Outside of Physical Activity and Wellness Centre

Faculty of

Kinesiology, Sport, and Recreation

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The Faculty of KSR provides solutions to improve well-being by advancing how we understand and participate in physical activity and leisure.

Offering multiple undergraduate and graduate programs, KSR connects the art and science of human movement, performance, and play.

 

OUR PROGRAMS


KSR undergraduate programs

Undergraduate Programs

Learn more about the undergraduate programs available through the Faculty of Kinesiology, Sport, and Recreation.


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KSR Graduate Programs

Graduate Programs

Learn more about the graduate programs available through the Faculty of Kinesiology, Sport, and Recreation.


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Professional Development

The Faculty offers professional education opportunities including four graduate-level certificates in sport, coaching, and recreation.


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We Will Shape the Future

Our students are tomorrow’s change makers — seeking out today’s challenges to keep us moving forward. They will overcome barriers, push the boundaries of our knowledge, and optimize athletic performance. They will, with our support. Give today to the Shape the Future campaign for student success.

 

RESEARCH & FACULTY NEWS


Faculty of Kinesiology, Sport, and Recreation News

  • The swim-a-thon is raising money for the Steadward Bears Para Swimming program. The Steadward Centre serves athletes as young as seven to those over 50. There are three groups in the program, a learn to swim group, a development group and a competitive group.

  • Moving bodies become better-thinking bodies

    KSR鈥檚 redesigned curriculum is transforming how students learn about movement, bridging theory and practice through somatic learning in KIN 156鈥攁n innovative course where students don鈥檛 just study movement, they experience it.

  • Margie Davenport discusses fitness guidelines for new mothers.

  • A playbook for grit: three lessons from new research

    First-of-its-kind study looks at how competitive athletes develop grit and the psychology behind it.

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Research in the News

  • 鈥淭he guideline recommends that women engage in at least 120 minutes per week of moderate to vigorous intensity physical activity to gain the most health benefits, including better quality sleep and improved mental health,鈥 says Margie Davenport, a professor in the Faculty of Kinesiology, Sport, and Recreation at the 天涯社区 and leader of the team creating the new guidelines.

  • Ever wonder why some athletes thrive through adversity while others fall short? Danielle Cormier is a post-doctoral fellow in the faculty of kinesiology, sport and recreation at the 天涯社区. She authored a study on the psychology of grit.

  • A new guideline shows evidence-based recommendations for women in their first year after birth. Professor in Active Healthy Living, Faculty of Kinesiology, Sport, and Recreation at the 天涯社区, Margie Davenport, joined CTV Morning Live to discuss a world-first.

  • Traditionally, new mothers are encouraged to rest after having a baby. But a new post-partum guideline suggests new moms might be able to start exercising sooner than they might think. Margie Davenport is a professor in active healthy living at the 天涯社区. She led the creation of the new set of post-partum exercise guidelines, published in the British Journal of Sports Medicine.

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Top 10

in the World for Sports-Related Subjects

TOP 150

ranked in the top 150 Universities in the world

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$4,170,212

in total research funding for 2018-2019

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