Thursday, October 21, 2010

Busy times in PE..

Our office has been a hub of activity as we begin a new financial year, and look to end the calendar year on a high before the 2 week Christmas break. Below are a few updates on whats going on:

  • I along with a few members of the team, are working on establishing Skillz Street in PE, with at least one intervention before the calendar year. It will be an initial step into an exciting new venture that we hope will prove truly useful and empowering to young girls in the community.
  • Planning for the intern led HCT will is well on course. There are tons of details to go through, but we have a determined and talented group. I am excited to be part of it. This will be something we will truly have ownership of, an empowering experience for us. Today me, a few of our coaches, Titie (a Master coach) and Joel(fellow intern) went around New Brighton and we narrowed down 2 venues that we will most likely use. More details on the HCT to come, December 4th is the date.
  • Our new site coordinator, Pumeza Lusi began work on Monday. Mpumi is helping her settle in, and she's done that. She's excited to be here and I am looking forward to working with her.
  • Yesterday I attended a graduation at Philip Nikiwe primary school in New Brighton. Graduation is when kids get Skillz certificates indicating that they have gone through the curriculum. It was more than just a certificate handover though, the coaches ensured that it was truly a celebration and the kids reciprocated by giving their all, in various portions of a program that showcased their talents. From poetry, to dancing, rapping to singing (at one point all 35 graduates and younger guests who attended from the school) all got up and sang several songs).It was special, and I was happy to hear kids give testimonies on how Grassroot Soccer had impacted them! This was a welcome break from the office, and I was really proud to be part of it!
Moja (OK!) Thats all I have time to write at the moment, stay tuned for more, PE's heating up (our site and the weather - summer's on the way).

Jah Bless

Tuesday, October 19, 2010

Intoducing: Skillz Street


As mentioned in the Girls Count article earlier, there is an increasing focus on girls in social profit ventures, and Grassroot Soccer is no different. In a society where females have been marginalized and often abused, the need to empower and support young women is imperative.

In our case, this has been manifested in the Skillz Street curriculum which is a new addition to the group of Grassroot Soccer curricula.Skillz Street will include all the lessons from the Generation Skillz curriculum which targets South Africans 15-19 years of age specifically addressing the social norms that fuel this epidemic. In the case of girls aged below 15, the Skillz Core curriculum will be taught. Engaging and empowering young South African women is seen as central to the success of,campaigns to reduce HIV infections in the country.

Unfortunately in many African nations including South Africa, girls have been seen as second-class citizens and not given opportunities to reach their full potential. Sports programs directly challenge such misperceptions about women’s capabilities. Street Skillz aims to empower, inspire and educate young girls, while they enjoy recreational activity through the soccer, participate in community outreach work and learn from the unique Skillz curricula administered by Grassroot Soccer coaches. The idea is to use non-competitive sport to build an atmosphere of collaboration among the girls through fairplay soccer while they learn valuable life lessons.

In a 2008 report, the International Working Group for Sport for Development and Peace stated: “Research on sport, gender and development indicates that sport can benefit girls and women by: enhancing health and well-being; fostering self-esteem and empowerment; facilitating social inclusion and integration; challenging gender norms; and providing opportunities for leadership and achievement.” Access to safe, public space for young women to play soccer is limited, further solidifying gender norms around participation in sport in South Africa and most parts of the African continent. To illustrate this point one can look at the South African Football Association—the 6th largest football association on the planet— which has fewer than 1% registered female players.

An additional aspect of Skillz Street will be integrated testing, with the girls getting the chance to know their status having gone through either the Skillz curriculum, or Generation Skillz.

In its 2009-2011 Outcome Framework, UNAIDS identified “stopping violence against women and girls” and “empowering young people to protect themselves from HIV” as two of its eight key priority areas. To achieve these goals the GRS team that devised Skillz Street feels that "young women in South Africa need increased knowledge about the dangers of multiple concurrent partnerships and older partners, self-efficacy to avoid cross-generational and transactional sex, perception of opportunity, skills to negotiate safer sexual relationships, and support to stay strong when faced with challenges." Skillz Street will hopefully play a role in this educational push, especially among young women of South Africa.

Over the next few weeks our team will be looking to launch Skillz Street in Port Elizabeth. The challenge is getting it done during the holiday period when most kids will be leaving home to travel for the holidays.Most of our regular interventions are tied with the school year, whether it be doing programs during or after school, with teacher supervision. Our first attempt at delivering the Skillz street curriculum will most likely overlap with the school holidays, it will be a challenge but there should be a way to make it work. Once January things will be more clear cut and we can look forward to working with girls in different townships around PE.


