+ All Categories
Home > Documents > An Exploration of Male Self- Confidence in the Coaching Context Presented by Jackie Fitzgerald at...

An Exploration of Male Self- Confidence in the Coaching Context Presented by Jackie Fitzgerald at...

Date post: 24-Dec-2015
Category:
Upload: oswin-osborne-burns
View: 217 times
Download: 3 times
Share this document with a friend
Popular Tags:
20
An Exploration of Male Self-Confidence in the Coaching Context Presented by Jackie Fitzgerald at the 11 th Annual Coaching and Mentoring Research Conference, Oxford Brookes University. 15 January 2015
Transcript

An Exploration of Male Self-Confidence in the Coaching

Context

Presented by Jackie Fitzgerald at the 11th Annual Coaching and Mentoring Research Conference, Oxford Brookes University.

15 January 2015

Why this topic?

• Male self-confidence not well understood – almost a taboo

‘Men who lack confidence? Don’t you despise them?’

• Not clear what self-confidence ‘is’.

• How can coaching improve confidence?

References to search terms on Google

• Indicate familiarity with terminology (Shamma et al, 2004; Kelly & Cool, 2002)

• Self-confidence = 129m results

• Self-esteem = 53m results• Self-efficacy = 9.5m

results(search carried out 27/5/14)

Literature review• No clear definition/understanding of self-confidence

– Lies at the interface of abilities and personality (Stankov & Crawford, 1997)

• Little found on male self-confidence specifically (except arrogance)

• Men & women have similar levels of self-esteem (Reitzes & Mutran, 1994)

• Degree of Gender Role Conflict (O’Neill, 2013) affects confidence

• Confident men feel competent (Reitzes & Mutran, 1994)• Not clear whether & how coaching helps self-confidence

issues

Research method

• Intepretivist paradigm + pre theory status of question = IPA study

• 6 outwardly successful men aged 40-65 • All had been coached and/or mentored• Semi-structured interviews• Data transcribed and analysed following

Smith, Flowers & Larkin (2009) process

Superordinate themes3 emerged:1.The uniqueness of the RP’s attitudes towards and experiences of self-confidence2.Control as a factor in increasing self-confidence3.The need for someone to talk to

1. The uniqueness of self-confidence

What self-confidence means to the RP’s RP1 RP2 RP3 RP4 RP5 RP6

Trust in my own ability, competence X X X X X X

It depends on context/the situation   X X X X X

Accepting myself, being comfortable in own skin, being

congruent

  X   X X X

Financial security     X X   X

An act, what I project   X X   X  

Being well-prepared, having practiced   X       X

Something you can work on and change   X       X

What affects RP confidence?What affects your confidence? RP1 RP2 RP3 RP4 RP5 RP6

The situation & context X X X X X XHaving someone to talk to X X X X X XKnowing what's in store, familiarity X X X XBeing part of a good team X X XFamily support X X X

Autonomy, making my own decisions X XBeing successful X XCongruence X XPractice X XCompetence X X X X XBy acting it I become it X XPast experience X XInformation X XFinancial security X XHow high the stakes are X XBeing in the right place in the world X XHaving things under control X XAdding value, making a difference XWanting to be confident XKnowing you're doing the right thing XAge XPhysical attributes XEducation XChange XCuriosity, being open minded XPositive attitude XPlanning, preparation XBeing judged, what other people think X

2. Aspects of self-confidence

• Having: resources, skills, experience, power, autonomy, security, someone to talk to

• Doing: Education, training, research, planning, practice

• Being: congruence, authenticity• Clear distinction between work and social or

quasi-social situations: linked to control?• Arrogance a means of taking control?

Factors influencing confidence

External Internal

Being judged -ve Competence +veFamily expectations generally -ve Congruence +veMasculine role expectations -ve Self-acceptance +veHaving a good team around you +ve Positive attitude +veFamily support +ve Wanting to be confident +veHaving someone to talk to +ve Experience +veEducation +ve

Physical attributes (eg height, weight) both Financial Security +veSocial background both Familiarity +veThoughts often -ve Preparation +veAge often -ve Skill & knowledge acquisition +veSituation/context both Experience +veBeing in a competitive situation both Autonomy +veLow stakes +ve

Random Control

Factors influencing confidence

Effects of low confidence

• Reported effects strikingly similar: sleeplessness, physical discomfort, changes to posture, illness:

• RP3: So, it’s that…it’s just, it’s unsettling. So, you wake up in the middle of the night, you don’t get back to sleep. So, you go and chop a tree down at five in the morning, except the chainsaw will wake everybody up, so you can’t do that either. You just end up pacing round the house.

