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Coaching und Supervision

Dieses Buch ist von jemandem geschrieben worden, der selbst nie ein Coaching oder eine Supervision als Dienstleistung angeboten hat und – darüberhinaus – bisher noch nicht einmal ein Coaching oder eine Supervision genossen hat. Die kritische Frage „Haben Sie denn schon überhaupt einmal selbst als personenorientierter Berater gearbeitet?“ mag einigen Praktikern beim Lesen dieses Buches auf der Zunge liegen. Für die Wissenschaft aber ist – und das muss an dieser Stelle ausdrücklich betont werden – die fehlende Praxis der Normalfall. Wissenschaftler beforschen Sekten, ohne selbst einmal eine betrieben oder wenigstens einer angehört zu haben. Sie untersuchen Völker, zu denen sie nicht gehören und die sie häufig nur aus empirischen...

8/30/2018 3:00:36 AM +00:00

Best Lessons of a Chess Coach

An innovative book on game-winning strategy for players at the intermediate level--from a master chess coach. Every truth about chess must be coached in context, and the book's interactive teacher-student dialogue does just that. Weeramantry teaches how to think during a chess game. 300 diagrams.

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Interview JOB INTERVIEW SECRETS FROM AMERICA’S CAREER AND LIFE COACH

Success in interviewing requires a two-pronged approach. You must address the mechanics and mindset—the visible and invisible elements— of interviewing. Many job seekers focus only on the mechanics of interviewing—what’s the “right” answer to this or that question, how do I follow up after the interview, how do I negotiate salary, and so on. Although these “mechanical” elements are important, they are only half of what you need. It’s like trying to walk on one leg—a distinct disadvantage. When you incorporate both the mechanics and the mindset into your interview strategy, you set the stage for significant success—you will be able to run, not walk, to your next career...

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NLP Coaching: An Evidence-Based Approach for Coaches, Leaders and Individuals

This book is the first to look at NLP coaching as an evidence-based discipline. Susie Linder-Pelz describes how NLP coaching works, using examples and case studies to highlight what distinguishes it from other coaching approaches. She briefs readers on the theoretical underpinnings of NLP, and she explains which aspects of NLP can be backed with evidence and which aspects are not yet substantiated. A set of research questions helps coaches understand when and how to use NLP.

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COACH YOURSELF TO SUCCESS

In the past five years, over two thousand coaches have completed the Coach Training Program at Coach University. As the president of Coach University and an experienced coach of ten years, I have had the privilege to work with many of them. In the process, I have found that the most successful coaches have a few key qualities. The most successful coaches are demonstrably caring. Coaching is a people-development profession, not just an information-based one. Given that coaches spend much of their time developing, supporting, and training their clients, caring about their clients and their success and their values is the oil that keeps the coaching process working smoothly....

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UNDERSTANDING SPORTS COACHING THE SOCIAL, CULTURAL AND PEDAGOGICAL FOUNDATIONS OF COACHING PRACTICE

For five years I have been lecturing in a school of physical education (it could equally be described as a department of human movement, exercise science or kinesiology) where I teach a compulsory pedagogy course to approximately 220 undergraduates. The course has not been particularly popular with students, the most common objection being – ‘I’m not going to be a teacher, so why do I have to do pedagogy?’ Over the years I have tried different strategies in an effort to make the course more obviously relevant to students without compromising its educational content....

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Coaching Basketball FOR DUMmIES

We wrote this book for many types of youth volunteer coaches. For first-time coaches looking for some guidance before they step on the court to conduct practices and oversee games. For coaches who’ve been on the sidelines for a season or two and want to gain some more insight on specific areas of the game. For coaches looking to transition from working with younger kids to coaching older, more advanced kids. For veterans of the postseason pizza parties who have spent countless hours at the local basketball courts. And even for coaches who want to manage all star or travel teams....

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Coaching Competencies and Corporate Leadership

At heart, I have always been both a teacher and a student. I have been fortunate to continue to meet a variety of people and have traveled to many interesting places in both capacities over many years. One thing I have found to be true: learning has kept me stimulated, curious, and optimistic about life and its possibilities. Learning takes many forms, but the most powerful is the learning we gain from direct exposure to other people. Whether we know it or not, many of those people to whom we have been exposed have been coaches. Sometimes they are parents or teachers or community leaders. Sometimes they are...

