Does awarding man of the match undermine development of children's intrinsic motivation and self worth?
Take it to the extreme - what if someone was giving out stickers for good effort or for superstar defender etc...?
Thoughts?
Does awarding man of the match undermine development of children's intrinsic motivation and self worth?
Take it to the extreme - what if someone was giving out stickers for good effort or for superstar defender etc...?
Thoughts?
I have a mixed team of boys and girls and I award a player off the match based on our team agreements. Hard work, trying something new, daring to be creative, making yourself hard to beat, how well we play and our values of persistence, respect and teamwork. Not the scoreline or assists. First match of the season we won 4-3. My main striker got all 4 goals but I awarded to my defender who in one individual moment lost the balk but then immediately won it back, controlled the ball, shielded from the press, beat her opponent, dribbled forward and started an attack that led to a goal. Point is if you use it in the right way and have the team and parents bought into it, it can be a very powerful and motivating way to reward and recognise development, build confidence and self belief
I have a mixed team of boys and girls and I award a player off the match based on our team agreements. Hard work, trying something new, daring to be creative, making yourself hard to beat, how well we play and our values of persistence, respect and teamwork. Not the scoreline or assists. First match of the season we won 4-3. My main striker got all 4 goals but I awarded to my defender who in one individual moment lost the balk but then immediately won it back, controlled the ball, shielded from the press, beat her opponent, dribbled forward and started an attack that led to a goal. Point is if you use it in the right way and have the team and parents bought into it, it can be a very powerful and motivating way to reward and recognise development, build confidence and self belief