Evans-Fitzgerald2017
Evans-Fitzgerald2017 | |
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BibType | ARTICLE |
Key | Evans-Fitzgerald2017 |
Author(s) | Bryn Evans, Richard Fitzgerald |
Title | ‘You Gotta See Both at the Same Time’: Visually Analyzing Player Performances in Basketball Coaching |
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Tag(s) | EMCA, Ethnomethodology, Conversation Analysis, Membership Categorization Analysis, Multimodal interaction, Visual perception, Instruction, Correction |
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Year | 2017 |
Language | English |
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Journal | Human Studies |
Volume | 40 |
Number | 1 |
Pages | 121–144 |
URL | Link |
DOI | 10.1007/s10746-016-9415-3 |
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Abstract
Developing novices’ proficiency in skilful activities is central to the reproduction of human societies. The interactional practices through which instruction is accomplished have provided a rich focus for ethnomethodological and conversation analytic studies examining classroom settings, and, more recently, non-classroom environments of instruction in practical and manual skills. This paper examines the work of instruction in basketball training and in particular the correction of player performances, which are a ubiquitous and central feature of instruction in basketball training sessions. A central part of this instructional action relies on the coach observing training activities to determine players’ competencies and to extract relevant correctables from the players’ embodied displays, which are in turn embedded within complex arrangements of rapidly moving bodies situated in material environments. In this paper we examine the visual-analytic work involved in both organizing and observing a basketball training activity, demonstrating the sequential layering of multiple membership categorization devices drawn upon in producing and recognizing actions in this setting. We argue that the coach deploys spatial orientations which function analogously to membership categorization devices, with players’ bodily positions relative to one another and the material structure of the surround generating category-like sets of rights, responsibilities, and sequential relevancies. As we demonstrate, these orientations provide crucial resources for the identification of players’ errors and thereby for the organization of instruction in interaction in this setting.
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