sport for community relations: some issues and observations david hassan ulster sports academy...
TRANSCRIPT
Sport for Community Relations: Some Issues and Observations
David HassanUlster Sports Academy
University of Ulster
Sport and its Uses
Tendency to expect too much from sport – it is largely temporary and peripheral with limited actual outcomes
Ironically one of its effective uses is as a platform for the expression of identities, which can prove divisive
What the last 20 years in N Ireland has demonstrated is its very possible for otherwise conflicting identities to co-exist – identities are remarkably resilient
The Historical Role of Sport
Separate sports – different schools, cultures and communities meant sport itself became exclusionary
Different identities – sports became entrenched in difference and certain NGB’s knowingly or otherwise perpetuated a sense of ‘them’ and ‘us’
The lack of knowledge about ‘their’ sports reinforced the view that ‘we’ knew nothing about ‘them’ and ‘they’ moved in different circles to ‘us’
Benefits of wider thinking…
Sport becomes a ‘hook’ to open up opportunities to engage ‘hard to reach’ groups
Players socialised into one sport might actually be much more suited to another
Creates a common investment – everyone has some ‘skin in the game’
Ripple effect amongst policy makers, those willing to invest and other civic bodies
Sport has the potential..
Symbolic, but this is an incremental process of change
Identities are not compromised, only strengthened by embracing others
Possibly start by forming an advisory board where others have the opportunity to speak up
Key is to demonstrate that real change is taking place not simply the production of a ‘feel good factor’
1 China (CHN) 51 21 28 100
2 United States (USA) 36 38 36 110
3 Russia (RUS) 23 21 28 72
4 Great Britain (GBR) 19 13 15 47
5 Germany (GER) 16 10 15 41
6 Australia (AUS) 14 15 17 46
7 South Korea (KOR) 13 10 8 31
8 Japan (JPN) 9 6 10 25
9 Italy (ITA) 8 9 10 27
10 France (FRA) 7 16 18 41
Beijing 2008 Medal Table
The reality of M&E (Mieir, 2009)
M&E as a burden
M&E often funder-driven and serves for accountability (positive results only)
Lack of motivation leads to a lack of quality
Lack of time and/or money
Lack of knowledge and experience
Copius consulting
Designing for M&E
Sport’s difficult claims and objectives need to be simplified KPI’s, performance targets, goals
Does the programme have objectives?
Are these objectives SMART? Specific, Measurable, Achievable, Realistic, Timely
How can we design monitoring systems to be innovative and creative?
Drawing upon participation in the process
An acceptance that qualitative data can be sufficient to demonstrate impact
Example: Attitudes towards community
Traditional
SurveyMeasured before and after an interventionCommonly measured by attitudinal surveyUnwieldy paper based surveysDoes not fit reality of sport provision
Creative/Innovative
Graffiti WallMeasured before and after an interventionFlip-chart or other paper is used to record thoughts and feelings about one or more topicsCan be as unwieldy to set-upCan fit sport session planning – no instructor needed
StoriesMeasured before and after an interventionAudio/visual recorder collects stories from participantsFlexible collection: at sport session or at home
Participants can interview each other
Relevant questions to ask
What are the aims and objectives of the programme?
What monitoring tools are being used to measure these?
Are these traditional or creative research tools?
List and describe their strengths and weaknesses?
How can this process be carried out to more adequately represent what is going on?
Empowerment as a goal
Means giving someone more power than they had previously
Transferring power to the individual by promoting self-regulating and self-motivating behaviour through innovative sport practice, such as self-managing sport teams, enhanced individual autonomy, etc.