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Sport Makers - Good practice in volunteer and sports development.

Sport Makers - Good practice in volunteer and sports development. Jonathan Grix. University of Birmingham Geoff Nichols. University of Sheffield g.nichols@sheffield.ac.uk Gemma Ferguson. Richmond upon Thames College. Sport Makers. Sport England’s programme to promote volunteering in sport

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Sport Makers - Good practice in volunteer and sports development.

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  1. Sport Makers - Good practice in volunteer and sports development. • Jonathan Grix. University of Birmingham • Geoff Nichols. University of Sheffield g.nichols@sheffield.ac.uk • Gemma Ferguson. Richmond upon Thames College

  2. Sport Makers • Sport England’s programme to promote volunteering in sport • delivered through CSPs • Recruits volunteers – inspiration event – deployment to sport volunteering – 10 hours each – continued after 3 months • CSPs work through recruitment and deployment sub brokers

  3. Background • Sport participation very reliant on volunteers • But – have to recruit and retain them • Trend to episodic volunteers • Role models of broker organisations • Trend to informal sports participation • Systems of monitoring and control

  4. Monitoring and control • Via SM web site • Prospective SMs register interest on web • Directed to workshop in local CSP • Register – attendance, 10 hours and 30 hours • CSP targets – reflect % of 40,000

  5. Objectives • 1. has SM developed the work of CSPs such as it has increased both volunteering and volunteering opportunities? •  2. how has the operation of SM been influenced by the monitoring system?

  6. Methods • Case studies of 6 CSPs • Within these – mini case studies of partners, selected to contract size and innovation

  7. SM as a catalyst for new partnerships – examples - SY • Barnsley Best – volunteer broker programme • South West Yorkshire Foundation Trust - work with Mencap members • Doncaster Cheswold Park Hospital – work with sectioned patients • Doncaster deaf college –students set up a volleyball event • Sheffield teaching hospitals – staff table tennis sessions

  8. SM as a catalyst for new partnerships – example • Manchester food processing factory • With work place activity committee + HRM • 4 SM inspiration workshops • ‘sports clinics’ on running and table tennis • TT developed with Ping equipment • Co. buys full size table – in board room

  9. SM as building on existing synergy • SY CSP and regional ETTA • 2 inspiration events – 23 new volunteers • Deployed to Ping tables • http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=cvsom8RbpF8

  10. Impact of monitoring • Partners with easy access to large groups • Eg college sessions and NCS • Easy to register participants – and partner will record the hours • BUT – is there double counting?

  11. Impact of monitoring • ‘tail wags the dog’? • But – stacking up the numbers allows for more effective work • CSPs balance numbers v effectiveness

  12. Conclusions • Volunteering increased – but can’t tell real figures; some over and some under-counting • New and innovative partnerships stimulated • Allows for episodic volunteering and for more informal participation • Does the tail wag the dog too much or is this the best compromise?

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