An introduction to the UK Coaching CertificatePress Release: Five Sports Achieve Endorsement SummaryThe UKCC was developed in order to
For more information on UKCC developments go to: www.ukcoachingcertificate.org For information relating to recognised centres and candidate information on specific courses go to: 1st4sport Qualifications In July 2002, the Coaching Task Force final report was published. This report was is response to the Governments Plan for Sport and reflected the first real opportunity for coaching to get in the political radar. The UK Coaching Certificate (initially known as the National Coaching Certificate) was one of the recommendations from the Coaching Task force report to reverse this trend, along with 3000 Community Sports Coaches, 45 Coach Development Officers and some of the most extensive research on coaching to date. The UKCC indicates the Governments intention to improve the quality and profile of coaching, which will be vital to the development of sport and individuals. What is the UKCC?The UKCC will be an endorsement of sport specific coach education programmes against agreed criteria across 5 levels. This means that all sports will have to include the same core content as each distinct level and meet minimum standards with regards to delivery and assessment for each qualification. The main aim of the UKCC is to improve the quality of coaching across the UK to provide safe and effective coaching systems for participants within sport. The objectives of the UKCC
The five levels of the UKCC
The five levels provide coaches with a progressive development pathway from being a beginner coach (level 1) through to being a highly evolved expert coach. The levels are reflective of the coaching skills attained and not the level of the performer coached. Thirty one sports have signed up to the UKCC, divided into three phases
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