Coaching and Pedagogy Research Group: Research Projects
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.
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Outdoor PE Project
Using a Natural Curriculum approach to develop outdoor learning within Physical Education and to enhance wellbeing and engagement with the natural environment.
The project is being led by Dr Avril Rowley and Ceri Magill and will explore the Natural Curriculum approach to outdoor learning in PE. Through this, LJMU PE students will develop their subject knowledge and skills to facilitate outdoor learning within a PE environment. LJMU PE students will further support project staff in the delivery of practical workshops to secondary schools pupils and develop teaching and learning resources for secondary school PE teachers.
Staff: Dr Avril Rowley, Ceri Magill
Collaborating Organisations: Woodchurch High School
ParaPentathlon
Dr Nicola Robinson from the School of Sports Science was awarded QR Policy Support Funding from the impact team last year (2022), to enhance their research capacity in support of the emerging concept of Para-Pentathlon sports. This initiative was backed by the National Governing Body PentathlonGB and the International Federation Union of Modern Pentathlon (UIPM). The primary goal of the research was to investigate the development of Para-Pentathlon, a new addition to the pentathlon sports family. The study focused on attracting para-athletes, enhancing their engagement, organizing events, and understanding athlete perspectives, all with the ultimate aim of achieving inclusion in future Paralympic Games. This project aligned with Pentathlon GB's Equality, Diversity, and Inclusion strategy, shaping policies for inclusive sports and fostering international partnerships based on research findings. Initial events have been hugely successful. Dr Robinson presented the raw findings to the UIPM Para Commission last week and is now writing some key policy and guideline documentation for other National Federations including GB. The UIPM are also supporting her to attend the International Paralympic Committee VISTA conference in Egypt this November (2023).
Staff: Dr Nic Robinson, Danny Cullinane
Collaborating Organisations: Union International Federation of Pentathlon Modern, Pentathlon GB
ParaCoach
The ParaCoach was an Erasmus Plus funded project, led by staff at LJMU, aimed at enhancing the learning, mobility and employment of para coaches across the EU, through the development of a number of outputs: a Para-Disability European Sport Coaching Framework, ParaCoach Work Force Audit, Best Practice Case Studies, Free Massive Open Online Course and the ParaCoach website.
Staff: Dr Tabo Huntley, Dr Amy Whitehead, Dr Gus Ryrie, Dr Colum Cronin, Amy Hardwick (Dr Charlotte Williams, UCLAN)
Collaborating Organisations: The International Council for Coaching Excellence (ICCE); European Paralympic Committee (EPC); Dutch Olympic Committee*Dutch Sports Federation (NOC*NSF); Institute of Sport Poland (ISP); Hungarian Paralympic Committee (HPC), The Immersive Learning Studio
Find out more information on the Paracoach website.
Resources
Small-sided Games in Football Training
“The state of play of small-sided games”
Small-sided games are training formats derived from the official match and aim to replicate the football demands. It’s a proven training tool to provide an adequate physical, technical, and tactical training stimulus to football players. It fits in any training program, regardless of age, gender, playing level, and even sport. It creates a learning environment with a meaningful context of the match. Previously, Dr Sigrid Olthof completed her PhD on the representativeness of small-sided with the official match.
In this project, we survey coaches’ use and knowledge of small-sided games, and we monitor the small-sided games across a season. We address the following aims:
- Capture current understanding and knowledge of small-sided games
- Determine the applications of small-sided games in football practice
- Identify where coaches have obtained knowledge from about small-sided games.
Take part in "The state of play of small-sided games" - survey.
Staff: Dr Sigrid Olthof, Dr Stephen McQuilliam, Dr Colin Lewis, Dr Tabo Huntley, James Bush, Dr Amy Whitehead
Special Olympics
Workforce audit and eLearning course
Our collaboration with Special Olympics came to fruition through the ParaCoach Project. We conducted a workforce audit and follow-up interviews with Special Olympics coaches which aided the development of the ‘Introduction to Coaching Developmental Sports’ eLearning Course. The aim was to provide an evidence based understanding of the coaching workforce in order to inform policies and practice of Special Olympics.
Staff: Dr Tabo Huntley, Dr Amy Whitehead, Amy Hardwick
Collaborating Organisations: Special Olympics, The Immersive Learning Studio
Multidisciplinary approach to coaching Laser Run
The LaserRun Project is looking at developing coach education knowledge around the technical and tactical elements of the Laser Run discipline in Modern Pentathlon. We will be utilising an interdisciplinary approach to the data collection covering biomechanics, physiology and psychology. Currently recruiting athletes!
