Faculty of Science TALENT IDENTIFICATION AND DEVELOPMENT IN SOUTH AFRICA: SUGGESTIONS FOR DEVELOPING...

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Faculty of Science TALENT IDENTIFICATION AND DEVELOPMENT IN SOUTH AFRICA: SUGGESTIONS FOR DEVELOPING POTENTIAL ATHLETES L.O. Amusa and A.L. Toriola University of Venda, Thohoyandou, South Africa Tshwane University of Technology, Pretoria, South Africa Universi ty of Venda

Transcript of Faculty of Science TALENT IDENTIFICATION AND DEVELOPMENT IN SOUTH AFRICA: SUGGESTIONS FOR DEVELOPING...

Page 1: Faculty of Science TALENT IDENTIFICATION AND DEVELOPMENT IN SOUTH AFRICA: SUGGESTIONS FOR DEVELOPING POTENTIAL ATHLETES L.O. Amusa and A.L. Toriola University.

Faculty of Science

TALENT IDENTIFICATION AND DEVELOPMENT IN SOUTH

AFRICA: SUGGESTIONS FOR DEVELOPING POTENTIAL

ATHLETES

TALENT IDENTIFICATION AND DEVELOPMENT IN SOUTH

AFRICA: SUGGESTIONS FOR DEVELOPING POTENTIAL

ATHLETES

L.O. Amusa and A.L. Toriola

University of Venda, Thohoyandou,

South Africa

Tshwane University of Technology, Pretoria, South Africa

University of Venda

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Faculty of Science

Introduction

• South Africa attained independence following multiracial elections in 1994.

• Sport administration in the country has witnessed series of transformation.

• After independence, the National Sports Commission (NSC) was established to coordinate sports and recreation in the country.

• The NSC was the operational arm of the Ministry of Sports and Recreation.

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Introduction - contd.

• The NSC subsequently established the national Sports Science and Information Agency (SISA) that provided scientific support to elite athletes under its high performance programme.

• The Ministry of Sport and Recreation published the white paper on sport and recreation in 1997 that guided sport and recreation development in the country.

• The rural development and reconstruction programme (RDP) launched by the ANC in 1998 was aimed at using sport and recreation as a catalyst for development in the country.

• In 2002, the NSC introduced the concept of provincial academies of sport.

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Introduction – contd.

• Despite these structures, sport and sports development in the country face a number of problems:

• National squads were not representative of the demographics of the country.

• Performances of national teams at international competitions were inconsistent and unreliable.

• Sports development programmes were not properly designed and implemented.

• In soccer for example, the country has had 13 coaches in its 12 years of independence.

• Physical Education is more a feature of the curriculum of public schools.

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Recent developments

• In 2004 the NSC was dissolved and replaced with a new body: South African Sport Confederation and Olympic Committee (SASCOC).

• While SASCOC is now responsible for coordinating elite sport, the Department of Sports and Recreation administers recreation and leisure programmes at the national level.

• The provincial sport academies still exist alongside private academies, but no strategic approach is implemented to coordinate sports development initiatives among the various stakeholders.

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Management Structure of Sport and Recreation in South Africa

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Debate

• Is ‘talent identification’ the same as ‘athlete selection’?

• What are sport organizations in South Africa doing regarding talent identification/athlete selection?

• Are there specific models of talent identification that South Africa has adopted?

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Recognition of Stages of development of an elite athlete

• Catch them young: Not catch them old

• Initiation phase: (1-6 years), i.e. development of fundamental movement patterns.

• Developmental phase: (6-12 years), i.e. development of sports skills.

• Perfection phase: (12-18 years), i.e. Correction of missing gaps in sports skills development.

• Discrimination phase: (19+ years), i.e. professional or elite sports participation.

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What happens to the athlete during these phases?

• Body/growth crisis• Psychosocial adjustment (psychological problems, social

problems) • Discrimination• Peer crises

Guidance should be provided by parents, teachers, peers, coach and society at large)

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Coping Mechanism During The Development

• Childhood: Readiness, motivation, interest, knowledge (cognition)

• Adolescence: Identity formation, sport/athlete identity, identity foreclosure (sees himself only in sport), student athlete (dual identity).

• Young Adulthood: Role formation, partnership formation, societal role/expectations.

• Childhood: Readiness, motivation, interest, knowledge (cognition)

• Adolescence: Identity formation, sport/athlete identity, identity foreclosure (sees himself only in sport), student athlete (dual identity).

• Young Adulthood: Role formation, partnership formation, societal role/expectations.

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Goal of Competitive sport –Development of Elite Athlete

• What makes a champion athlete?

• Multidimensional factors are involved: Physical, physiological, social and training factors.

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Developing an elite athlete

Nutrition Physiological Physical Psychological

Nurture Champion Athlete Cognition

Genetic Endowment Training Socio-economic

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Talent characteristics

Psychology: Attitude, interest and motivation

Motor skills

Physiology

MorphologyChampionship potential

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Talent Identification

A complex process Talent – Dynamic/Non-static

Sport specific

Talent Identification

Athlete specific

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Talent Identification Processes

Identification

Selection

Development

Detection

Identify Develop Nurture

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Need for a paradigm shift

Talent selection Talent identificationFrom:

Athlete coming from within the sport(Has been engaging in the sport)

Athlete coming from outside the sport (Possesses all required potentials)

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Talent search basics – contd.

Broad

Older Youth

Physical variables

Experience

Focused

Novice

Physiological forms

From:

Individualsports

Team sports

Centralized Decentralized

General Specific

Longitudinal Short term

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Talent search basics

• Phase 1: At school (Catch them young – FS+SS+Perfection)

• Phase 2: Sent to a developer (Academies, training institutes, schools of excellence, etc.)

• Phase 3: Invited for trials

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Talent ID Program Issues

• Growth and development continuum- Individual must be in the right environment with the right management

• Labour intensive• Capital intensive• Athlete acceptance uncertainty• Requires enthusiasm of teachers, coaches, developers

and other role players• Information privacy concern – For the athlete, his training

and development (cf. Jabu Pule)• Response to immediate changes/development• Response to immediate athlete needs – Money,

education, health and safety, technical development

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Support structures for talent development

• Health, safety and sports medicine

• Sports science

• Technical development aids

• Research and information management

• Counseling

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Summary/Conclusion

• South Africa has abundance of sports talents, but there are problems with its talent identification system and practice.

• Problems include:• Priorities • HIV/AIDS• Nutrition• Sport science• Absence of PE in schools• Facilities• Necessary sports structures – At national, provincial,

district and regional levels• Fragmented approaches to sport development-

Holistic/strategic approach is preferable.

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Thank you!