海角社区

Current Students

Siobhan Henderson (PhD5)听

Hometown:
Saint-Hubert, Quebec

Degrees:

  • BSc in Kinesiology, 海角社区
  • MA in Kinesiology and Physical Education, Specialization in Sport Psychology, 海角社区

Current Degree:

  • PhD (in progress) Sport Psychology, 海角社区

Funding:

  • Bloom, G. A., & Henderson, S. Evaluation of the Talk Today program delivered in a hybrid format to elite adolescent male hockey players and their support staff. Funded by the Mitacs Accelerate Program and Canadian Mental Health Association (Ontario), 2023鈥�2024.
  • Recipient of the Dan Q. Marisi Award in the Department of Kinesiology & Physical Education at 海角社区, 2023.
  • Recipient of the Fonds de Recherche du Qu茅bec - Soci茅t茅 et Culture (FRQSC) Doctoral Scholarship, 2022鈥�2026.
  • Recipient of the Social Sciences and Humanities Research Council (SSHRC) Joseph Armand Bombardier Canada Graduate Scholarship 鈥� Master鈥檚, 2019.
  • Recipient of the Graduate Excellence Award in the Department of Kinesiology and Physical Education at 海角社区, 2018, 2020.
  • Recipient of the Cooke Fellowship in the Department of Kinesiology and Physical Education at 海角社区, 2018.

Research Interests:
The research for my master鈥檚 degree explored the desired coaching behaviours during competitions of six Canadian national team springboard and platform divers. Among our findings, athletes perceived their coaches to play a crucial role in facilitating their performance during competition, which included helping them to direct their attention, prevent doubt from settling in, and manage their emotions. However, athletes discussed certain emotions and behaviours of the coach that negatively affected their mood and performance. Consequently, the nature of high-performance coaching requires individuals who can manage various challenging situations with their athletes and their collective team, while ensuring that their own emotional and psychological states are at optimal levels to operate effectively under these numerous pressures. Some of these demands include job insecurity, long hours, high workload, traveling, media pressure, team performance, and player satisfaction. Collectively, this can affect an athlete鈥檚 performance and a coach鈥檚 mental health. To date, the majority of research on mental health and well-being in elite sport has focused on athletes. The lack of research on the mental health of elite coaches is surprising given that several international consensus statements have identified the important role of coaches in safeguarding the mental health of their athletes (Breslin et al., 2019; Moesch et al., 2018; Reardon et al., 2019; Van Slingerland et al., 2019). The closest line of research is coach burnout, which has found that coaches can experience burnout and exhaustion as a result of various stressors that make up their job. Additionally, coaches have historically suppressed the symptoms of burnout to avoid being perceived as vulnerable or weak in the elite sport context. Given their reluctance to disclose and seek help for experiencing psychological distress, it seems reasonable that similar thoughts and behaviours may exist with regard to their own mental health issues. Therefore, the focus of my doctoral research is to gain a better understanding of mental health in elite sport from the perspective of the coach and to provide recommendations to better support them in this high-pressure environment. We hope this program of research will contribute to helping coaches cope with the demands of their profession to ensure their own mental health and well-being.

About me:
My interest in sport psychology stemmed from my background in competitive sport as a national level springboard diver and my experience as a youth sport coach. In particular, the coaches that I have had over the course of my athletic career have been instrumental in my development and diving success. As a result, I have been the recipient of the 鈥淭roph茅e Philippe Comptois鈥� awarded by Diving Qu茅bec to an athlete who demonstrated perseverance and tenacity in the face of adversity as well as the 鈥淩ipple Effect Athlete Award鈥� by Diving Canada, which is given to an athlete who is a positive role model and whose actions, ideals and values have impacted others in a positive way. My background in diving and coaching led me to become increasingly interested in the coach鈥檚 role in facilitating successful performances in sport. For these reasons, I decided to pursue a doctoral degree in sport psychology, specializing in high-performance coaching, to further understand what it takes for coaches to be at their best in a demanding environment, subsequently allowing them to optimize athlete development and performance.

Publications:

Henderson, S.,听Bloom, G. A., Durand-Bush, N., & Kentt盲, G. (revise and resubmit). Canadian University sport coaches鈥� experiences participating in a social learning space on topics related to and impacting coach mental health.

Henderson, S., Bloom, G. A., & Heath, N. L. (in press). Ice hockey coaches鈥� perceptions of their role in supporting athlete mental health. International Sport Coaching Journal.

Henderson, S., Alexander, D., Bloom, G. A., & Jowett, S. (2024). The coach-athlete relationship in high-performance sport: A behavioural perspective. In V. Girginov & M. Sarkar (Eds.), Routledge resources online: Sport studies. Routledge.听PDF icon Preview

Lefebvre, J. S., Henderson, S., Salomie, A., Heath, N. L., & Bloom, G. A. (2023). A mixed-methods examination of a mental health awareness program in elite ice hockey. International Journal of Sport & Exercise Psychology, 21(3), 557鈥�578.听PDF icon Preview

Henderson, S., Bloom, G. A., & Alexander, D. (2022). Desired coaching behaviours of elite divers during competition.听International Journal of Sport & Exercise Psychology, 20听(6), 1777-1794.PDF icon Preview