Erin
Banned Member
- Messages
- 10,470
I’ll be curious to see what impact this has on coaching practices and if any other other countries follow suit.
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I think it’s an excellent first step that cannot stop there.That’s a good document. A lot of thought’s gone into developing it (and it’s well edited, which I appreciate).
I’m very impressed by the changes Skate Canada is trying to make in its coaching culture, and hope they spread outwards from here. But it must be hard knowing that whatever they try to do will be derided as simultaneously too little/too performative and too much/too politically correct by many.
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Spending a lot of time on something or working hard does not mean that the product is any good.Both of the above posts criticizing Skate Canada are incredibly superficial and--at best--vaguely/arguably responsive. Agree or disagree with the guidelines, but a lot of time and research was spent creating a substantive, academic report here. It's insulting to people on all sides of the relevant issues here to make such lame/nonexistent attempts to engage.
(Also, the references page has some rather glaring errors, but APA formatting is hard.)
Spending a lot of time on something or working hard does not mean that the product is any good.
I wonder how much time and money has been spent on coming up with that document.
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Groan.As much time & money as it took for the Mohawk-Choctaw names study.
Skate Canada is trying, but action speaks louder than words. It’ll take more than a document to change people’s mindset.
Action and words aren't mutually exclusive, and anyone who has studied history even minimally should know that documents certainly can and have done a lot to change people's mindsets.Skate Canada is trying, but action speaks louder than words. It’ll take more than a document to change people’s mindset.