What Is Cognitive Load Theory?
Nathan Sherratt
Supporting Referees to perform better on and off the pitch ?? NLP Practitioner ?? Mental Health Ambassador ?? Resilience Trainer ?? Podcaster ?? Blogger ?? Speaker ?? Autism Charity Trustee ??
Cognitive Load Theory is a psychological theory that every referee, and those coaching officials, needs to know about. If you are not already familiar with this theory, this Blog is a quick rundown of what it is and how to apply some of the key principles to refereeing.
Cognitive Load Theory – An Explainer
Cognitive Load Theory highlights how?working memory has a limited capacity.?Working memory is where we hold and process new information. For learning to take place, this information has to be transferred to long-term memory.
That sounds simple enough; however, there is a bottleneck between the two, meaning that information that doesn’t get transferred across is ultimately lost and forgotten.?Cognitive Load Theory is all about acknowledging this bottleneck and presenting information to referees in a way that aids and accelerates that transfer to long-term memory.
How Can Cognitive Load Theory Be Incorporated Into Your Refereeing/Referee Coaching?
Different concepts and ideas have been developed in relation to Cognitive Load Theory to help improve learning and reduce the chances of overload happening. These are important for you to know yourself and as a coach of officials to help you improve your methods and boost learning. Let’s take a look at a few of them:
The Redundancy Effect
When a referee’s working memory becomes clogged up with unnecessary information, the brain suffers from what is known as cognitive overload. In this bottleneck, the official may only transfer the irrelevant or redundant information, not the key learning points.
The Redundancy Effect?often hinders learning due to this inefficient use of working memory resources. For referee coaches, this means that you should:
The Split Attention Effect
The Split Attention Effect occurs when people have to refer to two different sources of information simultaneously when learning something. This creates an extra load on their brain, as?switching between tasks?takes time, effort and energy.
It is best thought of as an act of juggling, where each item of information represents one ball. Ask a novice juggler to use too many balls and inevitably some will get dropped. So, what can you do to limit this from happening?
Scaffolding
Scaffolding is a method whereby you gradually remove support as the learner begins to progress. It helps to guide referees to learn independently and manage their load. This is important when it comes to different levels of learners: some are newly qualified officials, and some are experienced referees. You can use this to offer different levels of support.
This method of coaching is beneficial because it provides officials with enough structure so as not to not overwhelm them at their current level, but still stretches them enough to expand their knowledge.
领英推荐
Emotional Control
There is also an added factor of feeling stress and pressure when refereeing. This stress can overload the brain and lead to a decline in all cognitive functions.
Research shows?that experiencing an interference or overload on cognition is strongly associated with poor performance relating to memory and processing.
If officials are dealing with a high cognitive load then it can be mentally exhausting and bring about poor performance. This can lead to a referee experiencing negative emotions, which in turn can affect their confidence and motivation. Because of this, cognitive load has been described as closely related to the emotional state of the official.
Given that referees perform under a variety of cognitive loads, we think it’s important to help officials to learn how to control their emotions when there is a lot of information for them to take in. Here are 10 ways that referees can control their emotions better:
Final Reflections
Every official and every referee coach is different, so think about how you can integrate these tips into your coaching and refereeing. Remember that Cognitive Load Theory is all about acknowledging the bottleneck between the short and the long-term memory.
Being aware of the Redundancy Effect, the Split Attention Effect, and using worked examples and completion tasks to incorporate scaffolding into your coaching and officiating should really help.
At?The Third Team?I work individually and in collaboration with different professionals where I have developed workshops and 1-2-1 sessions associated with Resilience and Mental Toughness Development to help referees. The?workshops and 1-2-1 sessions?are interactive, where referees are encouraged to open up and share their experiences to help themselves and each other.
Feel free to?contact?me if you’d like to know more about my workshops or 1-2-1 sessions and how I could help you or your officials.
Best Wishes,
Nathan Sherratt
Referee Educator & Managing Director, The Third Team
07530894226
The Third Team?is now offering all?#ResilientReferees?across the world the opportunity to gain access to our coaching through ‘The Refereeing With Confidence’ Online Course!
Mental Toughness Expert | Helping athletes, coaches, leaders and their teams effectively measure, and develop mental toughness for a stronger, consistent performance
1 年Really instructive and practical post - thanks Nathan Sherratt