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This blog explores the principles of skill acquisition research and how they apply to basketball, with a particular emphasis on using the Constraints-Led Approach (CLA).
What is Skill Acquisition?
Skill acquisition is an evidence-based field analyzing how athletes learn and develop motor skills. Contemporary skill acquisition research informs us that effective coaching is about a lot more than just repetition. The days of repetitive drilling may be numbered, as instead a CLA involves coaches designing more representative learning environments where players are constantly making decisions.
The Constraints-Led Approach (CLA)
The Constraints-Led Approach (CLA) is a framework which can be used not only for understanding how basketball skills emerge, but also for coaches to design their practices. A CLA emphasizes how basketball skills emerge within the interaction of the three constraint categories:
- Task Constraints: The rules of a small-sided game, the points system, the space that can be played in, etc.
- Environmental Constraints: Factors like court conditions, crowd noise, or lighting, in addition to sociocultural constraints and “forms of life.”
- Individual Constraints: A player’s physical, mental, and emotional characteristics. For instance, their height, weight, wingspan, mood, fatigue, etc.
Rather than isolating techniques in drills, a CLA requires coaches to design practices that mimic the complexity of the real game. For example…
- Instead of practicing dribbling through cones, players dribble past defenders in a constrained space within a certain time period.
- Rather than form or spot shooting, designing shooting activities featuring a real defender, replicating the pressure and time constraints in the actual game.
Principles of Effective Practice:
- Representative Learning Design: Activities should be designed around “small slices of the game” to promote skill transfer. This helps players develop decision-making and adaptability under game-like conditions.
- Variable Practice: The more variability, the better! For instance, playing against different defenders, in various positions, with varying rules. This challenges players to adapt their movements as each repetition slightly differs.
- Feedback and Self-Discovery: Immediate, actionable feedback is essential. However, allowing players to experiment and discover solutions fosters deeper learning and creativity.
- Mistakes are Essential: Embracing mistakes as learning opportunities helps players develop resilience and refine their solutions under pressure. Within a CLA, messy practices are encouraged as this means the players are being challenged to continuously adapt and try new skills.
The Role of the Coach
Coaches are pivotal in creating an environment which fosters optimal learning. Responsibilities of the modern day coach include:
- Designing practices that integrate the principles mentioned throughout the blog.
- Balancing challenge and success to maintain player engagement, ensuring practice is not too easy but also not too difficult.
- Providing feedback that is constructive, avoiding “shot gun” feedback where lots of scattered feedback points are delivered to the players in a confusing manner.
By understanding and applying frameworks like the Constraints-Led Approach, coaches can accelerate their players’ development. The key is for a coach to work creatively to make practices as representative and challenging as possible, designing new activities based on the problems at-hand vs copy-pasting the same old drills.
Want to keep learning with Transforming Basketball? Access our FREE skill acquisition workshop (value $147) to learn more about small-sided games and using an evidence-based approach in your practices: https://transformingbball.com/online-skill-acquisition-workshop.