Many coaches advocate for picking and choosing methods from a variety of theoretical camps, on the premise that which is best ‘depends’ on the player, the coach, etc and you want the biggest toolkit you can get.

I think this is an error, which I will now attempt to defend
First, let’s set the scene. VERY roughly, there are two approaches in coaching. Traditional coaching is very cognitive, all about the coach as a source of knowledge. Then there’s the plucky ecological upstarts who focus on training skilled engagement over knowledge #ymmv
Lots of traditional coaches want to be able to use anything that works in their sessions, regardless of what theory motivates the training idea. They consider this the right move; why commit to some theory that rules things out and might be wrong?
Ecological types tend not to approve of this, and stick to using ecological methods (and sometimes explicitly going after traditional methods). This has become a key point of contention on social media; is mixing and matching a feature or a bug?
Eco types don’t approve because, as a rule, becoming an eco type entails an explicit rejection of more cognitive models. This is because we aren’t the default way people talk about this stuff and you have to switch. Trad types never have to switch & so don’t come so feisty
This rejection of traditional approaches and its methods is only justified if adopting an eco approach requires it. Maybe they’re just two different ways of thinking that can live side by side?
But they aren’t. The representational and ecological approaches are two incompatible understandings of what kind of physical system could be a perceiving-acting system. They split right at the ontological base, where we set up what we think the rules are
This was the essence of the Turvey eg al 1981 defence of the ecological approach against Fodor & Pylyshyn, and I did my best to translate this from the Turvey to the English in my interface theory paper psyarxiv.com/zbkqd/
So this is why picking and choosing coaching methods that come from both camps is an incoherent idea for an eco psych type - coming to endorse the eco approach entails understanding the IP approach is not just wrong, but radically different
But is this something a coach need worry about? Surely it’s just nerds like me that care, and in practice it all just kind of comes out in the wash, so long as what you are doing is working? It’s this I want to reject as wrong by describing the benefits or picking a side here
Because of the evidence in favour of it, I am firmly committed to developing ecological answers to all questions about behaviour. I may end up wrong, though, or it might not go all the way up - won’t cutting myself from representations, etc hurt my science?
Lots of embodied cognition people think so. Andy Clark famously has a paper on ‘representation hungry problems’ perception can’t obviously solve which is endorsed by many people.

Clark’s just a coward though. I think he ducked out when the going got tough (aka interesting)
Sabrina and I decided to nail our colours to the ecological mast and see how far we could go into rep-hungry territory. Net result has been solid first drafts of ecological approaches to language and brains that bring them within range of the eco approach to explain
Clark looked at those problems and abandoned what we think are the unavoidable radical implications of embodiment to the comfort of representations that just do all the work for you. Everyone doing this missed the chance to work out what Sabrina and I have and went ‘it depends’
No progress came from ‘it depends’, only more uncrossable stumbling blocks. If sometimes ‘it depends’ requires information and sometimes representations, how and when can we switch between these two incompatible systems? etc
Picking your ground for evidence based reasons and hanging onto it even when the going gets tough is how you make progress and come up with genuinely new insights without the problems that come from throwing up your hands
This works in coaching too. Say you design a constrained game to teach something people think demands specific instruction, and it doesn’t work the way you intend. You could give up, or try again
Only if you commit will you grit your teeth while its not working and keep trying to make it work. And then, if you manage to help players self organise a behaviour people thought demanded specific instruction, you have learned something new and important that others can build on
(And if it NEVER works, you’ve learned something important too!)
So look. I get that picking a side and ruling out some ways of doing things is a big step. What if you’re wrong? You’d be screwing your players over, and no coach wants that. But...
...if you pick a side based on good evidence and hold onto the principles through the tough times, you will learn new things, make progress, AND know why those things are happening. With pick’n’mix, any problems are anyone’s guess...
...because you’ve given up control of what you’re doing by ignoring the reasons why different theories think you should do different things. That’s rubbish science, and psych is paying the price in the form of a replication crisis. I submit its rubbish coaching too
/end

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More from @PsychScientists

Mar 13, 2023
So this thread explaining a key issue in the debate seemed to be useful so I thought I’d add another; this one around the question of #itdepends and how a key difference of values feeds confusion in the debates

🧵
One of the things that confuses/annoys people is the eco psych advocacy for not using all available conceptual tools and frameworks when designing training. Broadly, we push for *just* using the ecological principles underpinning representative learning design
This is a major source of confusion and public relations shenanigans. We get marketed as zealots and cultists, and as crazy for rejecting the seemingly obvious fact that which approach is best depends on lots of factors - how can one approach claim to have all the solutions?
Read 10 tweets
Feb 17, 2022
A thread with some of those reflections - it was really interesting to see these guys in action and there’s a lot of things going on! @MrlycettPE @_andCoach
I got to see a few different sessions, including a classroom activity, some outdoor PE and indoor work too. Dan and Ross are working from a constraints based approach across the board; always trying to help guide towards solutions, rather than provide them
The first thing you notice is how messy the sessions are. Kids worked on things at their own speed, so the class as a whole was often not doing anything like the same thing. From one point of view, it’s pretty chaotic! But of course while it was variable, it was still constrained
Read 23 tweets
May 14, 2021
Recent challenges to thebFEP by @JBruineberg and @DioVicen and their colleagues seem to converge on a problem caused by the common error identified by @bayesianboy, namely confusing model things with system-being-modelled things. Papers linked at the end

🧵
The problem is Markov blankets. Mathematically, these can be read out of the data about statistical dependencies between model variables. This is a legitimate network analysis technique which Bruineberg et al label ‘Pearl blankets’ after the person who developed the technique
What FEP practitioners then claim is that those Pearl blankets actually pick out real parts of the system being modelled, suggesting the blankets are real things doing work in producing the system behaviour. Bruineberg et al call these Friston blankets to distinguish them
Read 9 tweets
May 11, 2021
Whether or not the FEP can be made ecological seems to hinge on whether terms like ‘generative model’ can be sensibly cast in terms like ‘a system of anticipating affordances’ and while it sort of can, whether that WORKS seems to remain a matter of opinion 1/a couple
We need a way to tell the difference between ecological FEP and non-ecological FEP; a way of seeing which is better. And I just don’t see what that could be just now
Part of this is Friston Slipperiness. He oscillates freely between the two vocabularies and doesn’t seem particularly attracted to one over the other
Read 8 tweets
Mar 17, 2021
Holy shit I’m mad, so deeply mad at this article for 18 different reasons

A thread
1. Fuck you and your patronising bullshit. We are SWAMPED with nonsense and STILL keen to learn good things but we don’t have time so fuck you. Honestly, the desire to learn new useful things is so high among my colleagues even though they are mostly drowning right now
2. New isn’t the same as better. I love VR and I’m stunned at its current capabilities. But I also know a lot about how it works and what it can and can’t do and so you know what, it’s flashy but as yet unproved as a game changer in education
Read 10 tweets
Mar 15, 2021
Ok, sorry I just threw this out then ran - I was in the school run 😂

What got me thinking was as I was driving, I came to an annoying intersection. I had to make my way through two close sets of lights; the latter was about to change, I had time to get through but had to...
...monitor to see if there was room for me on the other side, all while not trying to accidentally fake the dumbass tailgating me into thinking I was going if I wasn’t so that he wouldn’t plow into me

And it was all kind of easy
Because I’m me, I started thinking about how many things I had just fluidly engaged with in order to not get anyone killed, and it seemed a bit more than 7, +/- 2.
Read 10 tweets

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