Metadata
Title
The forgotten stakeholder
Category
general
UUID
8453da75c04a40589e0835f34ea272de
Source URL
https://www.lboro.ac.uk/research/spotlights/forgotten-stakeholder/
Parent URL
https://www.lboro.ac.uk/research/spotlights/
Crawl Time
2026-03-24T00:03:00+00:00
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The forgotten stakeholder

Source: https://www.lboro.ac.uk/research/spotlights/forgotten-stakeholder/ Parent: https://www.lboro.ac.uk/research/spotlights/

Understanding and enhancing the role of parents in supporting their children’s involvement in competitive tennis

Parents are key players in supporting their children’s positive experience of sport, but many describe it as a difficult and stressful role.

They acknowledge experiencing negative emotional responses during competitions – ranging from anxiety to anger – and that this can affect the quality of their involvement and the experiences of their child, coaches and match officials.

Our research underpins initiatives by the Lawn Tennis Association (LTA) and International Tennis Federation (ITF) which are helping parents around the world to enjoy their children’s sport participation – and play an active and positive part in encouraging it.

The outcomes of the research have also been extended to tennis coaches, referees, development officers and other officials within the sport to enhance their practice and engagement with parents.

Images courtesy of the Lawn Tennis Association

Our impact

The LTA’s Tennis Parent Education Strategy

The ITF’s Global Tennis Parent Education Strategy

Global Parental Engagement

The LTA Parent Tennis Workshops

The research

Our research exploring the experiences of parents in the UK whose children play competitive tennis began in 2006.

We have discovered that parents often find their children’s tennis competitions challenging. Our studies have identified a wide range of competition, organisational and developmental stressors that negatively affect their behaviour and support of their child’s involvement in the sport.

Building on this, we identified parents’ education and support needs – designing and trialling a three-month intervention with a series of workshops. Participants reported not only improved confidence in supporting their children positively, but also enhanced enjoyment of the competition experience and reduced levels of stress.

The workshop materials were then adapted to form an online package for parents. Again, the quantitative and qualitative results demonstrated a positive impact on the participants.

With organisation-led education now available worldwide, the competition experience is becoming far more positive for children and parents alike.

Professor Harwood’s research has been very successfully applied to achieve a national scale-out of education… Many people have affirmed the positive influence that the workshops initiative was having.

Miguel Crespo, PhD

Head of Participation and Education – ITF

In 2019, 119,458 young people competed in one or more tennis matches

### Drilling down - 36,000 played in formal competitions; 43,000 in recreational competitions; 49,000 in school competitions

Research funders

Development partners

Meet the experts

Professor Chris Harwood

Professor of Sport Psychology - Nottingham Trent University

Dr Christopher Spray

Reader in Sport and Exercise Psychology