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What Should Replace the National Curriculum?

In the latest episode of the Green and Gold FC podcast, I expressed keen curiosity in an effort to understand the fuss when it came to the national curriculum. I remember football sessions as both a kid and a young adult, and nearly half the lessons were situps, pushups, sprints and burpees while we were told to "get the ball out of there" whenever the ball got anywhere near our goal. This was pretty good for getting fit, but the sample sessions in the national curriculum looked so much more fun. There were a series of small sided games where everyone gets lots of touches of the ball, and you learn skills in a fun and systematic way rather than turning us all into fitness robots that occasionally get within 10 feet of a football. I'm sure things were great for youth teams at NSL clubs, but for me in Rural Queensland, a technical focus implemented through small sided games seemed a breath of fresh air.

After a decade trying to figure out why a coaching manual for grassroots noobs created more drama, debate and even rage than American politics, I think I'm starting to get a clear picture in my head on what went wrong.



Some aspects that are levelled at the national curriculum - that it produces robots - seems to be a complaint of every fan culture in the world, and is probably just a result of modern sports. Other aspects seem to be fixable mistakes in the curriculum itself - technical development was introduced too late, goal keeping courses were and possibly still are remedial, and strength and conditioning is neglected leading to injury prone players. Early courses under emphasised defence and later courses under emphasised goal scoring.

But some aspects seem to be a result of the implementation of the national curriculum. The curriculum didn't have to be as rigid or doctrinaire, it didn't have to be as cerebral and it didn't have to be as expensive, not enough people were educated and it could have evolved more. These are the mistakes that interest me the most, because they tell me something fundamental is wrong.

Whenever I hear that there is no problem with a philosophy but a problem with the implementation, I tend to think that people in charge did not adequately take into account something about human nature. Humans are deeply fallible and society does not work very well without a carefully crafted system of incentives. The consensus approach to every major western political party apart from the tea party wing of the American GOP is the mixed economy. Government is consigned to fixing moral problems through laws, regulations and welfare spending whereas the private sector promotes innovation through competition. Markets do little to implement laws and equity as markets tend to be morally blind and ruthless making them a poor fit for the job. Similarly, governments tend to be inefficient, beaurocratic, rigid and lack innovation. The latter are precisely the sort of issues we see when people talk about the "implementation of the national curriculum" which indicates to me we have too much centralisation and not enough competition.

Make clubs in charge of coach training

It was interesting hearing from Danny Graystone about his experience at the Melbourne Victory academy. They managed to innovate their way out of some of the "fixable" problems in the curriculum and developed some of their own methodology. In fact, apparently all a league academies have in essence developed their own curriculum, each of them different to each other. I propose we introduce competition into the system, and give clubs a pathway to create and teach coaching licenses.

All of a sudden you have every club in an arms race to produce the best coaching methodology, teach in the most accessible way in order to get the most customers. This will also mean that our coaching methodology is constantly evolving as clubs have to compete to offer the best courses. Clubs will also have an incentive to cut the jargon and cut costs as they compete with each other for customers. Higher quality, less jargon, lower costs. With more coach education centres, there will be more teachers and more coaches in the system. This means that youth coaches will be cheaper and youth fees will in turn go down. Additionally, clubs have another revenue source which can be reinvested into youth.

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Of course we cannot go to an extreme that ignores the role of governance, less we follow the path of a long line of politicians who spoke about the wonders of the private sector only to create just as big of a mess as what they started with. For the system I am suggesting to work, the FA needs to prevent collusion between clubs to stop price gouging. They need to avoid conflicts of interest - the NPL and A League licenses have minimum qualifications for coaches; it would be a conflict of interest for a coach to get their qualifications at the same club they will work at. They also need to provide a public option - something similar to the current set of coaching courses taught by the FA, to prevent a race to the bottom.

