Experts reminded of ONOC’s sport education legacy within the Pacific Islands

March 29, 2022
ONOC
Twenty-three sport education experts are in the week-long meeting to review micro-qualifications. | Photo: ONOC / Shivneel Narayan

Sport experts kickstarting a review of five sport education courses toward micro-qualifications were reminded of the rich legacy of the Oceania Sport Education Programme (OSEP) in the Pacific Islands.

OSEP is the flagship programme of the Oceania National Olympic Committees (ONOC) and already recognised as a one-of-a-kind community-based sport education programme in the Olympic Movement for potential duplication in marginal settings and the challenge for sport experts is to maintain this legacy whilst progressing to micro-qualifications which increase graduate employability in the Pacific Islands.

ONOC said, “The establishment of OSEP as the first regional sports education programme offered a cost-effective solution to build the capacity of Pacific based coaches, administrators and trainers utilising a regional approach of collaboration.

“ONOC is entrusting you with the responsibility that this legacy continues to recognise past alumni and licensed facilitators and is able to blend this rich heritage of alumni and their huge work in the region to the manner in which courses will be repackaged and shared with higher learning institutions so that inclusion and diversity, and recognition of prior learning are still able to be championed among those for whom sport, and sport education is a lifelong passion.

“Today, your collective work is taking this rich legacy and ensuring that OSEP can do better and serve the needs of the Pacific Islands sporting sector in a more targeted fashion and with due recognition to its trainers and current and future candidates.”

The micro-qualifications exercise is being conducted through a partnership between ONOC and the Pacific Community’s (SPC) Educational Quality and Assessment Programme (EQAP), specifically the expertise of Rajendra Prasad, in consultation with representatives of the sporting sector in Industry Advisory Committee (IAC).

ONOC acknowledged the work of the IAC in the areas of Sport Management, Technical Coaching, and Strength & Conditioning in the previous year, which produced a series of three drafts for review.

ONOC raised several challenges and said, “What is critical is to position and determine the offerings these micro-qualifications will address.

“What will our comparative edges be? Our relevance? What will be our point of difference with other providers, and how unique will our offering be, and would this perhaps be unique to Oceania?  

ONOC further raised, “Will training providers be convinced - that the uptake of these micro-qualifications will be a viable endeavor for them?

“And finally, will our end-users, our clients, will our offering be attractive to sport administrators, technical coaches, and strength & conditioning experts?”

ONOC added that OSEP and sport education in general contribute directly to the International Olympic Committee (IOC) strategic roadmap, the Olympic Agenda 2020+5 through contributions to sport organisation management, good governance, athlete development, entourage development toward Games, and through strengthening of national sporting sectors that contribute directly to the UN Sustainable Development Goals.

ONOC said sport contributed to the SDGs through the areas of education, health and wellbeing, gender equality, decent work, economic growth, and climate action.

Members of the ONOC Education Commission, Makarita Lenoa (FASANOC President), Fiji, and Regan Kama (Oceania Athletics / OSFO Representative), Australia. | Photo: ONOC / Shivneel Narayan

The Micro-Qualifications Review Meeting has delegates from Fiji and Australia only due to the current border closures and travel restrictions due to the ongoing COVID-19 pandemic, but its outcomes will be shared with sport experts throughout the region for their comment and input.

ONOC extended gratitude to all sport education experts who are lending their expertise on a voluntary basis and acknowledged the hard work of its Education Commission which is led by James Tobin of the Federated States of Micronesia.

The ONOC Education Commission members attending include Makarita Lenoa who is also the President of the Fiji Association of Sport and National Olympic Committee (FASANOC) and Regan Kama of Oceania Athletics and the Organisation of Sports Federations of Oceania (OSFO) representative within the Commission.

The meeting has twenty-three sport experts reviewing the micro-qualifications and finishes on Friday, 1 April.

For background - OSEP History

When it was established in 2007 through initial Australian support, it was the culmination of ONOC conversations that began way back in 1991 – on the specific need for a sport education programme suited to the needs and realities of the Pacific Islands region.

OSEP was established after the results of an Australian-initiated Sporting Needs Assessment provided the evidence such a programme was needed, but it is good to remember that within the region, the conversation and intent was already there for about sixteen years, pointing to the wisdom and foresight of our sport leaders in Oceania.

OSEP was created to address a gap within the sport education space as identified in the key findings of the Pacific Sporting Needs Assessment conducted in 2004 by the Australian Sports Commission (ASC), and constructed through the collaborative efforts of the Australian Sports Commission the Oceania National Olympic Committee (ONOC) and the Organisation of Sports Federations of Oceania (OSFO).

-

You may learn more at the following links:

On the Oceania National Olympic Committees

On the Pacific Community’s (SPC) Educational Quality and Assessment Programme

On the Oceania Sport Education Programme

On the ONOC and SPC Partnership

On the ONOC SportIndustry Advisory Committee (IAC) Members

On the OSEP Independent Review

###

About ONOC 
Established in 1981, the Oceania National Olympic Committees (ONOC) is one of five Continental Associations. It looks after the interests of 17 member nations in the Oceania Region, including Australia and New Zealand as well as seven associate members. 

ONOC has an office in Guam where Secretary General Mr. Ricardo Blas is based and the Secretariat in Suva, Fiji, where the Office of the President Dr Robin Mitchell is located.

All services and-programmes are based on the ONOC Strategic Plan for 2018-2021, and its 4 Core Functions of (1) Building and Strengthening NOCs Capacity (2) Cultivating Strategic Partnerships (3) Contributing towards Sporting Excellence and (4) Leading by Example.

###

For more information, please contact;

Shivneel Narayan
Chief Communications Officer (Acting)
shivneel@oceanianoc.org

###

Digital Channels
For up-to-the-minute information on ONOC and regular updates, please follow us on Facebook, Twitter, Instagram LinkedIn and YouTube.