Skip to main content

Mr. Ray Breed

Lecturer Level B

Section/Portfolio:

Academic Operations - IEAC

Location:

Berwick Campus, Online

Available for:

  • Supervision

Contact Ray

Biography

Ray Breed is a lecturer and researcher across two broad fields: Physical Education and coaching pedagogy, and Exercise and Sport Science. He has a specific interest in skill acquisition and has coached sport from junior to elite senior level. Ray's research is predominately in models-based practice and game sense pedagogy, player movement demands and lower limb injury prevention and management

Content and Quality of Comparative Tactical Game-Centered Approaches in Physical Education: A Systematic Review

Epidemiology of Hamstring Strain Injuries in Elite Male Australian Football Players: An Analysis of 773 Injuries Over 7 Seasons

The Effect of Pedagogical Approach on Physical Activity of Girls During Physical Education

Comparison of Countermovement Jump and Squat Jump Performance between 627 State and Non-State Representative Junior Australian Football Players

Poor Reporting of Exercise Interventions for Hamstring Strain Injury Rehabilitation: A Scoping Review of Reporting Quality and Content in Contemporary Applied Research

Developing game sense in physical education and sport

  • Book

Can Video-based Perceptual-cognitive Tests Differentiate Between Skill Level, Player Position, and Experience in Elite Australian Football?

  • Journals

Factors Affecting Set Shot Goal-kicking Performance in the Australian Football League

Relationships between fundamental motor skill competence and physical activity in primary school students

One of the primary goals of physical educators is to encourage lifelong participation in physical...

  • Book Chapters

Tackle and impact detection in elite Australian football using wearable microsensor technology

Quantification of tackling demands in professional Australian football using integrated wearable athlete tracking technology

The effect of a resistance training programme on the grab, track and swing starts in swimming

A biomechanical comparison of the grab, swing and track starts in swimming

  • Journals