Personal construct psychology and the research interview: the example of mental toughness in sport.

Personal construct psychology (PCP; Kelly, 1955/1991) offers researchers and practitioners several useful methodologies for eliciting the personal constructs of individuals. However, there has been a tendency in the PCP literature to become reliant on traditional construct elicitation procedures suc...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Gucciardi, Daniel, Gordon, S.
Format: Journal Article
Published: Personal Construct theory & Practice 2008
Subjects:
Online Access:http://www.pcp-net.org/
http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11937/43864
_version_ 1848756830991286272
author Gucciardi, Daniel
Gordon, S.
author_facet Gucciardi, Daniel
Gordon, S.
author_sort Gucciardi, Daniel
building Curtin Institutional Repository
collection Online Access
description Personal construct psychology (PCP; Kelly, 1955/1991) offers researchers and practitioners several useful methodologies for eliciting the personal constructs of individuals. However, there has been a tendency in the PCP literature to become reliant on traditional construct elicitation procedures such as triadic and dyadic sorting as well as laddering interviews. The power of PCP in guiding the design of a retrospective interview protocol for research purposes, in particular, has not featured strongly. We address this issue in this paper by describing a case example of how we have employed PCP to design an interview protocol for examining the phenomenon of mental toughness in sport. Evidence demonstrating the usefulness of the proposed methodology is described and suggestions for future research are offered.
first_indexed 2025-11-14T09:18:26Z
format Journal Article
id curtin-20.500.11937-43864
institution Curtin University Malaysia
institution_category Local University
last_indexed 2025-11-14T09:18:26Z
publishDate 2008
publisher Personal Construct theory & Practice
recordtype eprints
repository_type Digital Repository
spelling curtin-20.500.11937-438642017-01-30T15:10:40Z Personal construct psychology and the research interview: the example of mental toughness in sport. Gucciardi, Daniel Gordon, S. content structure construct elicitation research interview organisation Personal construct psychology (PCP; Kelly, 1955/1991) offers researchers and practitioners several useful methodologies for eliciting the personal constructs of individuals. However, there has been a tendency in the PCP literature to become reliant on traditional construct elicitation procedures such as triadic and dyadic sorting as well as laddering interviews. The power of PCP in guiding the design of a retrospective interview protocol for research purposes, in particular, has not featured strongly. We address this issue in this paper by describing a case example of how we have employed PCP to design an interview protocol for examining the phenomenon of mental toughness in sport. Evidence demonstrating the usefulness of the proposed methodology is described and suggestions for future research are offered. 2008 Journal Article http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11937/43864 http://www.pcp-net.org/ Personal Construct theory & Practice fulltext
spellingShingle content
structure
construct elicitation
research interview
organisation
Gucciardi, Daniel
Gordon, S.
Personal construct psychology and the research interview: the example of mental toughness in sport.
title Personal construct psychology and the research interview: the example of mental toughness in sport.
title_full Personal construct psychology and the research interview: the example of mental toughness in sport.
title_fullStr Personal construct psychology and the research interview: the example of mental toughness in sport.
title_full_unstemmed Personal construct psychology and the research interview: the example of mental toughness in sport.
title_short Personal construct psychology and the research interview: the example of mental toughness in sport.
title_sort personal construct psychology and the research interview: the example of mental toughness in sport.
topic content
structure
construct elicitation
research interview
organisation
url http://www.pcp-net.org/
http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11937/43864