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RESEARCH PRODUCT

“Sport has always been first for me” but “all my free time is spent doing homework”: Dual career styles in late adolescence

Kaisa AunolaNatalia StambulovaTatiana V. RybaJari-erik NurmiHarri Selänne

subject

Metaphormedia_common.quotation_subjectadolescent Finnish athletes050105 experimental psychologyTerminologyDevelopmental psychologyNarrative inquiry03 medical and health sciences0302 clinical medicineExcellence0501 psychology and cognitive sciencesNarrativesignificant life eventsta515Applied Psychologymedia_commoneducationbiologyAthletes05 social sciences030229 sport sciencesbiology.organism_classificationlate adolescencesportConstruct (philosophy)PsychologySocial psychologyQualitative research

description

Abstract Objectives In adolescence, personally meaningful autobiographical memories begin to integrate into cultural narrative structures to form a life story. We examined how and to what extent adolescent Finnish athletes narrate and integrate significant life events in sport and education into their identities and future narratives in order to delineate the different styles of athletes’ career construction. Design Longitudinal qualitative study. Method Ten female and eight male, elite junior athletes, aged 15–16 at baseline, participated in individual conversational interviews. The resulting interview data were analyzed using narrative analysis. Results Thirteen of 18 adolescent athletes drew primarily on the performance narrative plot to construct their life story and five of 18 athletes could not project into the future beyond their athletic selves. We identified three styles of athletes’ career construction. Employing musical terminology as a metaphor, the contrapuntal style entwines sport and education as harmonically related life-themes; monophonic style draws on a prominent athletic life-theme; and dissonant style is underpinned by discord of sport and education. We did not detect direct associations between narrative types (performance, discovery and relational) and career construction styles. We show the dominant style development within an exemplary story. Conclusion Exploration of the future and possible selves are critical for developing meaningful (dis)continuity of a dual career pathway from adolescence to adulthood. We conclude that dual career discourse is gaining traction in directing young athletes’ future thinking; however, a broader repertoire of exemplary success stories which allow athletes to imagine achieving excellence in diverse ways would enable them to channel action.

https://doi.org/10.1016/j.psychsport.2017.08.011