relative age effect – SIRCuit

Teaching Moment

Relative age effects (RAEs) are developmental advantages experienced by those born in the early months of the year relative to an age-defined cut-off date. A recent study investigated the accumulated advantage of RAEs amongst Canadian male adolescent ice hockey players at different competitive levels (i.e., house league and travel) assessing the leadership behaviours and other developmental outcomes (e.g., personal & social skills, goal setting) among Canadian hockey players within the context of RAEs.

Subscribe to Updates
News travels fast. Stay connected to sport and physical activity-related knowledge, news and resources through SIRC’s daily newsletter – delivered straight to your inbox.
Latest Knowledge Nuggets

SIGN up for Canadian sport daily

News travels fast. Stay connected to sport and physical activity-related knowledge, news and resources through SIRC’s daily newsletter – delivered straight to your inbox.

Sign up to Our Newsletter

News travels fast. Stay connected to sport and physical activity-related knowledge, news, jobs and resources through SIRC’s daily newsletter — The Canadian Sport Daily — delivered straight to your inbox.

"*" indicates required fields

Groups*
Skip to content