Applied Sport Psychology - Our work is different! | Oliver Stoll | TEDxUniHalle

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  • Опубліковано 22 чер 2017
  • Oliver Stoll resolves the picture of the psychologist with his patients sitting on a sofa talking about their problems. As a sport psychologist he works where his patients are: on the road, inside the water, cycling, running, training. That job might generate a lot of weekend work and travelling, but he also tells us why it is worth it.
    Oliver Stoll studied sports science, psychology and pedagogy at the University of Giessen as well as at the College of Charleston (S.C., USA). He became a Dr. phil. in the field of sports science at the University of Giessen. In 1995 he joined the University of Leipzig as a scientific assistant. With the focus on sports psychology and sports education, he became professor of sports science at the University of Halle in 2002. He mainly researches with "perfectionism", with the flow-experiences in sports and with the development and evaluation of sports psychological interventions in competitive sports. Furthermore, he developed the first university master's program in sports psychology in Germany.
    This talk was given at a TEDx event using the TED conference format but independently organized by a local community. Learn more at www.ted.com/tedx

КОМЕНТАРІ • 27

  • @Liz-wg9bc
    @Liz-wg9bc 6 років тому +47

    this is my dream job, psychology+sports, and always on the road!

    • @elipajo
      @elipajo 6 років тому +8

      I'm picking my degree and I don't know whether to do Sports Psychology or Football Coaching & Management D:

    • @tombradleyjr.3990
      @tombradleyjr.3990 6 років тому +12

      Pick Sports Psychology, you wont regret it, I'm in my first year at Bournemouth Uni studying Sports Psychology and I find it incredibly interesting already!

    • @egiziaphoto
      @egiziaphoto 6 років тому +3

      Mine too! Maybe one day we'll meet while working our dream!

    • @PrayerSoldiers
      @PrayerSoldiers 4 роки тому

      That's awesome! What sport?

    • @sitnok3820
      @sitnok3820 4 роки тому +3

      Same as me I’m about to start uni in Exeter studying psychology with sport science so hopefully I can take an interactionist approach combing the humanistic approach from the psychological perspective with the performance setting from the sports scientists approach.

  • @colinlee963
    @colinlee963 4 роки тому +2

    I was studied Sport Psychology in Financial & Organization Behavior in Asia

  • @Oswadomob
    @Oswadomob 3 роки тому +2

    Very interesting

  • @shamnasc373
    @shamnasc373 6 років тому +5

    It's my passion

  • @minhanhnguyen3593
    @minhanhnguyen3593 4 роки тому +4

    hi guys, as i find myself interested in sport psychology so i intend to take an undergradute degree in this major. however im considering between an psychology MA (gives an basic and holistics view of human psychology) and sport psychology MA, which one is better when it comes to finding a job?

    • @jon-loinegronalicea879
      @jon-loinegronalicea879 4 роки тому +1

      Minh Anh Nguyen I don't know if you've already taken a decision but....an MA in General Psychology will only prepare you for a PhD. You will get to explore your interests in the Psychology field but you would have to pursue a PhD after graduation. An MA in Sport Psychology could give you access to employment (depending on licensing protocols, of course) if your chosen program focuses on clinical or applied work. On the contrary, if you choose a research-oriented Sport Psychology Master's program then you would also be preparing yourself to pursuit a PhD. It depends on the Graduate Program's specific focus,

  • @ComedyHub-dz7sm
    @ComedyHub-dz7sm 11 місяців тому

    "Wonderful day today huh? Sunny outside. Great day. Ok." Adorable lol, people who live in colder climates with little sun appreciate the heck out of the sun i love it

  • @raworthyel3786
    @raworthyel3786 5 років тому +1

    how much schooling do you have? and what is required by most who hire a sports physiologist.

    • @justadude5828
      @justadude5828 5 років тому +4

      Most have a bachelors in psychology. Followed by a masters and in most cases a PHD

    • @annabellindner2752
      @annabellindner2752 3 роки тому +1

      In Germany and the US many Sportspsychologists have a Bachelor in Applied Sports and Exercise (three years), specialise in Health and then continue with a Master in Sportspsychology or related masters like Applied Neuroscience in Sports and Exercise (2 Years), then Doctors Degree (3-4 Years) at University.

  • @briand9217
    @briand9217 3 роки тому +5

    Psychology IS a long road if you want to become a counsellor you will have to embark on a journey that takes 8 years start to finish you will need a degree followed by a masters followed by 3 years doctorate or a PhD your designated area of study

    • @madamesatan5761
      @madamesatan5761 3 роки тому +2

      It depends in where country you live but it is indeed a long road. In my country if you want to be a licensed or registered Psychologist you need to take a master's degree first then licensure exam and those are kinda costly (tuition in master's and if you plan to go to a review center). Sadly a bachelor's degree is not enough to try all of the specializations.

  • @partyatmyplace01
    @partyatmyplace01 4 роки тому +1

    Who does he refer at the beginning? What is the theory his colleague wrote about? Where could I find their 18min TedTalk? Sorry the accent makes it hard to tell what was said exactly

    • @peterbarnett8714
      @peterbarnett8714 4 роки тому +1

      Arne Dietrich, Transient Hypofrontality

    • @annabellindner2752
      @annabellindner2752 3 роки тому +1

      The transient hypofrontality hypothesis of flow (Dietrich, 2004) is his paper but I'm not sure if Stoll meant this TED Talk: TEDxBeirut - Arne Dietrich - Surfing the Stream of Consciousness: Tales from the Hallucination Zone

  • @johnmclean6380
    @johnmclean6380 11 місяців тому

    Utterly incoherent :(

  • @user-dp2pr2oi5j
    @user-dp2pr2oi5j 3 місяці тому

    Psychology IS a long road if you want to become a counsellor you will have to embark on a journey that takes 8 years start to finish you will need a degree followed by a masters followed by 3 years doctorate or a PhD your designated area of study

    • @Tiffany-ov2jf
      @Tiffany-ov2jf 2 дні тому

      not necessarily. u do need a minimum 4-5 years of academic journey, for a 3/4 years bachelors + 1/2 yr masters to then work in the field