In my view, the current system will always have precisely the sort of "implementation problems" we currently see because these are the sort of issues that arise with too much centralisation. We see very similar problems in the education sector when governments try and introduce a top down national curriculum, and we have seen the same problems over and over again whenever the government tries to drive innovation using central planning. We are out of balance, and if we want to lead the world in both coach and youth development, balance must be restored.
About author
grazorblade
Graham is a physicist who researches the early Universe at University of Southampton and a football tragic with 2 left feet.

Comments

One thing I learned from Danny, it seems the vast majority of coaches don't understand why a NC has been adopted in Aus?

So they aren't as onside as I am. I was in the right place at the right time. I also coached in the old Soccer Aus system and the new FFA/Football Aus under Berger. The NC has been a 95% improvement on the old system.

13 coaches from FFA Tech Dept in Aus visited the identified 7 Proactive world powerhouses and devised a NC based on Spain, Netherlands, France and Germany ( the latter to a lesser extent).

Another important tenet of the NC, is that any curriculum needs constantly updating. It is hard to determine how much this has occurred?

Danny also identified one starc difference between the Aus NC with England.
 
In the past Top Down worked, because the level of football knowledge further down was generally pretty low in Aus.

There weren't heaps of Aus coaches around who had been educated at Clarefontaine, KNVB, La Maisa or Coverciano.
 
One thing I learned from Danny, it seems the vast majority of coaches don't understand why a NC has been adopted in Aus?

So they aren't as onside as I am. I was in the right place at the right time. I also coached in the old Soccer Aus system and the new FFA/Football Aus under Berger. The NC has been a 95% improvement on the old system.

13 coaches from FFA Tech Dept in Aus visited the identified 7 Proactive world powerhouses and devised a NC based on Spain, Netherlands, France and Germany ( the latter to a lesser extent).

Another important tenet of the NC, is that any curriculum needs constantly updating. It is hard to determine how much this has occurred?

Danny also identified one starc difference between the Aus NC with England.
It sounds like another factor in you being for it was your teachers seemed more flexible whereas others had a rigid experience.
 
Interesting Grazor and a important subject as we all agree needs work/tweaking.
I'm sorry you still have 2 left feet but I expect you can curl a really nice corner with one of them :) 50% chance of execution can't complain lol.....

Your early experience I suppose being in regional Qld (always behind the times :)) compared to Syd/Melb burbs.
Being of older gen and from my own experience having played Rep from young teen I experienced far more variety in training than burpies/etc you experienced.
Sure fitness was some focus but ball control/heading/close passing was focussed plus long before small sided games was introduced we played lots of small games using just the pen box or the whole GK box.
Then we used to play the last third of one end of the pitch backs vs forwards tuning attack/defense in turn giving the GK practice from shots and corners.
That was in the '70's into 80's.

I'm no details fella like you uni qualified types and lecturers but from the layman outlook.
Need the/a curriculum no doubt about that.
Obviously any paper/doc should be updated for eg every 3/4yrs maybe 5 to tweak with changes of the times or major influencers that has occurred since last done.
Obviously its done through the FA and they put out their feelers etc to the Feds for feedback (I expect) and have actioned people such as Berger etc......
Do they just rely on the intel they recieve I wonder ?
Does anyone go under the Feds themselves and get feedback from the NPL clubs and further down the grass roots clubs ?
Feedback from parents ? costs ?
How open is the intel the FA recieve for all to see ?
Put it this way - having sent email to the FA over the years over some concerns I have never had a response.
Its very easy to say the post NSL curriculum is 100% better - well of bloody course it should be otherwise whats the bloody point eh.