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COACHING FOR EMOTIONAL INTELLIGENCE

WANT TO INVITE YOU to join me in a personal journey of selfexploration and discovery. This is a book about coaching people to develop their emotional intelligence. You cannot approach this topic as a coach without taking a close look at yourself and the life experiences, beliefs, attitudes, assumptions, and personal abilities that have shaped the development of your own emotional intelligence. There is an underlying assumption present in all coaching: that the coach has developed deeper mastery of the knowledge and skills of a topic than the person receiving the coaching. For most managers, this is no problem when dealing with the technical aspects of the job. People get...

8/30/2018 3:00:36 AM +00:00

BEST PRACTICE IN PERFORMANCE COACHING

I must begin by acknowledging my bias. I know Carol well, have experienced her delivery of coaching, and I admire her track record with Richard Branson at Virgin, with the Association for Coaching, and elsewhere. Furthermore it is largely because of all this that she now works with me at Performance Consultants International. It is therefore fairly obvious that I am going to be upbeat about her contribution to the growing coaching library. However, those that know me are aware that I am not inclined to hold back if I don’t like something. To make that more credible I have been looking for something to criticize about this...

8/30/2018 3:00:36 AM +00:00

Football Coaching Strategies_1

In Football Coaching Strategies you'll find 349 detailed diagrams showing a variety of offensive attacks, defensive packages, and special team tactics—accompanied by useful advice from the experts. Best of all, the coaches are the recognized experts in the topics they cover. For example, read how these coaches explain game strategies and underlying principles: - Running game—Tom Osborne, John McKay, and Darrell Royal - Passing game—Bill Walsh, Steve Spurrier, and LaVell Edwards - Defense—Dick Tomey, Barry Alvarez, and Dave Wannstedt - Kicking game—Spike Dykes and John Cooper - Philosophy, motivation, and management—Eddie Robinson and Joe Paterno Football Coaching Strategies blends the invaluable lessons of the past with...

8/30/2018 3:00:36 AM +00:00

Football Coaching Strategies_2

Tham khảo sách 'football coaching strategies_2', giải trí - thư giãn, thể dục thể thao phục vụ nhu cầu học tập, nghiên cứu và làm việc hiệu quả

8/30/2018 3:00:36 AM +00:00

No Girls in the Clubhouse The Exclusion of Women from Baseball

Women have played and contributed to the sport of baseball for more than a century in the United States. Over the past fifteen years numerous books (Lois Browne, Girls of Summer; Sue Macy, A Whole New Ball Game; Barbara Gregorich, Women at Play; Gai Ingham Berlage, Women in Baseball: The Forgotten History; Marlene Targ Brill, Winning Women in Baseball & Softball; Michelle Y. Green, A Strong Right Arm; John M. Kovach, Women’s Baseball; Jean Hastings Ardell, Breaking into Baseball; Merrie A. Fidler, The Origins and History of the All-American Girls Professional Baseball League; Leslie Heaphy and Mel Anthony May, Encyclopedia of Women and Baseball, many articles published in scholarly journals...

8/30/2018 2:56:37 AM +00:00

FAITHFUL TO FENWAY Believing in Boston, Baseball, and America’s Most Beloved Ballpark

Studying the ways that people make sense of the world is impossible to do alone. We might assume that writing is a solitary act that we do sitting alone in our offices late at night, staring at our computers, spending too much time scratching our heads. But no one ever writes alone. We are social beings, even when we’re by ourselves. Not only are the words we use somebody else’s; most of our thoughts are too. Regardless of whether we’re writing a novel, a poem, or a sociological study, there’s always an audience. And when you’re writing your first book, which is how this project was conceived, that...

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CLEARING the BASES Juiced Players, Monster Salaries, Sham Records, and a Hall of Famer’s Search for the Soul of Baseball

The strike of 1994, culminating in the cancellation of the 1994 World Series, seemed like the last straw for baseball fans. The decade-long bickering and sniping between owners and players had come to a head. To many, it seemed like a fight between the Rich and the Also Rich, Greed vs. More Greed. The fans, the people who shelled out a couple hundred bucks to take the kids out to the ballpark for a game, were the biggest losers. Fans had simply had enough of what they saw as overpaid players wanting more money from whining owners. Although baseball came back in...

