Biography of Dr Sherylle Calder / Биография доктора Шерил Колдер


About

Sherylle Calder was born in Bloemfontein, South Africa where she completed her schooling and her first degree (also Honnours and HED) at the University of the Orange Free State.

She studied for her Masters’ degree at the University of Stellenbosch before registering for her Sport Science PhD under Prof Tim Noakes at the University of Cape Town.

Her Doctoral thesis grew out of her interests in understanding the training methods and game concepts used internationally in field hockey and, especially, the role that visual skills play in the improvement of sporting performance. She developed novel visual skills training programme to enhance the capacity of players to access performance-relevant visual information during play. Her studies established that the enhancement of visual skills, using these specific training programmes, measurably improved the on-field performance of hockey players. This effect was substantially greater than any achieved by conventional coaching and training programmes. She has also published her work in various academic and sport related journals.

Sports History

Between 1982 and 1996, she represented South Africa at Field and Indoor hockey, gaining 50 international field hockey caps and 15 indoor caps. Recognition as one of the top players of her era came in 1995 when she was selected to the team comprising the top 11 players in the pre-Olympic Qualifying Hockey Tournament. Countries participating at this Tournament included Germany, Netherlands, Korea, China, Great Britain, Argentina and Canada. In 1996 she was selected to a World Invitation Select Team to help prepare the Australian Women’s hockey team for the Atlanta Olympic Games.

She became the first woman in South Africa to coach a Men’s team at the National Hockey Tournament and the u/21 National Tournament. She also successfully coached the Stellenbosch University Men’s and Women’s Hockey teams to a record number of titles. She achieved all this while still participating for South Africa.

Discovering a Science

Being an athlete from a young age participating mainly in ball sports, she played her first competitive field hockey match at the age of eight. As a result of the role that she perceived the awareness of visual and perceptual skills played in her skilled performance as she developed as an elite hockey player, she began an interest in the visual concepts of elite sport. From an early age she was never given any coaching instruction regarding vision and its possible role in the visually -demanding game of hockey. The sole advice received was the traditional admonitions of most coaches of ‘keep your eye on the ball’. She however experienced, and even more so at an international level, that her visual and perceptual system was ‘different’ to others and perceived that it was an important part of performance at an elite level.

Dr. Calder is currently regarded as not only South Africa’s but also internationally the leading specialist in this field of study and work. She is also the only person with a formal PhD in Visual Performance Skills Training.