Team Sri Lanka

 

 

Change takes work. Changemakers must be made


Change takes work. Changemakers must be made

Updated Date: 13th September, 2023

 When bringing National Courses Directors together benefits a whole region

 

Common learning increases common understanding among sport administrators. That’s – common sense.

 

National Course Directors (NCDs) are in charge of organising Olympic Solidarity's Sports Administrators Courses. 

 

To do that, they need to be trained and certified through a train-the-trainer type of course. 

 

For several years, the National Olympic Committee of Sri Lanka, with the financial and logistical support of Olympic Solidarity, organised such train-the-trainer training for their own NCDs. Knowing other NOCs are not able to run Sports Administrators Courses because of a lack of certified NCDs, they invite others, including Bhutan and Mongolia.

 

This course proved hard work: 31 hours across five days. Topics: Aristotle’s concept of ‘praxis,’ or the melding of theory with practice to yield thoughtful, practical doing or, put another way, goal-directed action; why learners, especially adult learners, learn best through experience; using audio-video aids effectively; experience and practice as keys to facilitation; and, perhaps key, defining success as ‘respecting austerity, modesty and amiability.’

 

To go back to Aristotle, in our real world, change usually doesn’t just – happen. 

 

It typically takes planning, resource, goodwill, teamwork and, again, hard work. 

 

It also recognizes up-and-coming talent; transfers a wealth of knowledge; empowers all involved; and builds community, both locally and beyond.

 

Like at this seminar.

 

This NCD training is a next-step – a real-world education, if you will. 

 

“Academically, when you are in the university, when you make a presentation, it’s totally different,” Bhutan’s Jigme Thinley said, meaning it can be – is even encouraged to be – long and winding. 

 

In sport, you have to get to the point, engage your audience, understand that they have limited time and, most probably, attention. Again, in his words: “In sports administration, it needs to be different.”

 

Chimeddorj Amarsanaa, who serves on the executive board of the Mongolian Olympic Committee, said, “It was a very great experience, learning experience. I’m now ready to share my knowledge when I go back to my country …”

 

Thinley said he has already done just that. He and two others at the Bhutan NOC, who went through the same programme in Sri Lanka a few years beforehand, took what they had learned and delivered a course for office administrators at the local level.

 

How did it go?

 

He smiled. Because common learning increases common understanding: “It went well, actually.”

 

Cover photo: Participants from Sri Lanka, Bhutan and Mongolia at the train-the-trainer National Course Director initiative organized by the NOC of Sri Lanka


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The National Olympic Committee of Sri Lanka (NOC SL) was inaugurated on 8th April 1937 at a meeting of representatives of Athletic, Swimming and Boxing Associations. As resolved on this day, the first meeting of the Ceylon Olympic and Empire Games Association was held on 30th April 1937.


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