Disabled young people thriving in sport thanks to Sportivate

Wheelchair basketball

Sixteen-year-old Karen Goddard is selective mute and has limited opportunities to interact with her peers.  Participation in sport hadn’t seemed an option for Karen who finds it difficult to communicate with strangers.

However, a chance encounter with Sport England’s Sportivate programme, which offers six-week courses in a range of sports, sparked Karen’s interest in wheelchair basketball and she now plays regularly at her local club, Yeovil Lynx Wheelchair Basketball. Sportivate has also inspired her to pursue other sports including boccia.

Sportivate is a Lottery-funded Olympic legacy programme aimed at 14- to 25-year-olds who are not currently choosing to take part in sport in their own time. It’s fully inclusive and so far nearly 5,000 disabled young people have completed a sports course thanks to Sportivate.

Speaking about how Karen has responded to taking up wheelchair basketball, her mother Heather Goddard said: “This sport has done the world of good for Karen, before she barely said a word but now her confidence has grown and she is slowly interacting with her peers.”

Jack Hooper, who’s 16 and has learning disabilities, is another who has enjoyed the sessions in Yeovil, crediting the project with helping him make friends. He said: “I really enjoy coming to the club and hope that I will always be able to attend.”

Sportivate has also proved to be a hit with young people at Westminster School in Sandwell in the West Midlands. The school caters for young people with learning and behavioural difficulties and wheelchair basketball sessions there have been extremely popular.

It is clear that the students all enjoy the sessions and many hope to continue playing sport. Brandon Carson,15, is happy that he has been given the chance to take part in a sport other than football. “I only used to play football”, he said. “It’s good to have a change and try other things. I’d like to try long jump and Parkour in the future”.

The sessions have also benefited 18-year-old Toni, whose mother Gaynor Blunn said:  “For Toni it’s been brilliant. She doesn’t have much of a social life outside of school so this gives her the chance to spend time with her friends. It’s given her a lot of get up and go.”

“The kids enjoy the social side of the sport”, said PE Teacher Ben Taylor. “Some of the kids live in quite deprived areas and it’s good for them to have something to do. Most of them think of PE as running around and wouldn’t have realised that they could do sport in a wheelchair.”

Paul Hunt, Disability Co-ordinator at the Albion Foundation which runs Sportivate at the school, said: “The sessions have been really good. They allow the kids to see and appreciate different disabilities.”

Sportivate is being delivered by the network of 49 county sports partnerships, working with local clubs and providers and will continue for a further three years. Over that time more than 300,000 non-disabled and disabled young people will benefit.

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Disabled young people thriving in sport thanks to Sportivate

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