sport new zealand roadshow 2013 · kaikoria valley high school ... o swim & survive 4. ......
Post on 02-May-2018
218 Views
Preview:
TRANSCRIPT
1. 2012 - the year that was
2. Strategic Plan update
3. Things to watch out for
4. Discussion time
Topics
Purpose of the Roadshow
1. To discuss issues facing sport in NZ
2. To be accountable for what we do at Sport NZ
3. To listen to your feedback and ideas
Comparisons
YP Survey – Key Findings
1. Sport and active recreation are an important part of young NZers’ lives
2. Our well-established and team sports are still central
3. YP are engaging in sports/activities that develop foundation skills
4. Playful’ activity (“mucking around”) has a significant role – informal sport
5. Sport & rec participation varies with age, gender and ethnic background
6. Drops off in the teenage years
7. Lower participation rates for girls than boys – across all age groups
8. Asian’s represent the lowest participation ethnic group
Top 10s – frequency (regularly – 1 + times a week)
Boys Yrs 1-2
Boys Yrs 3-6
Boys Yrs 7-10
Boys Yrs 11-13
Girls Yrs 1-2
Girls Yrs 3-6
Girls Yrs 7-10
Girls Yrs 11-13
Mostly aged 5-6
Mostly aged 7-10
Mostly aged 11-14
Mostly aged 15-18
Mostly aged 5-6
Mostly aged 7-10
Mostly aged 11-14
Mostly aged 15-18
RUGBY SKATEBOARDING NETBALL DANCE
FOOTBALL
CYCLING/ BIKING
RUNNING/ JOGGING/X-COUNTRY
SWIMMING
Top 10s – frequency (regularly – 1 + times a week)
Boys Yrs 1-2
Boys Yrs 3-6
Boys Yrs 7-10
Boys Yrs 11-13
Girls Yrs 1-2
Girls Yrs 3-6
Girls Yrs 7-10
Girls Yrs 11-13
Mostly aged 5-6
Mostly aged 7-10
Mostly aged 11-14
Mostly aged 15-18
Mostly aged 5-6
Mostly aged 7-10
Mostly aged 11-14
Mostly aged 15-18
RUGBY SKATEBOARDING NETBALL DANCE
BASKETBALL
GYMNASTICS MĀORI ACTIVITIES
ATHLETICS GYMNASTICS
MĀORI ACTIVITIES
TOUCH RUGBY LEAGUE
WALKING (for fitness)
ATHLETICS BASKETBALL WALKING (for fitness)
Dance Basketball Tramping Badminton
FOOTBALL
CYCLING/ BIKING
RUNNING/ JOGGING/X-COUNTRY
SWIMMING
Tops 10 Activities - Interest – try / do more of
Boys 5-10 yrs
Boys 11-14yrs
Boys 15-18yrs
Girls 5-10 yrs
Girls 11-14yrs
Girls 15-18yrs
RUGBY NETBALL SWIMMING
BASKETBALL FOOTBALL TENNIS
Tops 10 Activities - Interest – try / do more of
Boys 5-10 yrs
Boys 11-14 yrs
Boys 15-18 yrs
Girls 5-10 yrs
Girls 11-14 yrs
Girls 15-18 yrs
RUGBY NETBALL SWIMMING
CRICKET HOCKEY
HOCKEY RUGBY
RUGBY LEAGUE SNOWBOARDING
TOUCH
BADMINTON TOUCH
VOLLEYBALL
Cycle Fishing
Martial arts Swim
Badminton
Martial arts Surfing
Volleyball
Cycle Dance
Gymnastics
Dance Running
BASKETBALL FOOTBALL TENNIS
Curriculum Development
Student Leadership Secondary-Primary connections
School values and culture
Community links
Sport in Education Project 2013-16
More young people enjoy and are involved in sport (e.g.
playing, volunteering)
Improved positive (e.g. leadership) & reduced negative (e.g. truancy) social outcomes
Improved academic outcomes Numeracy (Maths) & Literacy
(English)
Academic Social Sport
The Concept
• To engage kids & create positive learning environments in schools
• Schools as a setting to encourage more kids to partake in sport • Community Hub - connecting sec schools, primary schools, clubs & the community • Partnership with MoE, NZSSSC • Not about creating specialist sport school
Outcomes – using sport to teach:
Focus
Sport in Education
Pilot Schools
1. Aotea College Wellington Decile 5 Co-Ed
2. Hillmorton High School Canterbury Decile 5 Co-Ed
3. Howick College Auckland Decile 10 Co-Ed
4. Kaikoria Valley High School Otago Decile 5 Co-Ed
5. Papakura High School Auckland Decile 2 Co-Ed
6. Queens High School Otago Decile 5 Girls
7. Tauranga Boys’ College Bay of Plenty Decile 6 Boys
8. Te Kuiti High School Waikato Decile 3 Co-Ed
Community Sport Growth Progress to date
NSOs • Group 1 - Cricket, Rugby, Netball, Gym, Hockey, Football, Rugby League = Step 1,2,3 • Group 2 - Bike, Basketball, Athletics, Tennis, Golf, Triathlon, Bowls = Step 1, 2
NSO
RSO
NATIONAL
REGIONAL
$12.0m
NSOs
RSOs Step 2 Regional Alignment
Step 1 Community Sport Planning
Sport New Zealand
RSTs
$12.0m
LOCAL
Schools / Informal Sport / Clubs / Facilities / Events
Kiwisport
$8.7m
Step 3 Regional Delivery
• Broaden Sport New Zealand’s focus to include informal sport
• Recognition the current Community Sport strategy has primarily focused on formal sport (NSOs)
• Define scope, determine how best to influence and how best to engage?