Staff: Dr Nic Robinson, Dr Joe Causer, Dr Amy Whitehead
Collaborating Organisations: Pentathlon GB
More information: please email Dr Nic Robinson
Caring Culture in Sport Coaching
The Caring Culture project is an example of Dr Colum Cronin's care research. This project is running alongside UK Coaching. We are exploring Care within sport coaching, specifically how coaches experiences of care and how organisations can care for coaches. This study hopes to understand how coaches can experience care in their everyday situated lives. In doing so, the project will:
- identify the needs of coaches
- provide a baseline assessment of coaches’ perceptions of care
- help seeking strategies across four coaching domains
Data has been collected through a survey with over 300 respondents and through interviews with a number of sport coaches.
Staff: Dr Colum Cronin, Dr Amy Whitehead, Dr David Tod, Dr Fran Champ, Dr Gus Ryrie. Dr Colin Lewis, Dr Tabo Huntley, Amy Hardwick (Dr Fieke Rongen, Leeds Beckett University)
Collaborating Organisations: UK Coaching
Think Aloud and Coach Reflection
Dr Amy Whitehead submitted an impact case study for REF 2021 on her research that uses the Think Aloud method to develop coach reflection. Amy has developed the Think Aloud Programme which has impacted 375 coaches, mentors and coach educators and adopted by the England Football Association (FA), Rugby Football League (RFL) and UK Coaching. The FA Regional Mentor Manager stated, “The TA programme has helped the mentors realise the benefit of reflection, it has given them another tool in the tool box for reflection and perhaps more importantly, it has actually improved their understanding of reflection because it’s about the why. Why do I reflect? So they can actually make some adjustments or challenge their thinking or actions and it helps the mentor go on and help the coach or the person they’re working with. The impact of this research is that it has improved the mentor-coach relationship, the mentors communicate more effectively with their mentee coaches which in turn has improved the coaches we work with.”
Amy is also currently developing a Think Aloud resource for Sport and Exercise psychologists is current leads the Think Aloud Research Group, funded by the British Psychology Society. She has also recently created a series of resources for UK Coaching providing guidelines on how coaches can use Think Aloud within their practice.
Staff: Dr Amy Whitehead, Dr Tabo Huntley, Dr Colum Cronin, Prof Zoe Knowles, Dr Gus Ryrie, Dr David Tod, Steven Vaughan, Dr Hayley McEwan (University of West Scotland), Dr Phil Birch (University of Chichester), Dr Trish Jackman (University of Lincoln), Dr Laura Swettenham (International Federation of Esports Coaches).
Collaborating Organisations: UK Coaching, England Football Association, Rugby Football League, British Psychology Society (Division of Sport and Exercise Psychology)
Resources
Improving young children’s physical and cognitive outcomes through a gamified at-home intervention
“Closing the physical and cognitive attainment gap for early years children through a home-based, gamified stability skills intervention: a pilot study”
A 12 week gamified intervention based on developing stability skills of 4-5 year old children. Children work with their parents to complete 24 challenges within 6 missions based in a space adventure story arc. Children are assessed on certain physical, cognitive and affective aspects. If effective, it is hoped to create a free resource for families and schools to use.
Staff: Dr Katie Fitton-Davies, Professor Mike Duncan and Dr Sam Clarke (Coventry University, Professor James Rudd (Norwegian School of Sport Sciences)
Collaborating Organisations: Coventry University, Norwegian School of Sport Sciences
Warrington Youth Rowing Club Project
Underpinned by a new logic model developed in collaboration with Warrington Youth Rowing Club in 2021, this qualitative study seeks to explore key stakeholders’ experiences and perceptions of the influence the Warrington Youth Rowing Club’s school’s rowing programme on student’s physical, mental, social, and scholastic wellbeing and performance. It is using focus groups and interviews to collect data from youth rowers, rowing coaches and coordinators, teachers and head teachers, and parents/guardians.
