Monday, April 18, 2011

Play like a girl: Skillz Street.



Following successful pilots of the curriculum in Cape Town and Port Elizabeth, Skillz Street has officially been added as a supplementary curriculum as part of Grassroot Soccer’s Life Skillz and HIV prevention work in South Africa. With funding partly from the Elton John foundation GRS has trained coaches in Cape Town, Johannesburg and Port Elizabeth in this innovative curriculum that is designed to cater to young girls who in South Africa are more likely to contract HIV than their male counterparts. 

As mentioned in a prior blog Skillz Street is is a girls targeted intervention forming part of Grassroot Soccer’s life skills and HIV prevention programs. The intervention has been developed in response to overwhelming research that shows:
1.      Participation in sport among adolescent females correlates to a range of health benefits, and;
2.      HIV is disproportionately concentrated among women and girls.

Skillz Street combines Fair Play soccer with HIV Counseling and Testing (HCT), assertiveness-, efficacy-, and interpersonal relationship-building activities including a peer led community outreach day. 






In the pilot version of the curriculum run in November we did not implement the HCT element but this was tried out successfully in Cape Town and we will be following suite here in Port Elizabeth.  Testing is voluntary and for many of the girls, this will be their first time testing for HIV. The goal is to allow them to know their status and build good habits. Many young people have their first sexual experience early, therefore being aware of the dangers that come with unprotected sex and multiple sexual partners will hopefully deter them from irresponsible sex. The community outreach component of the program allows girls to be aware of opportunities and services available in their communities. Fairplay soccer places an emphasis on teamwork, respecting opponents and communication between players and a mediator.  

On Wednesday April 13th a Training of Coches (ToC) for Skillz Street began. We decided to train all our female coaches to start things off, with the view of training more coaches in future. The training lasted 3 days and one of our Trainers from Cape Town, “Hooter” led the group in discussion and activities from the Skillz Street curriculum. It was a fantastic time and on the final day coaches were confident enough to deliver parts of the curriculum to each other in preparation of actually doing the program with kids in their communities. 

I was happy to be part of the planning and implementation of the training and having already planned and coordinated the last Skillz Street I am sure that we can use lessons from the pilot and this training to ensure that the program fulfills its goal of engaging young girls in a meaningful way. Skillz Street targets girls aged between 12 and 18.

Our coaches were very responsive and their position as role models in their communities is undoubted. The next 3 weeks will involve some heavy planning to ensure that Skillz Street reaches girls in the three communities we serve. I am energized by the challenge and hopeful that our program will prove to be a catalyst to positive change. 





Coaches participating in a Skillz Street discussion.

During the training we watched some high impact videos illustrating the power and potential of young girls when given opportunities. Our organization plays a part in the lives of a generation of girls that we hope will live a happy healthy life HIV free.

First video - The Girl Effect (see girleffect.org) :


Second video 1 goal, 2 girls: 


Approximately 600 girls will go through the Skillz Street program in Port Elizabeth this calendar year. I was inspired by the energy and verve of our coaches during the training and I am confident that they will take this to the field with the young girls we will be working with!   



Wednesday, April 6, 2011

It all started in Bulawayo

Former Zimbabwean soccer star and coach, Methembe Ndlovu shares his story of using the power and popularity of soccer to fight HIV / AIDS in Zimbabwe. The organization was founded in Zimbabwe by himself,  and Tommy Clark with the support of other team-mates at Highlanders F.C. in Bulawayo, Zimbabwe. They leveraged their influence as popular footballer to engage youths in the community in a life skills and HIV prevention program that has been evolving since its introduction in 2003!

Bacary Sagna: GRS Ambassador!

 Bacary Sagna (left) with one of the founders of GRS, Methembe Ndlovhu

Bacary Sagna, right-back for the Arsenal football club and the French National Team, recently joined Grassroot Soccer as an ambassador. Bacary had this to say: “In Africa soccer is like a religion. I see that Grassroot Soccer is using the power of the game to improve the lives of many young people across Africa. I am African and I play the beautiful game. So I am very excited to be part of the Grassroot Soccer team”.  

Grassroot Soccer, is an international non-profit, uses the power of the game to educate, inspire and empower young people to live healthy and productive lives.

For the full story click here. Story courtesy of GRSweb.

To make a donation to Grassroot Soccer, click here.

Port Elizabeth updates


Our office is abuzz as always, obstacles or not. Unfortunately we have had no electricity for the last week since someone decided that it was a good idea to steal the copper wires connecting us to the electrical grid! In typical GRS fashion we have buckled down and the show goes on.

Schools are currently out at the moment, and so most of our coaches will not be doing any interventions this week – the holiday is only a week long. Our training team is taking the time to train more of our coaches in the Generation Skillz curriculum which is targeted at youths aged 15 – 19. The topics covered here are more mature than those covered in the regular Skillz Curriculum which is for 12 to 15 year olds. Not all of our 47 coaches had been trained in the curriculum, so now is the ideal time to catch up so we can have enough capacity to meet our target for graduates at the end of the year.

Next week we will be returning to Skillz Street, an intervention we piloted at the end of last year. This time around we will have a 3 day training for coaches that will be delivering the curriculum in our site. Skillz Street is a post Skillz curriculum intervention for girls – main components of this intervention include empowerment of young girls through sport, while promoting HIV prevention and community engagement. I will be assisting with the training as far as day to day logistics go, as a team from our Cape Town Headquarters will be guiding our trainers.

Having spent almost 8 months in Port Elizabeth, I am always floored by the dedication of some of the people I work with – the quest to reduce HIV infections and promote real behavior change will need this level of commitment. I am inspired and I hope to finish my last 2 months on the highest possible note.

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!
$