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Three team and organisational culture myths and their consequences for sport psychology research and practice

Authors :
Martin Littlewood
David M. Richardson
Mark Nesti
Noora J. Ronkainen
Michael McDougall
Publication Year :
2020
Publisher :
Routledge, 2020.

Abstract

In this article, three prevailing myths about team and organisational culture – an increasingly popular topic in applied sport psychology research and practice – are identified, reviewed and challenged. These are; that culture is characterised only by what is shared, that culture is a variable and therefore something that a particular group has, and that culture change involves moving from the old culture to an entirely new one. We present a challenge to each myth through the introduction of alternative theoretical and empirical material and discuss the implications for sport psychology research and practice. The intent of this endeavour is to stimulate debate on how to best conceptualise and study culture. More broadly, we aim to encourage sport psychologists to consider team and organisational culture in new and/or varied ways, beyond current conceptualisations of consensus, clarity, integration and as a management tool to facilitate operational excellence and on-field athletic success. peerReviewed

Details

Language :
English
Database :
OpenAIRE
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....509d36eb69eec94ecc6431b6c1c297fa