Staff: Dr David Todd, Scott Whitfield, Danny Cullinane, Milly Blundell, Cath Walker
Collaborating Organisations: Warrington Youth Rowing Club
Experiences of Pregnancy on the World Class Programme: Athlete Partner Research
Kelly Massey has been involved in the “Experiences of Pregnancy on the World Class Programme: Athlete Partner Research”, which started in early 2023. Researchers in the group have recently published a report, the findings of which are based on a qualitative interview study with 10 Olympic and Paralympic athlete partners on, or recently retired from, the WCP. The research was conducted by staff at Loughborough University and Kelly Massey from Liverpool John Moores University, in collaboration with UK Sport and was designed to extend the empirical insights on athlete pregnancy experience on the WCP to inform UK Sport’s pregnancy guidance.
The report indicates that athletes face significant challenges as they balance WCP commitments with supporting their partner prenatal and postpartum with implications on athlete health and wellbeing, performance outcomes and equitable practice. The findings highlight that there are shared experiences between athlete partners and female athletes who start a family whilst on the WCP that proceed from cultures of organisational practice in relation to family planning and pregnancy support. Importantly, the report highlights opportunities for the development of athlete partner support and provision.
Collaborating Organisations: UK Sport
More information: Research Report
Appreciating and Supporting Community Sport Coaches
Community sport coaches are pillars of their sporting communities and essential to positive sporting experiences for people in ‘grassroots’ settings. Yet, for many of them, coaching can become a burden that is difficult to maintain without support. In response, our collaboration with UK Coaching and the University of Northumbria seeks to support community sport coaches by connecting them with colleagues in their organisations, appreciating and sharing the knowledge within their groups, and developing a structure of workshops to support sport coaches. To do so the project seeks to develop a ‘ground up’ approach to coach learning, empower ‘coaching leaders’ in sport organisations, and wrap a community of supportive peers around coaches. To achieve this the project will develop, deliver and evaluate appreciative inquiry workshops to be delivered in person, and online across sporting communities.
Staff: Dr Colum Cronin, Dr Amy Whitehead, Dr Justine Allen (Northumbria University), Dr Reece Chapman (Northumbria University), Dr Adam Nichol (Northumbria University)
Collaborating Organisations: UK Coaching, Northumbria University
Postgraduate Research
Our postgraduate students study a range of PhD’s and Professional Doctorates in the areas of coaching, education, and pedagogy. In addition to applying multiple approaches in areas such as sport psychology, nutrition, physiology and strength and conditioning to coaching and teaching practice. For more information on postgraduate study with us please see our Postgraduate research opportunities in Sport and Exercise Science webpage.
Current students
Current students
Amy Elizabeth Hardwick
Programme: PhD
Thesis title: Exploring Coaches and Coaching in the Context of Special Olympics
About my research: The aim of Amy’s research is to provide an original exploration of coach learning, development and practice within the context of Special Olympics. This area is extremely underrepresented and so research is needed in order to provide an evidenced understanding of coaches within this context, how they can best be supported and in turn how they can best support their athletes.
Andrew Newland
Programme: PhD
Thesis title: Exploring the Athlete-Coach relationship within high performance football.
About my research: The aim of Andy’s research is to explore the Athlete-Coach (A-C) relationship within high performance football. The research focuses on developing our understanding of the knowledge and skills required in order for coaches to develop and maintain high quality relationships with athletes. Initially, the research explores the role of formal coach education and looks specifically at the conceptualisation of the A-C relationship and focuses on how knowledge and skills are developed through the English FA’s coaching pathway at Level 3 and Level 4. Subsequently, the research captures the perceptions of high performance coaches. This includes the realities and challenges of forging and maintaining these relationships in practice. Lastly, the athletes voice is captured in order to better understand their perceptions and experiences relating to the key competencies of coaches they were able to develop high quality relationships with.
Eleanor Cantwell
Programme: PhD
Thesis title: Talent development in the British Gymnastics pathway
About my research: My research forms part of a collaboration between LJMU, British Gymnastics and UK Sports Institute (UKSI, formerly EIS) and has involved operating in a dual capacity as a researcher-practitioner within BG and UKSI performance support teams. Particularly focusing within BG's performance pathway, I am looking at the psycho-social factors within talent development in these spaces. I am especially interested in exploring how such factors may be influenced systemically such as through coaching practice and environment/practice design.
James Bush
Programme: PhD
Thesis Title: TBC
About my research: My PhD thesis covers online coach education, and is an overall exploration of online coach education given the increased prevalence in online coach education in the last 5 years, due to advancements in technology, increased user knowledge of technology use, and the forced use to the pandemic.
