases
respiration rate,
heart rate and
blood pressure
Improves concentration and
increases motivation
Includes
progressive
muscular
relaxation,
meditation,
centred breathing
Goals can be
short or long
term,
behavioural
or
performance
focused
Provides focus, gives
direction, motivates and
redirects focus if lost
Case Studies
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=0V5ZzXbWuq8&feature=related Johnny Wilkinson
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=YNRQYT8IQDQ&feature=related Michael Jordan
Athlete
Psychological
strategies
utilised
How might it
improve
performance?
Why is this the
case?
Johnny Wilkinson
(Rugby Union)
Michael Jordan
(Basketball)
Activity 1.
Supplementation
Vitamins
Case For
Case Against
Supplementation is only required when an
athlete is:
Undergoing long-term weight loss
Intake of excessive quantities of vitamins
is not necessary and is potentially
dangerous
Travelling to countries with different food
choices
Excessive amounts of Vitamin A and D
contribute to joint pain, headaches,
nausea, fatigue and reduced appetite
Have a pre-existing vitamin or mineral
deficiency which cannot be corrected
through diet
Have a heavy competition schedule that
interferes with normal eating
Super-supplementation DOES NOT
improve performance
Supplementation
Minerals
Iron
Case For
Helps deliver oxygen to the working
muscles and enhances adaptation to
endurance training
Case Against
Supplementation is generally deemed
unnecessary because diet can provide
adequate levels required.
Lack of iron impairs aerobic capacity
Calcium
Case For
Inadequate consumption can weaken
bones, increase the risk of stress
fractures and inhibit proper muscle
functioning, particularly in high impact
sports involving running or jumping.
Under-consumption of calcium can lead
to osteoporosis.
Calcium absorption diminishes with age.
Female athletes have a higher needs and
usually fall short of adequate intake.
Case Against
Supplementation is generally deemed
unnecessary because diet can provide
adequate levels required.
Supplementation
Protein
Case For
Endurance athletes in training require
extra protein to cover a small proportion
of energy costs of their training and to
assist in the repair and recovery process.
NOTE: Research does not support the idea
that athletes require massive amounts of
protein in their diet.
Case Against
Increase calcium excretion in urine and
increase the risk of osteoporosis.
Decrease the intake of vitamins and
minerals.
Protein cannot be stored like CHO and
the processing and filtration of additional
urea can interfere with kidney function
Increase the risk of certain cancers
Supplementation
Caffeine
Case For
Enhances endurance performance
because it promotes an increase in the
utilisation of fat as an exercise fuel and
‘spares’ the use of limited muscle
stores of glycogen.
Case Against
Caffeine-containing drinks have a
diuretic effect cause an athlete to
become dehydrated.
Impairment or alteration of fine motor
control and technique, over-arousal
(interfering with recovery and sleep
patterns).
Excessive caffeine intake can lead to a
fast heart rate, excessive urination,
nausea, vomiting, restlessness, anxiety,
depression, tremors, and difficulty
sleeping.
Supplementation
Creatine Products
Case For
Case Against
Accelerates gains in muscle size and
strength.
Creatine users may be more
susceptible to cramps, muscle
spasms and even pulled muscles.
There is a 5-8% uptake in anaerobic
capacity, especially when performing
repeated bouts of high-intensity
exercise for 6-60 seconds.
Prior creatine loading enhances
glycogen storage and CHO loading in
a trained muscle
Can increase creatine storage by up
25% and in some athletes 50%.
A transient increase in body weight
during the initial loading week (water).
This consistently disappeared during
the following 7 days.
Extended Response
“Supplementation of an athlete’s diet can mean the difference
between winning and losing”
Vitamins
Minerals
Protein
Caffeine
Creatine
Activity 3.
Characteristics of the Learner
CHEAP!!!!!!!
Personality
Confidence
•A set of ideas that
influence a person’s
behaviour or motivation.
There are 4 broad types
of personalities
• The belief in oneself and
their ability to complete a
skill
Heredity
Ability
• An athlete may be
inherently gifted
through hereditary
traits and a
culmination of the
above factors
• Refers to the genetic
characteristics we
inherit from our
parents
Prior Experience
• Previous experiences
practicing new skills or
sports
1 Minute Madness
http://www.online-stopwatch.com/countdown-clock/full-screen/
List hereditary factors that may
influence an athlete’s rate of skill
acquisition and performance
Activity 4.
Think, Pair, Share
Answers
Characteristic
How might it influence?
Why might it influence?
Confidence
- Loss of interest in learning and practising the
skill.
- Increased ability to focus on the task.
- Confidence is the belief in oneself and their
ability.
- It influences motivation, concentration and self
esteem.
Heredity
- Gender may make the athlete more suited
physiologically to a specific sport.
- Somatotypes may limit an athlete’s
performance in a particular sport e.g.
endomorph in gymnastics.
- Testosterone influences strength and males
have higher levels of it.
- Body types such as the endomorph have a
shape and muscle mass not conducive to
gymnastics.
Prior Experience
- Transfer of skills from a previous sport make it
easier to grasp a new one e.g.Tennis and
squash.
- Incorrect technique may be developed.
- When similar skills are required, the neural
pathways in the brain have already been
established for the skill.
- The pathways are difficult to recreate once
learned.
Ability
- Natural coordination allows athlete to excel in
hand eye sports e.g. ball sports.
- Problem solving skills may hinder game
performance.
- Ability encompasses confidence, hereditary
factors, experience and personality.
- Each of the factors influence the rate of
learning and the athlete’s motivation.
Personality
- The eagle may persist with learning a new skill
through to mastery.
- The peacock may talk about practising but
never get around to doing it.
- Eagles are driven, have high energy and are
often highly motivated.
- Peacocks are enthusiastic and good
communicators, but often talk about things
without doing them.
Activity 5.
All the best for the HSC…