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ABNER DOUBLEDAY BOY BASEBALL PIONEER

Abner Doubleday leaned against the fence post and tossed his ball in the air, then caught it without looking. He was watching his friend Charley. Charley lived across the road from Abner in Auburn, New York, and the two boys often played ball together. Today, however, Charley was sweeping the walk. Abner’s brother Tom was busy too. Everyone in town seemed to be busy on this last day of May, 1825. Suddenly Abner jumped back as a long gray cat came running through the gate, chased by Abner’s dog Brownie....

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BaseBall superstars Mike Piazza

Mike Piazza had one thing on his mind when he stepped up to the plate for the first time in the New York Mets’ game against the San Francisco Giants. It was May 5, 2004, and the Mets’ slugger desperately wanted to hit a home run. Hitting homers was as natural as breathing air to Piazza. In 11 years in the big leagues as a catcher, he had smashed 351 round-trippers of every kind: line-drive rockets, towering moon shots, bottom-of-the-ninth blasts, crushing grand slams. Piazza knew, however, that the next ball he sent screaming over the fence would be something special, something for the ages. The next home run would...

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Connie Mack and the Early Years of Baseball

Connie Mack (1862–1956) was the Grand Old Man of baseball and one of the game’s first true celebrities. This book, spanning the first fifty-two years of Mack’s life, covers his experiences as player, manager, and club owner through 1914. Norman L. Macht chronicles Mack’s little-known beginnings, recounting how Mack, a school dropout at fourteen, created strategies for winning baseball and principles for managing men long before there were notions of defining such subjects. And he details how, as a key figure in the launching of the American League in 1901, Mack won six of the league’s first fourteen pennants while serving...

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The Major League Pennant Races of 1916

In many ways this book began about 50 years ago with another book about baseball. When I was growing up in Wayne, New Jersey, in the 1950s, I had two passions—baseball and books. As my interest in baseball grew, I tried to read every book I could find about the sport. One in particular, John Carmichael’s My Greatest Day in Baseball, stood out. Written well before Lawrence Ritter’s classic, The Glory of Their Times, Carmichael’s book is comprised of brief accounts of the memorable moments of legendary players. Although not the in-depth interviews that Ritter compiled, Carmichael had the advantage of being able to include the stories of...

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Baseball’s Longest Games A Comprehensive Worldwide Record Book

This work examines in detail the length of baseball games at all levels, in all countries, and all eras. If a game lasted 20 or more innings, or five or more hours, or ended after 1 A.M., you will find it here. This effort represents 46 years of work, begun in 1963. I am very thankful for the tremendous assistance along the way by fellow baseball researchers, many of whom are members of the Society for American Baseball Research (SABR). Those most helpful have included David Black, Patrick Gallagher, Karl Knickrehm, Tim Copeland, Richard Musterer, John Thorn, Miles Wolff, Lloyd Johnson, Tom Kayser, Branch Rickey, Miwako Atarashi, David Skinner, Yuyo Ruiz, Yogo Suzuki, Jon Clark,...

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Baseball Superstars Kirby Puckett

On October 26, 1991, the fans at the Metrodome in Minneapolis, Minnesota, fidgeted in their seats. It was Game 6 of the World Series, and Minnesota was trailing the Atlanta Braves, three games to two. The Twins needed to win this game to tie the series and go to a final seventh game. In the third inning, that prospect looked promising. The Twins were leading, 2-0, and the Braves were up to bat. Atlanta’s Terry Pendleton waited on first base as Ron Gant stepped up to the plate. Gant swung hard on an inside pitch and caught it right on the meat of the barrel. Crack!...

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As Koufax Said . . . The 400 Best Things Ever Said About How to Play Baseball

This book is for baseball players, baseball coaches, and anyone else searching for a greater understanding of how best to play the game. The book is divided into eight sections: The Game, Practice, Batting, Pitching, Fielding, Baserunning, Managing and Coaching, and Character. Each section contains dozens of quotations—enough so that each part of the game is covered by more than one voice. For example, if you don’t like or understand what Maury Wills has to say about base stealing, turn the page and read what Joe Morgan and Lou Brock have to say. You’re sure to find something that resonates....

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The Sizzler George Sisler, Baseball’s Forgotten Great

Prior to August 2001 I was not personally acquainted with George Sisler, Jr., the eldest son of old-time baseball player George Sisler. His name was quite familiar, however, frequently appearing in local newspapers during the 1980s when he was the general manager of the Clippers, the New York Yankees Triple-A affiliate in my hometown of Columbus, Ohio. As a lifelong baseball fan, whenever I heard the name I made the connection to his father, but I never seriously thought much about the elder Sisler’s baseball career or his place in baseball history. That was about to change....