Jason Doggett
Programme: PhD Sports Coaching
Thesis title: Working title: An holistic -ecological perspective of elite women’s academy football transition: a case study of the environment.
About my research:
The aim of Jason research is to explore how women’s regional talent centres (RTC) create holistic ecological talent development environments to support players development and transition without jeopardising the ethos of the club or aspects of personal and educational development. The second part of the research aims to gain insight into players perceptions of their experiences of holistic talent development environments and its support mechanisms. Upon completion the aim is to frame these findings within the holistic-ecological framework, and, by doing so inform future practice in an underrepresented field.
Jenna Louise Rice
Programme: PhD
Thesis title: The effect of a gamified motor skill intervention on emotional intelligence in 10-11-year-old disadvantaged primary school children.
About my research: The aim of Jenna’s research is to increase the emotional intelligence of 10-11-year-old primary school children through the improvement of motor skill via the development and evaluation of a gamified approach in physical education. This area of research has not been directly investigated before and offers significant theoretical and practical implications for teaching and learning, whilst promoting positive development trajectories of motor competence and emotional intelligence.
Jono McPhail
Programme: PhD
Thesis title: Coaching Philosophy and the Authentic-Self – A Journey from Conception to Action
About my research: The aim of Jono’s research is to further explore the process of developing a coaching philosophy from conception to action and its associated implications for coaching practice/ process. Whilst research into the area is by no means sparse, this to date has been found to lack philosophical underpinning and in turn, lacks a genuine connection between coaching philosophy and the act of sports coaching. To this end, the intention is further to developing an intervention strategy to positively impact practice and/ or process for the individual coach, organisation and wider groups.
Millie Graveson
Programme: PhD
Thesis title: An investigation into body image psychological projections of physical education teachers and the potential transfer consequences on their students
About my research: Millie's research is looking at how physical education teachers’ body images are projected onto their students through social interactions and pedagogical practice, alongside student affective consequences.
Sam Richardson
Programme: PhD
Thesis title: Understand before we act: Exploring a golf coach’s perception and application of a game-based approach and a female cricket coach’s perception and application of nonlinear pedagogy.
About my research:
My research is focused on coaches’ and teachers’ perceptions and application of game-based approaches (GBA), nonlinear pedagogy (NLP) and constraints-led approach (CLA), and how best to support their understanding and application of these pedagogies. From conducting a systematic review on coaches’ and teachers’ perceptions and application of GBAs, NLP and CLA, the findings revealed a dearth of research evidence on target and striking/fielding games, as well as female coaches’ perception and application of the pedagogies. Therefore, I am investigating a male golf coach’s perception and application of a GBA and a female cricket coach’s perception and application of NLP. This research aims to provide a much-needed insight on how these coaches’ perceive and apply these pedagogies in their practice, as well as providing the basis to how these coaches could be supported with their understanding and application of the pedagogies.
Steven Vaughan
Programme: Professional Doctorate
About my research: Steven’s research relates to cognitions and mental performance within endurance sport, with his systematic review exploring the efficacy of psychological interventions. His first research project is an explorative study to qualitatively examine perspectives of cyclists on factors which determine their attentional focus and control during virtual-world cycle races. This is a novel study with implications for coaches working in this area to best support their riders.
Former students
Former students
Noel Dempsey
Programme: PhD
Thesis title: An Examination of Coach Education Provision in Grassroots Football
About my research: The aim of Noel’s research is to examine formal coach education provisions within the English Football Association (FA) grassroots provision. This research focuses on coach education courses from a policy perspective and their initial creation and dissemination processes that are then reproduced in-practice. The complex and contested nature of policy development requires greater focus of research around initial course design, content and structure, and pedagogic methods to be examined prior to any course observation taking place. This focus aims to support NGBs when designing future coach education provisions.
Reece Chapman
Programme: PhD
Thesis title: An Investigation into the Past and Present Practices of FA Grassroots Coach Education
About my research:
The aim of Reece’s research is to examine the past and present practices, and policy, of The Football Association Coach Education. By applying a Freirean lens Reece’s work considers if coach education is oppressive or instead liberates. Reece has already reported how coach education in more recent times has developed (doi.org/10.1080/13573322.2019.1654989) and the remainder of his thesis explores the experiences of coaches in their own contextual and nuanced world.