Gender and Diversity Responsive Coaching: Building Capacity Through Relational, Feminist-Informed, Intersectional, Transdisciplinary, and E/Affective Coach Development
Abstract
1. Introduction
2. The Current State of Play: Contemporary Discourses of Gender Responsive Coaching and Power Effects
They [girls] need encouragement. If they make a good pass, you tell them they’ve made a good pass. If they score a good goal, you tell them they’ve scored a good goal.(Coach interview, Avner et al., 2025, p. 11)
Girls are more collaborative and like doing things together…boys are more aggressive in their competitiveness.(Coach interview, Avner et al., 2025, p. 11)
Well, I think—and this is a broad generalisation, but I think people like to generalise and put people into categories, so they like to say, ‘females won’t be as good as male athletes in football specifically.’ Well one, we’re not trying to play men’s football to start with, but two, if you give female athletes a full-time pay, really good coach, great facilities, yeah they are going to be just as good. It’s the lack of understanding around the impacts that all of those things have.(Coach interview, Avner et al., 2025, p. 10)
Until the process of framing and naming problems is recognised as value-laden, coaches will continue to believe that their problem-solving approaches are fair, just, best, and unproblematic, making it unlikely that they will ever consider the possible shortcomings or unintended consequences that their problem-solving approaches have on their coaching (p. 211).
3. Towards Relational, Feminist-Informed, Intersectional, Transdisciplinary, and E/Affective Coach Development
how does attuning to affect including an affective politics of dis/comfort open up a generative space to think and know otherwise, to move beyond static representations of coaches and athletes and towards a more generative conception of bodies, sport, and sport coaching? […] and how can educators use an affective pedagogy to support learners to attune to discomfort and defensiveness. To ask: when do I feel uncomfortable and defensive in relation to questions of gender and the athletes I am coaching? How can I be open to other ways of being, relation, and feeling in this context?
4. Conclusions and Further Considerations
Author Contributions
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Informed Consent Statement
Data Availability Statement
Conflicts of Interest
Appendix A
Current Challenges to Gender and Diversity Responsive Coaching | Why Is this a Problem? | Suggested Approach/Curriculum Content and Strategies |
Challenge #1: Artificial fragmentation of coaching knowledge and dominance of bioscientific and essentialist ways of knowing in shaping understanding of women’s moving and (high)-performing sporting bodies | Ignores the complex entanglements of biology AND culture in shaping women’s sporting bodies and the impossibility/unethicality of disentangling these when it comes to understanding and addressing various (gendered) participation and performance problems. Leads to (gendered) participation and performance sporting problems being selectively named and framed through a narrow bioscientific lens leading to partial and/or limited understandings and problem-solving solutions | Promote transdisciplinary dialogue through the integration of diverse perspective and ways of knowing that work to de-centre and complexify bioscientific knowledges and practices (e.g., Thorpe et al. (2021) theorisation of human bodies as “biocultural creatures and creatives”) Use strategies such as problem-setting and critical reflective conversations (J. Denison & Avner, 2011; Stodter et al., 2021) to encourage holistic and relational rather than fragmented and partial approaches and problem-solving strategies that more accurately reflect the complexity and contextuality of coaching |
Challenge #2: Siloing of coach development dedicated to learning about women’s moving and (high)-performing sporting bodies (i.e., as add on modules and coach development training) | Contributes to naturalising the problematic notion of women and girls as ‘special populations’ necessitating additional considerations and astuteness as opposed to the straightforward ‘default’ coaching knowledge required for coaching men/boys | Re-centre, ‘infuse’, and mainstream ‘women-related’ coach development content alongside other ‘minority-related’ coach development content (e.g., coaching athletes with disability) (Townsend et al., 2022) |
Challenge #3: Importation of problematic assumptions/stereotypes when transitioning to coaching women and girls with little emphasis placed on criticality and understanding the various unintended consequences of gendered ‘best’ coaching practices | Reproduction of limiting and/or harmful coach and women and girl athlete development practices | Re-centre critical coaching knowledges that trouble established coaching ‘truths’ and ‘best’ practices and re-open these to ongoing critical examination (e.g., Foucault’s Power-Knowledge-Practice and concept of problematising, see for example Avner et al., 2023) Promote reflective conversations with diverse critical friends/mentors to challenge problematic assumptions/stereotypes Use of audio and video feedback to identify and confront problematic gendered coach behaviours and practices |
Challenge #4: Coaches and coach developers’ limited knowledge and confidence around coaching women and girls and other historically marginalised participant groups in sport | Widespread apprehension around coaching different populations. Perpetuation of stereotypes around the challenging nature of coaching women and girls and other historically marginalised groups in sport (e.g., athletes with disability) | Re-centre, ‘infuse’, and mainstream ‘women-related’ and other ‘minority-related’ coach development content (e.g., coaching athletes with disability) Draw on a diversity of examples that highlight intersecting relations (e.g., gender, ethnicity, disability, sexuality, class) and how these shape and impact sport participation and performance Use reflective conversations with diverse critical friends/mentors to build coaches’ knowledge and confidence of coaching women and girls and other historically marginalised groups while challenging normative assumptions and binaries that privilege white, able-bodied, heterosexual, male athletes. |
Challenge #5: Coaches and administrators’ affective dissonance/rejection of ED&I work and perspectives | Homologous replication of coaching workforce (Blackett et al., 2019, 2021) Less diverse teams, worse performance. | Focus on the ‘moveable’ middle (Kanter, 1977) Draw on feminist-informed andragogic strategies that promote participants’ attunement to instances of discomfort and defensiveness as important moments of (un)/learning. Such strategies require skilled facilitators and the formation of heterarchical (i.e., non-hierarchical) communities of learning/relations where participants feel more comfortable expressing vulnerability and openness and where all participants are active in the materialization of knowledge (see Pavlidis et al., 2025). |
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Avner, Z.; Jones, L.; Stodter, A.; Jeffrey, A. Gender and Diversity Responsive Coaching: Building Capacity Through Relational, Feminist-Informed, Intersectional, Transdisciplinary, and E/Affective Coach Development. Educ. Sci. 2025, 15, 812. https://doi.org/10.3390/educsci15070812
Avner Z, Jones L, Stodter A, Jeffrey A. Gender and Diversity Responsive Coaching: Building Capacity Through Relational, Feminist-Informed, Intersectional, Transdisciplinary, and E/Affective Coach Development. Education Sciences. 2025; 15(7):812. https://doi.org/10.3390/educsci15070812
Chicago/Turabian StyleAvner, Zoe, Luke Jones, Anna Stodter, and Allison Jeffrey. 2025. "Gender and Diversity Responsive Coaching: Building Capacity Through Relational, Feminist-Informed, Intersectional, Transdisciplinary, and E/Affective Coach Development" Education Sciences 15, no. 7: 812. https://doi.org/10.3390/educsci15070812
APA StyleAvner, Z., Jones, L., Stodter, A., & Jeffrey, A. (2025). Gender and Diversity Responsive Coaching: Building Capacity Through Relational, Feminist-Informed, Intersectional, Transdisciplinary, and E/Affective Coach Development. Education Sciences, 15(7), 812. https://doi.org/10.3390/educsci15070812