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The Integration of Major League Baseball

The Integration of Major League Baseball is not another nostalgic trip through Negro League history or a re-telling of the Jackie Robinson–Branch Rickey saga. This book focuses on the teams themselves, and the owners, front-office executives, and managers who were the heroes, villains, or fainthearted spectators of integration. In these pages some of the most respected and revered names in baseball will be disparaged by the record of what was actually accomplished under their watch. By the same token, unsung heroes of the day will be identified. In each case, the acquisition, deployment and, where possible, the treatment and support of black players is evaluated; the effect...

8/30/2018 2:56:37 AM +00:00

THE BEST PITCHER IN BASEBALL

In the midst of another writing project, I became increasingly enamored of Andrew “Rube” Foster, who has been termed both the father and the godfather of black baseball. To my amazement and somewhat perverse author’s delight, I discovered that only one biography of Foster had been produced; moreover, as matters turned out, the scope of that lone book was quite limited. By contrast, any number of essays, articles, and book chapters on Foster were in print, including those by Robert Peterson and John Holway, who during the 1970s helped to rekindle interest in the blackened version of the national pastime....

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Baseball’s Offensive Greats of the Deadball Era

If ever there was a match made in heaven, it’s the marriage of baseball and statistics and, as in all happy marriages, each partner contributes its most valuable assets: • Baseball, its sheer visual beauty, joy of competition, the thrill of bat meeting ball, ball meeting glove, pregnant pauses that culminate in seconds of excitement and agony. As the eminent philosopher–baseball fan Morris R. Cohen put it, an “extraordinarily rich multiplicity of movements.” • Statistics and their pliability as an analytical tool. Through the manipulation of them, we can tell who are the premier performers in this game that so enchants us with its speed, powerful grace and...

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MUCH MORE THAN A GAME

Although we prefer to see baseball as a game we play or watch for recreation, from almost the beginning it has been a labor-intensive industry whose on-field personnel constitute both the entertainment product we enjoy and men engaged in doing their job. At the very heart of this laborintensive business has been the struggle between on-field employees and management over access to its opportunities, workplace rights, and overarching both of these, administering the industry and defining the relationship— paternalistic, adversarial, or cooperative—between the two sides. This history can be divided into three main eras....

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The Man Who Changed Japanese Baseball Wally Yonamine

In 1947 Wally Yonamine began his trailblazing professional sports career, fi rst with football, and later—and most notably—with baseball. Two years earlier, World War II had ended, but the confl ict was still fresh in our nation’s consciousness. When the war began, Americans of Japanese ancestry weren’t permitted to serve in our nation’s armed forces. We were classifi ed as 4-c, “enemy aliens,” and 120,000 Japanese Americans on the West Coast were rounded up and placed in internment camps surrounded by barbed wire and machine-gun guard towers that were located in desolate parts of the country. It was within these camps that Japanese Americans played baseball. The American pastime was...

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Death at the Ballpark A Comprehensive Study of Game-Related Fatalities of Players, Other Personnel and Spectators in Amateur and Professional Baseball, 1862–2007

When one thinks of baseball, rarely do thoughts of tragedy come to mind. It is a game associated with warm, sunny days and leisurely outings to the local ballpark. Yet injury and death have been associated with the game from its beginnings. Even the most casual fan has heard about baseball’s most renowned fatality, the beaning death of Cleveland Indians player Ray Chapman. On the afternoon of August 20, 1920, the Yankees notorious headhunter, Carl Mays, threw a pitch that struck Chapman on the left temple. A surgical attempt to save Chapman’s life proved futile and Cleveland’s 29-year-old shortstop died early the next morning. It is the...

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PRACTICAL LEADERSHIP STRATEGIES Lessons from the World of Professional Baseball

Bob Palestini has been a former dean of graduate studies and a professor of education for twenty years at my alma mater, Saint Joseph’s University in Philadelphia. His expertise and research interest is educational leadership. His twelve books on leadership have been outstanding in their own right but his current three-book series relates his theories on leadership to basketball, football, and baseball coaching and makes for a very interesting and intriguing connection.

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