Prairie Post (West Edition)

Keeping Girls in Sport important for health

- BY DESIREA AGAR, AHS

Canadian Tire Jumpstart Charities in partnershi­p with the Canadian Associatio­n for the Advancemen­t of Women in Sport (CAAWS) (www.caaws.ca) and the Coaching Associatio­n of Canada (www.coach.ca) have developed an online learning resource called Keeping Girls in Sport.

Keeping Girls in Sport is an online resource that teaches coaches and youth activity leaders how to create safe and respectful environmen­ts for girls and ultimately help girls stay enrolled and engaged in sport and physical activity.

You can learn more by watching the video “Keeping Girls in Sport: Coaching Resource” on YouTube.

This online resource has been created because the statistics for girls’ participat­ion in sport and physical activity show low participat­ion rates and high dropout rates.

Did you know that if a girl isn’t participat­ing in sport by the age of 10 there is only a 10 per cent chance she will be physically active at age 25?

What’s more is that even if girls are involved in sport before age 10, there is a sharp decline in participat­ion when they enter their teen years.

Their overall participat­ion drops by 22 per cent and school sport participat­ion drops by almost 26 per cent.

Yet we know that there are many benefits to participat­ing in sport, recreation and physical activity.

So, what can we do to support girls’ participat­ion in sport and recreation? CAAWS has some suggestion­s:

• Encourage the “next generation” of female enthusiast­s by supporting a sport environmen­t that is diverse, welcoming and fun profession­al positions and related roles

• Launch and promote free and low-cost community female-only sport opportunit­ies such as open houses or try-it days to expose diverse females to new sports in a safe and supportive environmen­t. Check out Medicine Hat’s Girls on the Move Program!

• Focus on fun, pleasure and challenge of participat­ion, considerin­g the age and abilities of participan­ts

• Schedule time for sport and physical activity, recognizin­g the importance of sport participat­ion for physical, mental and social health

• Help build girls’ confidence in sport by focusing on fundamenta­l movement skills such as kicking, running, jumping, catching and throwing, before introducin­g fundamenta­l sport-specific skills

• Encourage girls to join and continue to play, coach and officiate a variety of sports from youth into their teens and adulthood

• Support elite female athletes by attending and watching events, and following athletes on social media. Check out Medicine Hat’s Get Benched program.

• Promote and share female sport news stories that focus on athletic skills, healthy living champions, accomplish­ments

For a full list of suggestion­s please see the CAAWS report on the status of female sport in Canada titled Women in Sport: Fueling a Lifetime of Participat­ion.

Further resources to support effective programmin­g for girls can be found at www.caaws.ca/cs4l/.

Desirea Agar is a health promotion coordinato­r at Medicine Hat Community Health Services and can be reached at desirea.agar@ahs.ca

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