Coach Driven and Expert Led: Advanced Coaching Diploma

Behind every athletic performance is a dedicated, well-trained coach. A coach who has dedicated years of their life to discovering what makes their athletes tick while working to stay current in areas such as sport science, technique and nutrition, to name just a few.

Recognizing that coaches have busy and demanding schedules, the Canadian Sport Institute Calgary (CSI Calgary), on behalf of the Coaching Association of Canada, is excited to announce a new delivery format of the internationally recognized Advanced Coaching Diploma (ACD). Instructed by an array of veteran Canadian Olympic and Paralympic Sport Institute (COPSI) Network experts, Program Director Jason Sjostrom says the new ACD will thrive as a “coach driven, expert led, peer enriched, and mentor supported structured learning community – this is 21st century adult learning at its best.”

Considered the pinnacle of the National Coaching Certification Program (NCCP), the ACD features a unique new facilitated learning format that provides adaptability for coach-learners. Within the new framework there are four different ways that coaches can take part in the program: in person, participating through live webinars, via distance learning by watching a recording of the class, or as a “parachute” coach, coming in to the classroom for certain sessions and completing other aspects remotely. Sjostrom says, “The CSI Calgary is very excited about this blended learning opportunity that will allow coaches from Alberta and across Canada to be part of our program.”

The ACD curriculum’s four core themes (Coaching Leadership, Coaching Effectiveness, Performance Planning, and Training and Competition Readiness) are instructed by experienced professionals within the COPSI Network such as Dr. Cari Din, Olympic Silver Medallist and PhD in the field of Leadership Behaviour. The curriculum is science-based and results focused. ACD coaches’ learning can be applied and evaluated in a way that compliments the sport specific training available through the National Sport Organizations in Competition Development Advanced Gradation coaching contexts. The program also boasts access to mentorship from high-level coaches and support staff with backgrounds in a wide variety of sports. In combination, the curriculum and support afforded to the new ACD coach-learners will facilitate learning opportunities that are not experienced in a traditional classroom setting.

Similar programs are available across the COPSI Network in both languages. The ACD Program lead by CSI Ontario will focus on summer sports, offering most of their learning opportunities in the winter months. L’Institut national du sport du Québec will continue to offer the program for French speaking coaches with intake in June.

Applications are currently being accepted for the session hosted by CSI Calgary. The two-year program will begin in April and run until the end of November in 2016 and 2017. Current diploma candidates are primarily from winter sports including Alpine, Biathlon, and Curling. There are also coaches from summer sports such as Basketball and Wrestling. Coaches have applied from Alberta, British Columbia, Saskatchewan, Manitoba and New Brunswick.

Don’t miss your chance to continue pursuing excellence in sport! For more information, or to register, please visit www.csialberta.ca/advanced-coaching-diploma  or contact Program Director Jason Sjostrom at This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it.. Applications will be accepted until February 15.

Canadian Sport Institute Calgary: @csicalgary
Written by Brittany Schussler: @BSchussler
Photo by Dave Holland: @csicalgaryphoto

Sport Science Solutions, Education, Performance Services, Nutrition, Canadian Sport Institute Calgary Team, Coaching Association of Canada, Advanced Coaching Diploma, Cari Din, Jason Sjostrom

Wrestlers Kick-Start Olympic Preparation

For many athletes, the start of 2016 brings the Rio de Janeiro Olympic Games deeper into focus. This is the case for Canada’s top ranked women wrestlers: Jasmine Mian, Danielle Lappage, Erica Wiebe, Dorothy Yeats, Michelle Fazzari, Samantha Stewart, and Jillian Gallays.

The athletes and their support team were at WinSport from January 4-8 for their Olympic kick-off training camp with the goal of building their Olympic performance plan. Athletes first went through medical evaluations led by Dr. Katie MacGregor followed by strength, physiological and nutritional assessments at the Canadian Sport Institute Calgary (CSI Calgary). This was to determine their preparation state and identify where improvements are needed leading into the Games.

Head Wrestling Coach for the Olympic Games Leigh Vierling also used the camp to work with his athletes on a Key Opponent Analysis. Strength and Conditioning Coach Mac Read saw extreme value in the camp format because, “Normally the wrestling camps have up to 40 athletes. We had seven female athletes allowing for much more individual attention and focus. They also worked together to build a strong team atmosphere.”

Physiologist Erin Sargent worked with the athletes on their cardiovascular conditioning to ensure that they can sustain high intensity throughout a match. She notes that this will also “help improve their ability to recover between matches as the athletes can have up to six or seven matches in one day.”