• Coping strategies: distraction, physical activity, withdrawal

3. Someone to talk to• All considered this important

– Can’t talk to their wives, keep them out of things• Slightly motivational, more of a sounding board:• RP4: I would say overall its nearly always been

positive because its helped me deal with, for want of a better word, nagging doubts about things, and not in a massively life changing way, but in a positive reinforcing way, in a ‘there is nothing wrong with you thinking that’ kind of thing and occasionally a little bit of a gee up about ‘yeah, I do need to be…’

What the RP’s wanted from their coach

• Listen, support, teach & guide• Get them through ‘stuff’• Affirm, confirm thinking and decisions• Validation more than motivation • Most valued a mentor rather than a coach• However the coaching experience was

transformational for some

Implications for coaching practice 1:

• Idiosyncrasy of self-confidence re-emphasised the importance of initial contracting.

RP5 ‘That makes me think. One of my clients, a senior guy in banking, he wanted coaching on some self-confidence stuff and I never thought to find out what he meant because I thought I knew what he meant. We are going to be having a very different conversation in a few weeks.’

• Does the client want coaching or mentoring?

Implications for coaching practice 2:

• Coach must find out what self-confidence means to that client & what combination of factors influences their confidence

• Set aside value judgements - remain client centred

• Focus on context and situation – Can coaching help given the context?

Implications for coaching practice 3:

• Frequent temperature-checking needed– Situation may change– Client may not raise confidence themselves

• Confidence warning signs:– Sleeplessness, illness, slouching– Withdrawal, reticence, avoidance of issues,

arrogance (Berglas, 2006)– Focus on/concerns about decision-making

Implications for coaching practice 4: Suitable approaches

• Client-centred to address the highly individual nature of male self-confidence

• Skills and performance for those with strong ‘doing’ bias or in task/performance contexts

• Strengths-based– Known to improve confidence & self-esteem (Hodges

& Clinton, 2004; Linley & Harrington, 2008)– Addresses fear of showing weakness (Brown, 2012)

Further research

• Do gender role expectations matter more for younger, less affluent men?

• What differences are there between how men and women recognise & deal with self-confidence

• Is there a developmental aspect to confidence?

Contact info

Written and presented by Jackie Fitzgerald

[email protected]: 01235 861 311

m: 07833 478 761 twitter: @jfitzbizcoach

All slides © Jackie Fitzgerald 2015

ReferencesBerglas, S. (2006) ‘How to keep A players productive’, Harvard Business Review, Vol. 84, Issue 9, pp. 104-112.Brown, B. (2012) Daring Greatly How the Courage to Be Vulnerable Transforms the Way We Live, Love, Parent, and Lead. London: Penguin Books. Kindle edition.Hodges, T.D., Clinton, D.O. (In press) Strengths Based Development in Practice In: Linley, P.A., & Joseph, S. (eds.) International Handbook of Positive Psychology in Practice: From Research to Application. New Jersey: Wiley and Sons. Available from: http://strengths.uark.edu/development-in-practice.pdf [Accessed 25 September 2014].Kelly, D., Cool, C. (2002) ‘The effects of topic familiarity on information search behavior’ In: Proceedings of the 2nd ACM/IEEE-CS joint conference on Digital libraries. New York:ACM. Available from http://dl.acm.org/citation.cfm?id=544232 [Accessed June 9 2014].Linley, P.A., Harrington, S. (2006) ‘Strengths Coaching: A potential-guided approach to coaching psychology’. International Coaching Psychology Review Vol. 1 No. 1, 37:46O’Neil, J.M. (2013) ‘Gender role conflict research 30 years later: an evidence-based diagnostic schema to assess boys and men in counseling’, Journal of Counseling and Development, Vol. 91, pp. 490-498.Reitzes, D.C., Mutran, E.J. (1994) ‘Multiple roles and identities: factors influencing self-esteem among middle-aged working men and women’, Social Psychology Quarterly, Vol. 57, No.4, pp. 313-325.Shamma, D.A, Owsley,S., Bradshaw, S., Sood, S., Budzik, J., Hammond, K. (2004) Using the Web as a Measure of Familiarity and Obscurity. Available from: www.researchgate.net [Accessed June 9, 2014].Smith, J.A., Flowers, P., Larkin, M. (2009) Interpretative Phenomenological Analysis Theory, Method and Research. London: Sage.Stankov, L., Crawford, J. (1997) ‘Self-confidence and performance on tests of cognitive abilities.’ Intelligence Vol. 25, Issue 2, pp. 93-109.


Recommended