MoF Coaches Meeting
Muswell Hill, Nov 2015
Aims of meeting
1.Ensure all coaches are familiar with Child Protection processes, responsibilities and expectations
2.Understand the MoF Values, and how they relate to the sessions we deliver
3.Ensure consistency in the approach used to planning and delivering sessions
Feel free to interrupt at any time!We need to be able to talk freely, respectfully, directly
Intro
What are the strengths of the programme?What are the weaknesses and
opportunities?
8 years152 places on the programme nowOver 90% of triallists enrolOver 75% of children enrol next termOne-third summer born15% girlsFutsal Club and Futsal (David)
Success?
Key factors in success:• Coaches• Facility and surrounding demographic• Communication with parents• Sunday afternoons • Enjoyment in games
Key opportunities• Even better coaches
[that’s why we are here this evening!]
1. Child ProtectionThe most important thing we doDiscuss: a risky or tricky situation at MoF
• Risk Assessments• Consent Forms (incl toilet breaks)• Emergency Procedures• Accident Report Forms• First Aid and defibrillator• Child Protection Policy• Registers• Coaches contracts
[Sign-off that CP training delivered]
2. What do we value?Individual activity: Order the values in terms of
importance to you (in relation to running a football programme)
No right or wrong, everyone is different.
At MoF we need to be consistent. The values we have should shine through everything we do.
MoF aims to “develop confident, skilful, create children who understand and enjoy the game”
What are the 4 MoF values?
The MoF valuesEnjoyment: Children want to play games. Games need to be suited to their needs. Flow states.
Learning: Learning by playing. Maximising Learning Time. Game-based decision-making.
Inclusion: All abilities welcomed. Grouping according to needs. Differentiation within session.
Creativity: Allow kids to explore for themselves. Don’t be prescriptive.
Relate these to a recent or future session.See handout – values in programme and session.
A MoF session: The essential building blocks
Aim for children to be active and learning for 75% of session
• Get the players moving within 20 seconds of getting your group
• Get next activity ready while previous one is going on (i.e. get bibs on children for games while they are engaged in previous activity)
• Give them something to do when they return from a drink break
• Progress activities without stopping the group (if possible)• No queues or waitingChild-centred, game-based learning and enjoyment• Include elements of game-related decision-making in all
activities if possible• Use real game triggers, not cones or spots on floor• The coach should not be the centre of the activity• Rotate and swap team, partners etc during session• Don’t tolerate misbehaviour or disrespect
?? Excl 4pm Red
3v3 games
If the activity you are doing or planning doesn’t contain more football movement, more football learning, more football enjoyment than a 3v3 game – then do the 3v3 game instead.
A MoF session: The things we need to improve
PLANNING• Choosing a learning outcome for the group,
based on a problem that those children need to solve
• Choosing activities and games that relate to that learning outcome and allow us to teach
TEACHING• Providing challenge for children who need it, and
support for those who need it• Teach within games (eg demo, “stop-stand-still”,
command style)• Enhancing peer learning e.g. in small groupsREFLECTION• After the session – what went well, what didn’t?• How did your plan match the reality?
3. Outcomes of sessions
Outcomes should be problems to be solved, not solutions.
Which of these is a problem and which is a solution?
• A stepover• Beating an opponent 1v1
• An overlap• Creating a 2v1 overload
OK to leave children thinking about the answer. Conflict, chaos, struggle is good! It gets the brain working.
What do the children need to to be able to do?Pair or group activity: Take a group and write
down all the problems they need to be able to solve
• Technical/skill, in and out of possession• Game understanding / tactical• Physical & movement skills• Social, communication, organisational• Mental skills (confidence, effort etc)
Creative, confident, skilful, children who understand and enjoy the game
Think about what they need to be able to do, not how they need to be able to do it
Take home messagesPLANNINGChoose a problem relevant to the group you have.Plan your key teaching points and how you will
deliver these.Write down your plan and use it.
DELIVERYKeep children moving and activeInclude decision-making (SSGs, modified SSGs)Keep using 3v3s as the staple diet of sessions
TEACHINGTeach the individuals. Start teaching within
games.
Any other business
1. Registers filled in please (with outcome)2. Planet Organic sponsorship3. Orange group?4. Coach Evaluations and further learning,
team teaching etc?What would help? Practical inservice?
Thanks for coming.Beer?