1st Edition

Research Methods for Sport Management

    378 Pages 18 B/W Illustrations
    by Routledge

    378 Pages 18 B/W Illustrations
    by Routledge

    Research methods courses have become a compulsory component of most degree programs in sport management. This is the first introductory research methods textbook to focus exclusively on sport management. Through the use of examples, cases and data taken from the real world of sport management it opens up a traditionally dry area of study, helping the student to understand the vital importance of sound methodology in their studies and subsequent professional practice.

    The book covers the full range of quantitative and qualitative methods across the whole span of the research process, from research design and the literature review to data analysis and report writing. Every chapter contains a range of useful features to aid student learning, including summaries, discussion questions and guides to further resources, as well as examples drawn from contemporary sport around the world. Research Methods for Sport Management is an essential course text for all sport management students and an invaluable reference for any sport management professional involved in operational research.

    Part 1: Overview of the Sport Management Research Process  Chapter 1. Basic Principles of Sport Management Research  Chapter 2. The Sport Management Research Process  Chapter 3. Identifying the Research Problem, Conducting a Literature Review, and Ethical Considerations  Part 2: Qualitative Research for Sport Management Researchers  Chapter 4. Qualitative Data Collection in Sport Management Research  Chapter 5. Qualitative Data Analysis in Sport Management Research  Chapter 6. Action Research and Sport Management Research  Chapter 7. What is Case Study?  Chapter 8. Deconstruction and Sport Management Research  Chapter 9. Discourse Analysis and Ethnomethodology  Chapter 10. Ethnography and some Emerging Ethnogrophies  Chapter 11. Gender as a methodology in Sport Management Research  Chapter 12. Narrative Inquiry and the stories Sport Management Researchers can tell  Chapter 13. Phenomenology and the lived experience of the Sport Management Researcher  Chapter 14. Emerging Qualitative Approaches for the Sport Management Researcher to consider  Part 3: Quantitative Research for Sport Management Researchers  Chapter 15. Research Design for a Quantitative Study  Chapter 16. Data Collection Methods for a Quantitative Study  Chapter 17. Quantitative Data Analysis in Sport Management Research  Chapter 18. Introduction to Inferential Statistics  Chapter 19. Correlation and Regression Analysis  Chapter 20. Determining Difference among Groups  Chapter 21. Chi-Square and Spearman’s Rho  Part 4: Alternative Approaches to Sport Management Research  Chapter 22. Mixed Methods Approaches to Sport Management Research  Chapter 23. An Emerging Framework – Research 2.0 and Sport Management Research

    Biography

    James Skinner is a Professor of Sport Business and Director of the Institute for Sport Business at Loughborough University, London, UK. His research interests are in drugs in sport, culture strategy, leadership and change, sport and social capital, and research methods for sport management

    Allan Edwards is Head of Sport and Exercise Science at the University of Canberra, Australia. His research interests include qualitative research methodology, high performance sport management and sport marketing

    Ben Corbett is a sport management PhD candidate and lecturer at Griffith University, Australia. His research interests include organisational strategy and change, high performance management, and sport event legacy

    "This text is a solid companion for graduate-level research classes, where sport management and communication students may have had little or no research experience at the undergraduate level. Certainly, a supplemental text on the actual application of specific statistical analysis would be necessary for more advanced students looking to conduct actual research. For doctoral studies, this would also serve as an appropriate foundational resource. More in-depth resources are clearly needed for students taking on a thesis or dissertation. However, this is an excellent text for instructors wanting to give more than the basic quick introduction to research methods. For the sport communications classroom, the authors have excelled in providing a broad range of hypothetical cases and recent case examples that factor in topics appropriate for this audience."
    - Julie D. Lanzillo, Neumann University, USA, International Journal of Sport Communication, 2015, 8, 526 -527.