This is an abridgment of an article written by Mark Tabrum, the Director of the USA Hockey Coaching Education program. Orginally published in USA Hockey Magazine, March 2011
The new requirements become effective Sept. 1 with the start of the 2011-12
season.
The drive behind the change is to slow down the process of coaching
certification, which will benefit not only coaches but ultimately our players.
Coaches can no longer attend multiple coaching seminars over the course of a
season, or in some cases a long weekend, in order to obtain higher levels of
certification.
Under the new system, coaches can attend only one certification clinic per
season. They will also need to complete an online age-specific module that
corresponds to the level they are coaching.
That means a first-year Midget coach would attend the Level 1 clinic and then
complete the corresponding online age-specific module for Midgets. He would no
longer need to reach Level 4 certification in his first year of coaching.
We feel that this two-pronged approach to coaching
education will give all of our coaches the tools needed to be successful by
providing them with a solid overview of the essential elements of the game
through the subjects taught at our coaching clinics, while the age-specific
online modules offer critical information needed to coach at a particular age
level.
The Level 1 clinic is designed to create a strong foundation of overall
hockey and coaching knowledge, including the role of the coach, practice
planning, skill progression and risk management, just to name a few subjects.
Each subsequent clinic will build on the information learned at that first
clinic and add new topics, such as an introduction to goaltending and off-ice
training in Level 2, and sports psychology and team concepts in Level 3.
A coach must progress through the various levels over the course of the
three-year period until they reach their Level 3 certification. Once they
achieve their Level 3 status, they will have options to recertify or move up to
Level 4.
Current coaches will be grandfathered into their
existing certification level. However, they will need to take the online age-specific module.
The clinic curriculum itself is also undergoing major revisions to
incorporate more of the American Development Model principles and will feature
more on-ice instruction and demonstration.
We have found that coaches have responded positively to the ADM clinics held
around the country, and the certification clinics will follow that lead by
showing coaches how to conduct ADM-oriented practices. This will allow a coach
to bring those principles and concepts back to his or her team.
Another major change to the current system is the enforcement of the Dec. 31
certification deadline. If a coach has not completed the certification,
including the online component, by Jan. 1, he or she will be ineligible to coach
for the remainder of the season.