Maesara, Nadila
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Trend dan hasil penggunaan model pembelajaran pendidikan jasmani (systematic literature review) Maesara, Nadila; Rahmat, Alit; Carsiwan, Carsiwan
Jurnal Porkes Vol 6 No 2 (2023): PORKES
Publisher : Universitas Hamzanwadi

Show Abstract | Download Original | Original Source | Check in Google Scholar | DOI: 10.29408/porkes.v6i2.23972

Abstract

The learning model of education is the planning or pattern used for instructional activities in the implementation of learning that can happen to the maximum. The aim of this research is to review the scientific literature on research trends and results of the use of learning models in physical education. The method used is a systematic literature review. This research search uses Harzing's publish or perish application by setting up a Google Scholar database with a time range of the last 10 years to select articles that can contain information about the use of the learning model of physical education. Research is guided by (preferred reporting items for systematic review and meta-analyses). The search results were 487 articles downloaded in 2014–2023, with 88 final articles being the result of a process of filtering inclusion and exclusion according to criteria with gradual and systematic selection. The findings are in line with the analysis of the systematic literature survey, which found that the trend of using the learning model of physical education varied, with cooperative learning becoming the main model most explored from year to year. The use of innovative and relevant learning models can improve student participation, learning outcomes, health and physical condition, motivation, and student involvement in the learning process.
Trends in sport and exercise psychology research: An integrated bibliometric and systematic literature review based on Scopus (2005–2025) Hidayat, Yusuf; Fauzee, Mohd Sofian Omar; Salamuddin, Norlena; Tulyakul, Singha; Işık, Utku; Majeed, Hasmiza Abdul; Hambali, Burhan; Mutaqin, Dywa Ikal; Maesara, Nadila
Journal of Coaching and Sports Science Vol. 5 No. 2 (2026): Journal of Coaching and Sports Science
Publisher : CV. FOUNDAE

Show Abstract | Download Original | Original Source | Check in Google Scholar | DOI: 10.58524/jcss.v5i2.968

Abstract

Background: Sport and Exercise Psychology (SEP) has evolved significantly as a scientific discipline, yet comprehensive mapping of its intellectual structure, thematic evolution, and research trends remains limited, particularly for the period encompassing recent methodological and conceptual advances. Aims: This study mapped the bibliometric landscape of SEP research indexed in Scopus (2005–May 2025) and synthesised high-quality empirical evidence to address six research questions, identifying knowledge gaps and future directions. Methods: A dual-method approach combined bibliometric analysis of 2,637 Scopus-indexed articles using VOSviewer software with a PRISMA-guided systematic literature review. The search strategy employed the query TITLE (“Sport and Exercise Psychology”) in the Scopus database, limited to English-language original research articles published between 2005 and May 2025. Bibliometric indicators included publication trends, citation patterns, author productivity (Lotka's Law), journal distribution (Bradford's Law), geographical contributions, and keyword co-occurrence networks. Thirty high-quality empirical studies were reviewed to address six research questions spanning motivation, identity, professional practice, mental health interventions, methodology, and psychological risks. Results: Annual publication growth averaged 13.43%, peaking at 293 articles in 2024. The United States, United Kingdom, and Australia dominated output (32% combined). “Physical activity,” “exercise,” and “mental health” emerged as dominant themes, reflecting expansion beyond performance psychology toward holistic wellbeing. Conceptual structure analysis revealed four primary dimensions: sport motivation and performance, exercise and mental health, youth sport and education, and cognitive aspects. The systematic review identified three cross-cutting themes: progressive methodological pluralism, tension between globalising professional standards and culturally responsive practice, and convergence of researcher epistemology with practitioner identity formation. Conclusion: SEP demonstrates robust growth and increasing methodological sophistication, yet geographical disparities, underrepresented populations, and research-practice gaps require strategic attention to enhance global applicability and the implementation of evidence-based practice. This study contributes to the field by presenting the first integrated bibliometric-systematic review of SEP over two decades, offering a two-method framework that combines structural mapping of knowledge production with a substantial synthesis of empirical evidence, and an approach that has been underutilized in previous SEP reviews.