TY - JOUR
T1 - A holistic ecological approach to sport and study: The case of an athlete friendly university in Denmark
AU - Henriksen, Kristoffer
AU - Storm, Louise Kamuk
AU - Küttel, Andreas
AU - Linnér, Lukas
AU - Stambulova, Natalia
PY - 2020/3
Y1 - 2020/3
N2 - Objectives: Dual career development environments (DCDEs) exist to support student-athletes in their endeavours
to combine sport with education or work. Such environments are likely to vary in their structure, processes,
philosophy, and degree of efficiency. With the overall aim of applying the holistic ecological approach
(Henriksen, Stambulova & Roessler, 2010) to the study of DCDEs, the objectives of the present study are: (a) to
provide a holistic description of a Danish athlete-friendly university as a DCDE, and (b) to investigate the factors
influencing the environment’s effectiveness.
Methodology: Based on two working models, the study takes a case study approach and a real-time perspective
and uses multiple sources of data (interviews, observations, and documents).
Results: Two empirical models summarize the findings and portray the DCDE as: (1) centred on a dual career
(DC) support team that serves to support communication and coordination between the sport, study, and private
domains; (2) focused on providing individual solutions for each athlete; (3) teaching student-athletes to plan,
prioritize, communicate, and take responsibility for the balance in their DC endeavour; and (4) deeply rooted in
a shared DC philosophy that puts sport first and recognizes that the student-athletes must be seen as whole
persons.
Conclusion: Researcher-practitioners in the DC context are encouraged to focus not only on the challenges and
coping strategies of the individual student-athletes but to understand and (if necessary) optimize the entire
environment around them.
AB - Objectives: Dual career development environments (DCDEs) exist to support student-athletes in their endeavours
to combine sport with education or work. Such environments are likely to vary in their structure, processes,
philosophy, and degree of efficiency. With the overall aim of applying the holistic ecological approach
(Henriksen, Stambulova & Roessler, 2010) to the study of DCDEs, the objectives of the present study are: (a) to
provide a holistic description of a Danish athlete-friendly university as a DCDE, and (b) to investigate the factors
influencing the environment’s effectiveness.
Methodology: Based on two working models, the study takes a case study approach and a real-time perspective
and uses multiple sources of data (interviews, observations, and documents).
Results: Two empirical models summarize the findings and portray the DCDE as: (1) centred on a dual career
(DC) support team that serves to support communication and coordination between the sport, study, and private
domains; (2) focused on providing individual solutions for each athlete; (3) teaching student-athletes to plan,
prioritize, communicate, and take responsibility for the balance in their DC endeavour; and (4) deeply rooted in
a shared DC philosophy that puts sport first and recognizes that the student-athletes must be seen as whole
persons.
Conclusion: Researcher-practitioners in the DC context are encouraged to focus not only on the challenges and
coping strategies of the individual student-athletes but to understand and (if necessary) optimize the entire
environment around them.
KW - dual career
KW - environment
KW - elite sport
U2 - 10.1016/j.psychsport.2019.101637
DO - 10.1016/j.psychsport.2019.101637
M3 - Journal article
SN - 1469-0292
VL - 47
JO - Psychology of Sport and Exercise
JF - Psychology of Sport and Exercise
M1 - 101637
ER -