Coaches Insider
  • Home
  • About Us
  • Contact Us
  • Log In
  • Sign Up Free
  • Baseball
  • Basketball
    • Men’s Basketball
    • Women’s Basketball
  • Football
  • Lacrosse
  • Soccer
  • Softball
  • Track & X-Country
  • Volleyball
  • Wrestling
  • ADInsider
Navigation
  • Lacrosse Home
  • Skills & Drills
  • Strategy
  • Topics
  • Shop
  • Coaching Clinics
  • IMLCA Video Library

Use Social Media as a Tool

October 5, 2022 • By Human Kinetics

By: Becky Burleigh - Retired

Originally Published in: Winning Ways of Women Coaches

Provided by: Human Kinetics

Most athletes have outward-facing social media as well as inward-facing social media. You can post things on your private Instagram page or Snapchat that is not going out to everyone, and it can be really negative or not as nice as it maybe should be. But their public-facing social media could be totally different.

Social media is a really amazing tool that can help us connect with our athletes, but when they slip and put something that negatively or improperly presents their views, it has a real downside for them - and for the program they represent. Furthermore, our athletes are not likely to easily shrug off a negative or demeaning post by someone outside the program, even if the person responsible for the post doesn't even know them.

I am now coaching athletes who have never not had social media, and I am concerned about the effect it has on their long-term mental health. While I am a fan of the careful and proper use of social media, in general I don't like the effect it has on our players. President Theodore Roosevelt reputedly said, "Comparison is the thief of joy," and social media has magnified that 10,000 times, especially for young women. I believe it has a worse effect on women than it does on men because we often care so much about what other people think about us.

On the other hand, social media can be a great platform for education if focused on individuals and organizations that are somehow enhancing our knowledge and appreciation of the things that are important in our lives. I'll find interesting or educational things from others and repost them. It is educational and enjoyable for me. I can follow any coaches at any level and have access to the best coaches in the world. I would never have access to them without social media.

For example, Kara Lawson, women's basketball coach at Duke University, puts a lot of good content out on Twitter, and while I'm not actually in her basketball practices, I do get to see little glimpses of her in the gym and see what she is thinking and doing, and I think that's pretty insightful.

I also search for and save things from social media to use with my team. If our team is struggling with being resilient, I'm going to search for things I think can provide a bite-size, media-driven clip of resilience that my team will relate to. It is much more effective than me standing up and talking to them about resilience. I can show them a 45-second video as opposed to me just talking at them.

So, while social media certainly has its ugly side, if used constructively and responsibly by you and your athletes, it can be an excellent tool for learning and sharing. In that way, you are promoting the kind of open exchanges with your athletes - giving them a voice - that benefits them, you, and your program.

MyNotes () Leave a Comment (0 Comments)

More from Human Kinetics View all from Human Kinetics

Put It Into Practice

Steps Coaches Can Take to Prevent Player Injuries with Dr. Robb Rehberg - William Paterson University

Steps Coaches Can Take to Prevent Player Injuries with Dr. Robb Rehberg – William Paterson Univ.

What Every Lacrosse Coach Should Know About Emergency Preparedness with Robb S. Rehberg, PhD, ATC, NREMT – William Paterson Univ.

Coaching Yourself: Controlling Your Anger

Coaching Yourself: Controlling Your Anger

Primary Sidebar

Your subscription could not be saved. Please try again.
You are on the list!

Become an Insider!
Get our latest lacrosse content delivered straight to your inbox!

Latest Content

  • Defense: Positioning and Turning Drill with Jimmy Ryan – Rutgers Univ.

    Defense: Positioning and Turning Drill with Jimmy Ryan – Rutgers Univ.

  • Leadership is Authentic, Relentless, Selfless Service to a Cause with Colonel Craig Flowers – Sideline Leadership

    Leadership is Authentic, Relentless, Selfless Service to a Cause with Colonel Craig Flowers – Sideline Leadership

  • NIL: What High School Students Need to Know

    NIL: What High School Students Need to Know

  • Box Mirror Footwork Drill with John Gorman – Hofstra Univ.

    Box Mirror Footwork Drill with John Gorman – Hofstra Univ.

  • Great Teams Don’t Happen by Accident with Robert Grasso – La Jolla Country Day School (CA)

    Great Teams Don’t Happen by Accident with Robert Grasso – La Jolla Country Day School (CA)

  • Oklahoma Drill with Trey Wilkes – Univ. of Delaware

    Oklahoma Drill with Trey Wilkes – Univ. of Delaware

  • About Us
  • FAQ
  • Privacy Policy
  • Terms of Service
  • Contact Us
  • Privacy Policy
  • Terms and Conditions
  • © Copyright 2025 Clell Wade Coaches Directory, Inc., All Rights Reserved.

  • Sign Up Free
  • Home
  • Log In
  • Cart
  • ADInsider
  • Baseball
  • Basketball
    • Men’s Basketball
    • Women’s Basketball
    • Back
  • Football
  • Lacrosse
  • Soccer
  • Softball
  • Track & X-Country
  • Volleyball
  • Wrestling
  • About Us
  • Contact Us