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The Philosophical Influences that have Shaped Coaching

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We are very aware that this discussion is selective. We have focused on a limited number of Western philosophers and in particular their philosophy of knowledge. We hope that by doing so we have started to uncover some of the hidden dimensions of. coaching practice – what might be thought of as the submerged part of the iceberg (Malderez & Badoczky, 1999) – and at the same time provided an exemplar for uncovering more of that hidden dimension. A similar exercise might be undertaken with a different area of philosophical enquiry (for example, ethics), with different philosophers, or from a completely different philosophical tradition (such as Indian or Chinese philosophies). For individual practitioners we feel that one final ethical issue emerges from this discussion. That is that our personal philosophies matter; that we are driven by traditions and beliefs which bear examination. The current discussion may not fulfil that role for all readers. Yet, given the core function of relatedness in the coaching undertaking, we feel that some degree of examination is a duty to our clients.

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Authors

Peter Jackson

Peter Jackson specializes in Personal development coaching for leadership and change. He has been working in the field of personal development for nearly 25 years: from playleader for the Inner London Education Authority, teaching English as a foreign language, through management and Human Resources to personal development coaching as a specialism. After a first degree in modern languages from the University of Manchester, Peter completed his MSc in Organisational Behaviour at Birkbeck College, London in 1996. In 2004 I was awarded an MA (with distinction) in Coaching & Mentoring Practice at Oxford Brookes University, the very first dedicated masters-level course in the UK. He now also teach on the post-graduate coaching and mentoring programmes at Oxford Brookes.

 

Elaine Cox

Dr. Elaine Cox is senior lecturer within the International Centre for Coaching and Mentoring Studies at Oxford Brookes University. She is an experienced researcher, author and editor, and directs the Doctor of Coaching and Mentoring at the university, where she is also currently supervising twelve doctoral students. Elaine has a comprehensive knowledge of research approaches and methods and their application to coaching research, and her current research projects are focused upon aspects of managerial and leadership coaching. In addition to authoring a number of books and research articles, Elaine is the founding editor of the International Journal of Evidence Based Coaching and Mentoring.

 

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Cox, E., & Jackson, P. (in press). Developmental coaching. In E. Cox, T. Bachkirova & D. Clutterbuck (Eds.), Sage handbook of coaching. London: Sage.

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