Metadata
Title
Sport, Exercise and Physical Activity Research Group (SEPARG)
Category
graduate
UUID
847de31666074e31b42f092d573b9e2f
Source URL
https://www.brookes.ac.uk/research/units/hls/groups/sport-exercise-and-physical-...
Parent URL
https://www.brookes.ac.uk/engage-and-innovate/consultancy
Crawl Time
2026-03-19T05:14:57+00:00
Rendered Raw Markdown

Sport, Exercise and Physical Activity Research Group (SEPARG)

Source: https://www.brookes.ac.uk/research/units/hls/groups/sport-exercise-and-physical-activity-separg Parent: https://www.brookes.ac.uk/engage-and-innovate/consultancy

Group leader(s): Dr Greg Walsh, Dr Stuart Whigham

Contact:

gwalsh@brookes.ac.uk

About us

Our interdisciplinary and international research agenda seeks to understand, intervene and improve the lives of those involved in sport and physical activity from grassroots to performance. Our work is multi-faceted and focuses on relationships of individuals and communities with sport, physical education, physical activity and health. Through our approach to research, we seek to offer real world solutions that can:

Part of

Research impact

Our research team has helped create ' 'LET’S MOVE: Physical activity for children and teenagers with and after cancer', a new guide that offers practical advice on safe exercise for children and teens affected by cancer.

This publication reflects a significant shift in thinking. Whereas rest was once routinely recommended for children and young people with cancer, growing evidence now demonstrates that regular physical activity can alleviate side effects such as fatigue and improve overall wellbeing.

The original version of this booklet was created by the multidisciplinary German network ActiveOncoKids, with Dr Peter Wright as a co-author. Building on this foundation, the Oxford Brookes team, Dr Wright, Dr Alba Solera-Sanchez, and Hayley Marriott have translated and adapted the material for the UK audience as well as added a chapter which is linked to technology and lessons learnt from the FORTEe project (the largest paediatric oncology exercise study in Europe).

Leadership

Dr Greg Walsh

Senior Lecturer in Sport and Exercise Science

View profile for Greg Walsh

Dr Stuart Whigham

Senior Lecturer in Sport, Coaching and Physical Education

View profile for Stuart Whigham

Projects

Active projects Completed projects

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Active projects

Project title and description Investigator(s) Funder(s) Dates
FORTEe: Get strong to fight childhood cancer This project has received funding from the European Union’s Horizon 2020 research and innovation programme under grant agreement No 945153 Hayley Marriott, Mr Stan Windsor, Dr Peter Wright Horizon 2020 From: May 2021 Until: July 2026

Our research themes

Human Performance Enhancement

Our research contributes to the development and improvement of human performance in competitive sport and exercise through a multi-disciplinary approach. A particular focus of our work is the exploration of the physiological and psychological impact of contrasting training and recovery methods with regards to the preparation and performance of elite sportspeople.

Furthermore, we also have a specific focus on the use of nutritional aids and environmental physiology in sports and exercise, and the biomechanics of sporting technique and injury risk.

Membership

Physical Activity and Health Promotion

Our research contributes to the understanding of effective methods for health promotion and rehabilitation, with a particular emphasis on the role of sport, exercise and physical activity in relation to health promotion, rehabilitation, sports injuries and sports medicine. We are particularly focused upon on the use of various nutritional and training interventions to improve physical health and psychological wellbeing.

We also work on cardiac autonomic health and how it may be influenced by chronic training modalities or dietary intervention, based on a non-invasive measure of heart rate variability. Furthermore, we also study the potential benefits of participation in sport, exercise and physical activity as a means of generating positive health outcomes for patients suffering from acute and chronic medical conditions, including cancer, heart disease and other cardiovascular illnesses.

Finally, we are investigating the potential to improve injury prevention and recovery practices within the domains of sport, exercise and physical activity, including emphasis on concussion management protocols, research into paediatric orthopaedics, and sports medicine research.

Membership

Pedagogy and Coach Development in Sport

The design of learning environments is a key component of the work in this research theme. We are particularly focused on non-linear learning theories pertaining to human movement, such as dynamical systems, game-centred approaches and ecological psychology, and their relationship to pedagogy in practice.

Both physical education and performance sport are considered as key domains within which to explore the impact that teachers and coaches can have on environment design, practice design and the individual learning journey. We seek to better understand how to put theory into practice by actively developing research intensive projects that are applied. To this end, a key focus of the future research activity of this group endeavours to address the lack of empirical evidence that currently exists on these theoretical approaches.

Membership

Sociology and Politics in Sport and Physical Education

Involvement in sport, physical activity and physical education at all levels can provide a fulfilling and rewarding experience for those involved; however, unequal access and rights within these domains can limit the involvement of certain individuals and groups. As such, we seek to examine the way that sport, physical activity and physical education are constructed to serve those engaged from participation to performance.

We are particularly interested in the social benefits of sport, physical activity and physical education for individuals and groups at all levels of participation. Given this, we are also interested in critiquing the barriers to achieving equality and social justice in these domains, through exploring the impact of sociological, political and historical phenomena in this field.

Furthermore, we are interested in critically examine the impact of these phenomena in practitioners in this field, including coaches, athletes, administrators, teachers and pupils, amongst others.

Membership

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