Cheer Coaches and Cheer Parents May Contribute to Fear of Failure
Fear of failure is not uncommon in cheerleaders, as I mentioned in my previous posting. Excessive concern about making mistakes and perceived pressure to be perfect are associated with fear of failure. It can be a problem in that it may lead to sub-optimal performance, avoidance behavior and mental blocks.
What contributes to this dilemma?
Well first is the cheerleader’s basic temperament and personality style but then we need to consider the coach and the parents. A good coach wants his or her athletes to excel. A good parent wants his or her child to succeed. But how this is communicated can make all the difference between a cheerleader who has fun while learning and one who agonizes over every mishap.
A sport environment is an evaluative environment. The athlete is a learner who must be open to instruction and coaching. Ideally a cheerleader has or develops what I call a championship mind-set which means being open to learning, eager for feedback, and maintaining a perspective that every set-back and mistake is a wonderful opportunity to learn and grow and improve. (This is a life skill, too!)
Coaches and parents can nurture a championship mind-set or they can interfere with it. If the egos of the coach and/or parent are too closely intertwined with the success of the cheerleader, objectivity can suffer and emotions may run high.
If a coach/parent gets unduly upset when an cheerleader makes a mistake, this communicates to the athlete that mistakes are not ok, that they are a problem and are to be avoided. Patience and a sense of humor plus a championship mind-set on the part of the parents/coaches go a long way toward creating a healthy learning atmosphere.
Let’s not forget that this sport of cheerleading is supposed to be fun!
It is good to set high standards and strive for excellence in sport performance and it is imperative that coaches and parents never put down the cheerleader’s efforts, performance, and self worth when the results are imperfect.
To an athlete, the reactions and words of a parent and/or coach carry enormous weight. If coaches/parents pressure athletes (especially young beginners) to perform perfectly, to avoid mistakes, and to meet high (perhaps unrealistic) expectations, and if they criticize the athlete when he or she fails to meet those expectations, all this contributes to the athletes’ fear of failure.
Fostering a good work ethic with clearly defined and realistically high expectations, encouraging healthy team relationships, nurturing a spirit of curiosity and openness to learning where mistakes are gifts and not demons are all ways to contribute to the development of a happy, healthy cheerleader.
Tags: Cheer Con, cheer parents, cheerleader, cheerleaders, Cheerleading, cheerleading coaching, fear of failure