As a long time (well all my life in the game) football player/supporter I don't see any of the big wigs in the flesh at a grass roots game.
I've been a small biz owner for a long time (employ over 20) and deal with some of the largest corps in my industry and successful privately owned companies - there is one thing that I notice that these major owners do - get out in the coal face themselves from time to time and get some goss first hand not just rely on reports from one group to another.
I really don't think our governance for decades haven't been "hands on" enough whatsoever.
So one thing that should change from my outlook - transparency and get off your office arse so we all can see you do know whats doing from the ground up for it all bubbles to the top for our developing kids.
Do they hurt inside that our current top closed system limits spots for the thousands of potential kids ?
Do they hurt and squirm how much it costs to have kids in SAP/YL to Snrs ?
Only 12 Pro clubs despite hanging by a thread many of them is part of the curriculums forward progress for our Roos/Tillys let alone spirited competition that is needed from the top down.
So its not just about the curriculum itself for its also banging its head into a brick wall by the lack of open competition for kids/snr's to express themselves.

I could be part off topic specifically I suppose :)
 
Interesting Grazor and a important subject as we all agree needs work/tweaking.
I'm sorry you still have 2 left feet but I expect you can curl a really nice corner with one of them :) 50% chance of execution can't complain lol.....

Your early experience I suppose being in regional Qld (always behind the times :)) compared to Syd/Melb burbs.
Being of older gen and from my own experience having played Rep from young teen I experienced far more variety in training than burpies/etc you experienced.
Sure fitness was some focus but ball control/heading/close passing was focussed plus long before small sided games was introduced we played lots of small games using just the pen box or the whole GK box.
Then we used to play the last third of one end of the pitch backs vs forwards tuning attack/defense in turn giving the GK practice from shots and corners.
That was in the '70's into 80's.

I'm no details fella like you uni qualified types and lecturers but from the layman outlook.
Need the/a curriculum no doubt about that.
Obviously any paper/doc should be updated for eg every 3/4yrs maybe 5 to tweak with changes of the times or major influencers that has occurred since last done.
Obviously its done through the FA and they put out their feelers etc to the Feds for feedback (I expect) and have actioned people such as Berger etc......
Do they just rely on the intel they recieve I wonder ?
Does anyone go under the Feds themselves and get feedback from the NPL clubs and further down the grass roots clubs ?
Feedback from parents ? costs ?
How open is the intel the FA recieve for all to see ?
Put it this way - having sent email to the FA over the years over some concerns I have never had a response.
Its very easy to say the post NSL curriculum is 100% better - well of bloody course it should be otherwise whats the bloody point eh.

As a long time (well all my life in the game) football player/supporter I don't see any of the big wigs in the flesh at a grass roots game.
I've been a small biz owner for a long time (employ over 20) and deal with some of the largest corps in my industry and successful privately owned companies - there is one thing that I notice that these major owners do - get out in the coal face themselves from time to time and get some goss first hand not just rely on reports from one group to another.
I really don't think our governance for decades haven't been "hands on" enough whatsoever.
So one thing that should change from my outlook - transparency and get off your office arse so we all can see you do know whats doing from the ground up for it all bubbles to the top for our developing kids.
Do they hurt inside that our current top closed system limits spots for the thousands of potential kids ?
Do they hurt and squirm how much it costs to have kids in SAP/YL to Snrs ?
Only 12 Pro clubs despite hanging by a thread many of them is part of the curriculums forward progress for our Roos/Tillys let alone spirited competition that is needed from the top down.
So its not just about the curriculum itself for its also banging its head into a brick wall by the lack of open competition for kids/snr's to express themselves.

I could be part off topic specifically I suppose :)
Haha i should give my free kicks a go. Yeah i do wonder if peoples experience in major city centers was better than out in the sticks like myself. I think @Decentric has said many times in the past coaching knowledge wasnt shared

The lack of consultation and access you mention is interesting. I cant remember if this was included in the pod, but there was a story about how hard it was to access coach educators. Board members rarely talk to the media (Joseph was a great exception), i believe wallsend are trying to get accredited now as we speak but cant get anyone to visit them.

Not sure if this is an issue of a culture of arrogance in our governance or if they are overstretched (meaning they need a different system)
 

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Graham White
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