Sunday, 8 February 2009

Institue of Professional Judo Coaches

Hi

It was Cat Stevens who sang “Times they are a Changing” and so it is in the world of Judo in the UK and probably the rest of Europe. With the 2012 London Olympics the government has stated that its Olympic Legacy is going to be grass roots with 1000’s of new qualified coaches.

The BJA are supporting the UKCC coaching levels for new coaches but not yet integrating old caches. The EJU now have some of the best Judo Coaching courses in the world – a level 4 and level 5 Based at Bath University. ( http://www.bath.ac.uk/sports/foundation/judo/index.html
) These courses are recognised by the rest of Europe but The BJA don’t recognise them and you can’t get them added to your coaching idea....there is something wrong with this picture. The BJA will say they are don’t meet UKCC standards and then they promptly introduce a club instructor award to fill a gap created by people finding the UKCC to expensive or too much of a commitment – amongst other reasons.

We have a situation where there are a number of private companies providing excellent taster seasons and basic beginners Judo in schools and after school clubs. Probably more children in Judo are taught this way a week than in regular BJA clubs!

The BJA cater for the membership and clubs often run by volunteers, but their is no pathway or guidance, coaching model or franchise for the Coach who wants to earn a living teaching judo, so we get the man in a van syndrome who wanders like a ronin for school to school location to location.

They have no NGB backing just a coaching qualification and a membership licence if they are BJA.

So here is the radical idea copying the model from football who have a Managers Association would anyone like to join...

The Institute of Professional Judo Coaches ( name may be changed).

An organisation whose sole purpose is to advise and for the assistance people who earn money coaching judo. It will have a code of conduct, a coaching qualification will be a prerequisite, and you must commit to a Continued Professional Development Programme for your and your judo....this would be more then attending a single 4 hr course and include reflection, sharing ideas, seminars and courses. But it would be done at your pace and your level of coaching.

The aim would also include:

· helping provide business models for coaches,
· support coaches in running a business
· sharing best practice.
· Devleoping a knowledge base for coaches
· Creating world class support material
· Assisting participation coaches with retention
· Advice and shared experience of School and LEA Judo
· Possible dispute resolution
· Provide coach education as deemed needed by coaches!
· Lobbying NGB’s and funding authorities on the needs of coaches

It would be independent of the NGB, but would work with them, and focus on Coaching issues and Judo coaching issues, it wouldn’t matter if you were running a club or an after school activity the aim would be best practice in Judo Coaching.

Perhaps it is too radical for the UK, but with perhaps the right 20 members to start with you will be responsible for over 15,000 participation mat hours a week. A figure that Any NGB or Funding Body can’t afford to ignore. If you got the academic coach education providers behind it you also start to create a knowledge base, and a base of participation that could be used for serious Judo participation studies.

In three phone calls I mentioned the idea and everyone was for it –as long as it promoted good coach education. Whether or not the NGB’s would like it that’s another story. Someone suggested treating like a Professional body with different levels of membership so club coaches could be associates, others said it could provide support and help like a Union.

Blue sky thinking? It is outside the box, is it too radical for the UK? The idea is now out there, let talk about it – your comments please.


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