Coaching and Pedagogy Research Group: Members
View and find out more about the members of the Sport Psychology, Education and Coaching Research Group.
View and find out more about the members of the Sport Psychology, Education and Coaching Research Group.
See the Sport Psychology, Education and Coaching Research Group's publications.
Our research aims to make positive changes to coach, teacher and practitioner development and inform policy and practice to improve people’s lives. We provide multidisciplinary approaches to our research with the aim of solving real world problems and pride ourselves in collaborating with industry partners.
Our research aims to make positive changes to coach, teacher and practitioner development and inform policy and practice to improve people’s lives. We provide multidisciplinary approaches to our research with the aim of solving real world problems and pride ourselves in collaborating with industry partners.
We are always trying to make our research transferable to the intended population. Therefore, the Sport Psychology, Education and Coaching Research team are busy engaging in creating edited books, book chapters, blogs, podcasts, and online webinars.
The Physical-Literacy group at Liverpool John Moores University is developing a physical literacy consensus statement for England.
This project focuses on the role olfactory and oral perception plays in shaping our consummatory experiences, preferences, and food seeking behaviours. Research into this area is important to health research, shaping understanding of individual differences in food selection, consumption, and other dietary behaviours.
Exploring the impact of creative transpersonal psychology practices in person-centred coaching
This study aims to understand the causal relationship between discrimination and psychosis in ethnic minority populations in the UK.
Research suggests that autistic people are at a higher risk of suicide than non-autistic people. Figures show that up to 66% of autistic adults had thought about suicide during their lifetime (compared to 20% of non-autistic adults), and up to 35% had planned or attempted suicide.