Under the direction of Wrestling Canada, Registered Dietitian Kelly Drager examined all aspects of the recovery and weight cutting processes that wrestlers need to perform before every major competition.

Jasmine Mian, a 48-kilogram wrestler, enthused, “The camp was a great way to kick off the new year. We were able to see how far we have come and formulate a plan to get where we need to be. I am pushing myself to be ready for Rio, but I also see how hard the staff at the CSI Calgary are working to make sure we are ready. It gives me a lot of confidence heading into the Games because even though wrestling is an individual sport, I have a whole team supporting me. The culture of excellence has been integral to my success both on and off the mat.”

75-kilogram wrestler Erica Wiebe emphasizes the sentiments of Mian, noting, “Every year the team becomes more efficient at collaborating so that our performance on the mat becomes a direct result of the work that we put in on a daily basis. They really embody what it means to work as a cohesive team. I know I am in good hands.”

A veteran of four Olympic Games, Coach Vierling is confident the kick-off camp was a success, saying, “I believe we have created outstanding practices in preparing our athletes for Olympic success. ‬‪Our team is young, keen, and ready to commit to the work ahead! ‬”‬‬‬

Canadian Sport Institute Calgary: @csicalgary
Written by Brittany Schussler: @BSchussler
Photo by Dave Holland: @csicalgaryphoto

Sport Science Solutions, Sport Medicine, Integrated Support Team, Wrestling Canada, Exercise Physiology, Performance Services, Nutrition, Kelly Drager, Canadian Sport Institute Calgary Team, Strength and Conditioning, Mac Read, Erin Sargent, Katie MacGregor

Year of Sport 2015

The Honourable Carla Qualtrough, Minister of Sport and Persons with Disabilities, recaps a year filled with successes and lasting memories made possible by the work of countless individuals and dedicated volunteers.

More Than One Way to Support an Olympic Dream

Career Management, which is part of Game Plan, aims to help athletes explore and engage in different career paths. The Canadian Sport Institute Calgary (CSI Calgary) takes it a step further by directly helping current and retired Olympic, Paralympic, and National Team athletes find work experiences that are flexible and purposeful.

Cara Button, Director, Stakeholders Relations at the CSI Calgary, has been instrumental in the implementation of Game Plan, a program that ensures athletes are well prepared for life beyond their sport.

Strongly believing that part of being prepared is having confidence in the workplace, she discussed the opportunity to provide a more meaningful experience to athletes by offering something different than the typical sponsorship package with Christoph Faig, Founder, Chief Executive Officer and Director of the Calgary based software development company aclaro softworks.

Faig jumped at the chance, and team aclaro currently sponsors individual athletes directly. As part of the sponsorship program, they offer the ‘team aclaro’ athletes the opportunity for part-time work experience. The team is comprised of skeleton athlete Micaela Widmer, biathlete Christian Gow, biathlete Scott Gow, speed skater Gilmore Junio, and track cyclist Monique Sullivan.

“We are not a huge company, and you don’t need to be to hire athletes and to have an impact,” says Faig. “Offering employment to athletes has not been charity for aclaro – we have benefitted hugely from having athletes at our company.”

Skeleton athlete Sarah Reid was sponsored by aclaro for the 2013/2014 season. Forced to take the 2014/2015 season off due to injury, Reid began working in the aclaro office. Blogging about the value the employment program provided her with, Reid writes, “It can be a pretty frightening thing to take that big step off of the ice and into the office. I had no post-secondary education, no work experience, and a very short resume. What I did have though, what we [athletes] all have, is an abundance of very unique life experiences to bring to the table. Through sport we have learned what it means to work as a team. To succeed and to fail. To persevere. To accept criticism and to commit to something.”

As aclaro has shown, there are many ways that a company can invest in an athlete’s Olympic dream. Faig insists that the key to success when employing athletes is flexibility with hours and using the resources available through the CSI Calgary to ensure the correct athlete-company match is made.

If your company is interested in gaining a valuable employee while helping an athlete prepare for their life beyond sport, please contact Cara Button at 403-220-8184 or This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it.

Further information and resources can be found at www.csialberta.ca/game-plan.

Canadian Sport Institute Calgary: @csicalgary
Written by Brittany Schussler: @BSchussler

Game Plan, Education, Canadian Sport Institute Calgary Team, Cara Button, Aclaro


Copyright © 2013 Canadian Sport Institute Calgary | All Rights Reserved | Photo Credit : Dave Holland