Active Recreation – Informal Sport
Formal
Informal
Club Membership
School
HP Gym
Outdoor
Business House
Events
Pay to Play
Mucking Around
Social
Sport sector
Partner Capability
32
1. Professional services - expertise
o Governance, Leadership, People Management, Information Services,
Financial sustainability, Commercialsation
2. Project based activity
o Women in Sport (partnering with the NZOC ), International strategy
o Seminar series, Leadership course
3. Transformation Projects
o NSO support - Swimming NZ, Netball, Basketball NZ
o Swim & Survive
4. New Specialist areas
o Facilities, Events
High Performance Sport New Zealand
• New organisation
• New strategy – 2012-20
• New Investment criteria
2009 – 12 Olympic Cycle Investment 10 Olympic medals +
18 Paralympic medals +
2012 Funding 2008 – 12 Funding
Rowing $6,530m $19.181m
Bike $5,685m $18.332m
Yachting $3,292m $11.299m
Athletics $2,161m $7.269m
Swimming $1,889m $7.476m
Hockey $2,951m $7.145m
Triathlon $1,793m $6.932m
Canoe $1,641m $4.308m
Equestrian $2,012m $4.241m
Football $0.492m $1.572m
2009 – 12 Olympic Investment 10 medals or more…
2012 Funding 2008–12 Funding
Rowing $6,530m $19.181m
Bike $5,685m $18.332m
Yachting $3,292m $11.299m
Athletics $2,161m $7.269m
Swimming $1,889m $7.476m
Hockey $2,951m $7.145m
Triathlon $1,793m $6.932m
Canoe $1,641m $4.308m
Equestrian $2,012m $4.241m
Football $0.492m $1.572m
Olympic Investment 10 medals or more…
2012 Funding 2008–12 Funding
Rowing $6,530m $19.181m = 5 medals
Bike $5,685m $18.332m = 3 medals
Yachting $3,292m $11.299m = 2 medals
Athletics $2,161m $7.269m = 1 medal
Swimming $1,889m $7.476m
Hockey $2,951m $7.145m
Triathlon $1,793m $6.932m
Canoe $1,641m $4.308m = 1 medal
Equestrian $2,012m $4.241m = 1 medal
Football $0.492m $1.572m
Olympic Investment 10 medals or more…
2012 Funding 2008–12 Funding
Rowing $6,530m $19.181m = 5 medals + 2 4th
Bike $5,685m $18.332m = 3 medals + 2 4th
Yachting $3,292m $11.299m = 2 medals
Athletics $2,161m $7.269m = 1 medal
Swimming $1,889m $7.476m + 1 4th
Hockey $2,951m $7.145m + 1 4th
Triathlon $1,793m $6.932m
Canoe $1,641m $4.308m = 1 medal
Equestrian $2,012m $4.241m = 1 medal + 1 4th
Football $0.492m $1.572m
Investment goals – driven by the new Strategic Plan
Outcomes
• 14 or more medals at the Olympic Games in 2016; 16 or more in 2020
• Winning at world championships in targeted non-Olympic sports
• 1 or more medals at Olympic Winter Games in 2014
• 8-12 gold medals at Paralympic Games in 2016
• 2 or more gold medals at Paralympic Winter Games
Process used to guide decisions
• Olympic individual Sport with high probability of multiple podium success
Tier 2
• Olympic individual Sport with high probability of single podium success
• Olympic and non-Olympic Team Sport with high probability of podium success Tier 3
• Olympic individual Sport with moderate probability of podium success
• Olympic Team Sport with moderate probability of podium success
Campaign
• Olympic individual athletes or team sport with moderate probability of future podium success
• Non-Olympic individual athletes or team sport with a high probability of future podium success
Tier 1
Tier 2
Tier 3
Campaign
Overview – Where the money is going
Targeted Investment Campaign Investment Tier 1 Tier 2 Tier 3 Swimming
Bike Athletics Canoe Rugby 7s (W) Rowing Equestrian Triathlon Football (W) Yachting Rugby 7s (M) Hockey (W) Hockey (M) Netball Cricket Rugby League Paralympic Lawn Bowls Winter Squash Softball (M) – existing commitment Surf Life Saving Golf (Lydia Ko) Canoe Slalom (Luuka Jones & Mike Dawson) Boxing (Alexis Pritchard) Surfing (Paige Hareb) Taekwondo (Vaughan Scott)
top related