The answers to the questions are not easy to come by. Parents talk on sidelines about differences in clubs and coaches. Clubs use anything they can as a selling point. Education should be first priority in any working force. Educating myself as a parent is just as important. If a coach has an A license do they continue renewing the license? Times change and so do thoughts and perspective on new vs old style of coaching. |
The question is, how do we check if a coach is licensed or not. |
Ask |
I don't have an A license so I can't speak to that level, but to my knowledge none of the licenses currently require continuing education, although I suspect that is coming as the certification / licensing industry is moving that way - although I would argue that is more of a money grab, then a concern to keep folks up to date. Parents will always talk on the sideline - that's just human nature. I'm glad you take responsibility in educating yourself as a parent, I wish more folks would take that seriously. Bottom line for me, figure out what you and you're child's goals are for participating in soccer and find the right coach to help facilitate that. It's not easy, but it's well worth the time. |
Or check the website. Many coaches clearly state their credentials on the club's website. |
| ask the coach about their licensing level |
The A and B require continuing education. |
I don't think they do. |
So to coach a high-level youth soccer team and make around $10k I need to have what you need at your job? I have my teaching certification, bachelors, and a B license. What else do I need for the 10k km going to be making? |
your teaching cert and bachelors are irrelevant some clubs require license others do not most clubs require SAPT, concussion training, and background check (these are also required for the USSF licensing) what you may lack is a dedication to coaching for love instead of $ (you are probably overpaid for your job but wont be for coaching) |
Yes, they 100% do. I've got a 'C' and I'll never go higher because of all the upkeep necessary. |
+1 |
Seriously? How much do you think I pay each month? |
Amen. The license doesn't make the coach for sure, but what there is to learn in those courses (and in continuing ed) is there for the taking. I've met a lot of coaches who refuse to get their licenses because they think they know it all and have been coaching successful teams since the 80s and 90s. Run away from those per the above. The person who thinks they know it all is the person you don't want your kids anywhere near... By definition, that person has a ceiling to their knowledge, and is driven by personal arrogance. These are the "coaches" that are the problem with US Soccer player development. They are the drill sergeants or the imposter Pep wannabes. They have no imagination or creativity themselves because they're not curious at all to know what's really in those courses... Or they're flat out too dumb to realize that having the licenses at least opens up more opportunity for them even if they never take a single piece of advice. I went to the A, but before the new format. And in both the A and the B, learned 10x more from playing with, observing, and being coached by, the other coaches in the courses than from the coaching instructors themselves. The stuff you need to pass at all the levels except the A is like an open book test. It's literally more of a test of the coach-ability and intelligence of the coach themselves than of the soccer specifics. Both the B and A have been revamped a lot, with at least the A now requiring many months of work and site visits to be evaluated with your own club in your own environment. The REAL licenses to look for if you're trying to judge on paper is UEFA "A", and even "B". And more specifically if they're from England, Holland, France, Spain, or Germany. Be wary of ones earned elsewhere. Those 5 countries are no BS, real deal, "need to know your s#$@ licenses you can't fake period. But you can also pretty much buy them from other countries with smaller GDPs, historical corruption, or no top pro leagues, so be wary of others. In the end, it should matter more to a parent if their chosen coach avoids staring every sentence with "I...", is curious and actively seeking to learn, and respected by their kid (meaning the kid is always a little bit nervous about practice. Not out of fear, but because they have a clear idea what the coach wants and that they want to prove themselves). No license level matters if the coaches don't have those things first. I'd rather have a coach with those qualities who failed the A 4 times and keeps on trying than one who is "too good" to bother starting at the bottom with all the other peons. |