Skillz to take on the world!

Grassroot Soccer is developing several curricula, focusing on different age groups starting at the age of 12. The curricula, and notes associated with them are available for public viewing on Google sites. To learn more about them, visit Google sites page here. Some parts of the page are blank because the site is a work in progress.Input on these programs, curricula and plans is welcome.

Saturday, October 16, 2010

Thanks Mpumi!

Today was a special day in the PE Office, we celebrated the tenure of my boss Mpumi Lallie (wearing sunglasses above), the Port Elzabeth Site Coordinator for the last 19 months. He will be getting a promotion in the organization, working as a regional coordinator for GRS. The development session with the coaches today was dedicated to him, and the coaches were given the opportunity to speak on what impact Mpumi has had on them in his short time in the role. PE is one of the best GRS sites hands down, with coaches who set the bar as far as effective curriculum delivery, team spirit and meeting targets. Mpumi's time here has made PE even better and the testimonies given by the coaches showed that. They cited his professional approach, no nonsense take on discipline, and the fact that he always challenges the coaches to be the best they can be. I am glad to have worked with Mpumi for a little over 2 months and I wish him nothing but the very best gong forward!

Friday, October 15, 2010

A few steps closer to a million changemakers...


The calendar GRS uses to do its books of accounts is aligned with the American fiscal year due to the major sponsorship we receive from the states. What does this mean? The Financial year of 2010 is over as of Sptember 30th. GRS SA set a target of 26,000 graduates to go through the Skillz curriculum(as seen above) for the year. We managed 25,400, an excellent achievement considering major disruptions from the civil servant strikes of August and early Septmber. Kilo!

Port Elizbeth managed to graduate 5,433, a few hundred off the target of 6,000 (again, the strike hurt our numbers).

GRS aims to graduate a million changemakers by 2014 around Africa, at this rate, we are well on course!

Monday, October 11, 2010

Fun Day!

On Saturday Grassroot Soccer helped with a local fun run hosted by a local church, St Barnabas in Kwazakele township.The event started with a run/walk starting at 7 in the morning. We didn't attend this portion of the day, but it seems to have been successful, with winning runners winning prizes. Starting at 09.30 there was free HIV (pre- and post-) counseling and testing for participants on the day, and anyone from the community. We arrived around 10am along with 8 GRS coaches. Overall, 80 people were tested at the event.

GRS contributed shirts left over from our HCT for all individuals who tested. Our coaches led some Skillz activities with participants as part of the day's events. Us interns assisted with the group of kids 12 to 18 years old. The coaches led the kids in a game of Find the Ball and the Talk Show from Skillz 1.1. We participated in the talk show as "experts." Overall it was nice to participate in a community event targeted at local youths.

Another group of coaches led participants who were 18 and over, they led them in a discussion activity from Generation Skillz. The kids in our section were shy at first but in the end it was great to see their participation in the activities!

The church folk were very friendly and the day was filled with song and dance. For long periods of the program I couldn't understand what was being said, but from the bits of translation I got I was happy to learn about the messages of good healthy living being promoted particularly for youths in the community.

Girls Count


The Nike foundation has in the last 4 years been researching and working on a theory that states that investment in adolescent girls will yield benefits for poorer communities overall. They are not the first to do so, but their research has backed the theory which has driven them to invest further in girls through 2 initiatives known as Girls Count and The Girl Effect. It is certainly true that women and girls have received the short end of the stick historically, in terms of access to education, important roles in society and other other arenas as simple as participation in sports. There are many working to change these imbalances, and other projects like the microlending boom have also seen women being major beneficiaries of credit, proving to be very resourceful in enhancing their situations and collectively improving the plight of their families (The Grameen Bank is one such example).

Gender imbalance also affects females here in South Africa with teenage girls 3 to 4 times more likely to get HIV than teenage boys according to our Skillz booklet. The coach's booklet in the Skillz Curriculum states that girls are more likely to get HIV because they attract older men who are more likely to have HIV. The culture of sugar daddies is also prevalent especially in poorer areas of the country where older men will offer material goods for sex. (see UNFPA report for further info on Women and AIDS). Our Generation Skillz Curriculum will seek to address gender imbalance and the risks teenage girls face concerning the virus.

Support the Cause!

Thank you for checking out my blog. I am currently fund raising for an internship experience with Grassroot Soccer starting in August 2010. My goal is to raise $5,000 for living expenses and flights (currently at $4,392). I would appreciate your contribution to the cause!
$