How to Encourage Growth and Enhance Recreational Soccer?
 
The simplest ways to encourage growth of recreational players and programs is to sure that the players get to play in a fun environment.

The “Participation and Pleasure” model works should be used to evaluate and enhance all programs on the state and local level.

Model

Emphasis

Excellence

Body

Decisions

Opponents

Pleasure and Participation

Active participation

Perform to capabilities

Source of enjoyment

Shared

Needed

 

 

 
Evaluation Checklist

Each program, process, event, competition can be evaluated by the checklist below:

Does the program/completion

  • Encourage active participation?   ___ yes  ___ no
  • Allow all players to perform to their capabilities?  ___ yes  ___ no
  • Provide a source of enjoyment?  ___ yes  ___ no
  • Share decisions with the players?  ___ yes  ___ no
  • Value and appreciate opponents and encourage sportsmanship?  ___ yes  ___ no
If you get yes on all five, you are encouraging growth.  You are meeting the recreational player’s needs and encouraging their continued participation in the sport.
 
If You Have "NO", You Have to "Fix It"

For each no answer, you have to “fix it”.  It’s the same process as coaching a team, if you see a problem on the field; you have to “fix it”.

If you see a problem in a recreational program, event or such, you have to “fix it”

Effective and pervasive coaching education programs are a major “fix it” for many problems in recreational play.

Education of parents and supporter through Parent Education and other activities is another major “fit it” for many other problems.

Re-evaluation and program redesign is another fit it up tool.  Small sided games, festivals instead of tournaments are examples of such re-evaluation and redesign successes.

Effective training of recreational administrators in the basic precepts of recreational soccer also is a good tool to help keep programs true to the basic requirements of the players.

 
Pitfalls to Guard Against

Programs that are designed well but executed poorly i.e. become too competitive

Administrator who lose focus as to the realities of recreational soccer

Well meaning parents, coaches, administrators and board members who just don’t get it – who just don’t realize why kids play recreational soccer – to have fun.

Volunteers who want to help solely for the benefits they perceive they can obtain for their player, their team, their organization. 

Failure to use the checklist above to identify problems in recreational programs.

Failure to “fix” problems identified by using the checklist.

Focusing on elite players and programs to the detriment of the recreational player and programs.

 

 

For more information, please contact us at:  StateOffice@kysoccer.net
This website is the official website of the Kentucky Youth Soccer Association, Inc., 443 South Ashland Avenue, Suite 201, Lexington, Kentucky 40502 - Phone 859-268-1254 - Facsimile 859-269-0545   © Kentucky Youth Soccer Association 2008.  All rights reserved. No commercial reproduction, adaptation, distribution or transmission of any part or parts of this website or any information contained, herein by any means whatsoever is permitted without the prior written permission of Kentucky Youth Soccer.
 
Recreational Soccer Opportunities & Challenges
Encouragement of the Small sided Games
Creating Dynamic Recreation Programs Requires Effective Communications
How to Encourage Growth and Enhance Recreational Soccer? 
 
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