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Sport Participation Research Initiative (SPRI). CSP 2012 Research Agenda. Background. Designed and developed by Sport Canada and the Canadian sport academic community together with the Social Sciences and Humanities Research Council (SSHRC). Purpose and parameters.
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Sport Participation Research Initiative (SPRI) CSP 2012 Research Agenda
Background • Designed and developed by Sport Canada and the Canadian sport academic community together with the Social Sciences and Humanities Research Council (SSHRC)
Purpose and parameters • Functions within the parameters of Bill C-12, the Act to Promote Physical Activity and Sport (2003) • Research base provided by the SPRI primarily intended to assist in the implementation of CSP 2002 • Limitations: • Not HP (funding targets “participation”) • SSHRC does not fund Health (this is a CIHR mandate)
2004 Roundtable • Forum for consultation to meet needs of the Canadian sport and research communities, and to develop funding priorities and criteria • Themes selected: • identifying and overcoming barriers to participation in sport; • training of participants, volunteers, coaches and administrators in sport; • development, monitoring and evaluation of policies designed to enhance participation in sport; • development of capacity and infrastructure for the purposes of enhancing participation in sport; • determining the benefits and outcomes of participation in sport.
CSP Policy Values Fun Safety Excellence Commitment Personal Development Inclusion and Accessibility Respect, Fair Play and Ethical Behaviour
Policy Principles • Values Based • Inclusive • Technically Sound • Collaborative • Intentional • Effective • Sustainable
CSP 2012 Framework The Policy’s framework draws on the full spectrum of sport practice in Canada. For the purposes of the Policy, participation in sport is characterized by four general contexts
Goal • Introduction to Sport Canadians have the fundamental skills, knowledge and attitudes to participate in organized and unorganized sport.
Goal • Recreational Sport Canadians have the opportunity to participate in sport for fun, health, social interaction and relaxation.
Goal • Competitive Sport Canadians have the opportunity to systematically improve and measure their performance against others in competition in a safe and ethical manner.
Goal • High Performance Sport Canadians are systematically achieving world-class results at the highest levels of international competition through fair and ethical means.
Goal • Sport for Development Sport is used as a tool for social and economic development, and the promotion of positive values at home and abroad.
PIM and SPRI • Outputs – Outcomes – Objectives – Goals • PIM ------------------> <-------------------- SPRI = Achievement of CSP 2012 vision, goals and policy outcomes