Skip to main content
  • Fall 2021
    Portrait of Dana Voelker

    Dana Voelker recognized for research on gendered culture in competitive sports

    Dana Voelker, CPASS associate professor and director of undergraduate online education, received the 2020 Diane Gill Paper of the Year Award from the Women in Sport and Physical Activity Journal, recognizing her research on body image and weight and appearance pressures in competitive sport.

  • Fall 2020
    Guy Hornsby reviewing data with a student

    A new path to success

    Thanks to an innovative partnership with the Rockefeller Neuroscience Institute and collaborations with WVU Athletics, CPASS students are getting hands on experience.

  • Fall 2019
    A skier with with a glitched aesthetic

    Overcoming injury through the mind

    Student-athletes face a multitude of challenges in overcoming injuries. In attempting to achieve recovery and return to the field or court, athletes often rely on physical and psychological techniques. Damien Clement, associate professor, sport, exercise and performance psychology and athletic training, strongly supports the utilization of sport psychology techniques in preparing for the athlete’s return to competition.

  • Fall 2018
    Students entering CPASS

    Educational Centers

    We sat down with faculty experts to answer key questions about the educational centers on our campus that have become vital to research and student engagement at CPASS.

  • Fall 2017
    Group photo of Ed Etzel, Kristen Dieffenbach and Gonzalo Bravo.

    Unpacking the Ethics of Sport

    Three CPASS professors — Ed Etzel, professor, Sport and Exercise Psychology, and director of the Center for Sports Ethics; Kristen Dieffenbach, PhD, associate professor, Athletic Coaching Education, and director of the Center for Applied Coaching and Sport Science; and Gonzalo Bravo, associate professor, Sport Management — discuss some of the most fundamental questions raised in sports ethics today. How and why must sport be protected, and what are we actually protecting it from?