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SKATING A BRIEF HISTORY OF ICEANDThe NATIONAL ICE SKATING ASSOCIATION of Great Britain
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Circa 1650 |
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Circa 1660 1683 1742 1772 He described various edges and figures such as the basic circle "eight" 1830 |
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1841 ....." The ice cracked , and Albert was in the water up to his head, even for a moment below. In my agony of fright and despair I screamed and stretched out my arm... My Dearest Albert managed to catch my arm and reached the ground in safety." At that time no male heir had been born and had Albert drowned the whole monarchial succession would have been different and there would have been no Queen Elizabeth ll !! 1860-61 1864 One result was a book "Spuren auf dem Eise" (Tracings on the ice) which laid out the schedule of geometrical figures based on two and three circles. These became the basis of Compulsory Figures, in use in World Championships until 1990. One Foot Eights, Threes to a Centre, Rockers, Brackets, Loop change Loops, Bracket change Brackets all formed part of this basic discipline of figure skating. |
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1876 1879 He organise the setting up of the NATIONAL SKATING ASSOCIATION in Cambridge. 1880 1891 1892 1893 |
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1895 1896 1898 1899 |
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1901 1902 The President of the ISU, Colonel Viktor Black presented a cup to the NSA which is now the Trophy for the British Men's Championship. Colonel Balck being Swedish, it is now known as the Swedish Cup. 1903 1905 It can only be contested when the weather produces sufficient ice. Latest winner of the King Edward cup is Olympic Bronze medal winner, Nicky Gooch, who won the Cup in 1997. 1906 1907 |
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1908 1909 1910 1912 1914 |
![]() Madge Sayers Britain's First OLYMPIC CHAMPION |
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1920 1921 1924 1927 1928 Later in 1928 the NSA appointed its first paid official as Assistant Secretary. He was Eric Coggins, who became General secretary from 1933 until his death aged 63 in 1966. At the end of the year one of Britain's most famous Rinks opened. It was the Sportsdrome at Richmond in Surrey. It closed in 1991. 1929 In April the NSA's 50th Anniversary was celebrated with a gala at Richmond Ice Rink. 1930 Several new rinks opened in 1930 - Queen's Ice Club, in Bayswater, London, Grimsby, Oxford, and the Westover Ice Rink in Bournemouth. In the years up to 1940 a further 23 rinks followed. Amongst them were Streatham, Southampton, Birmingham, Wembley, Brighton, Liverpool, Blackpool, Dundee, Nottingham, Murrayfield and Durham. 1932 Megan Taylor finished 7th and Cecilia Colledge 8th. Mollie Phillips, who was 9th, became the first woman to carry the British flag at the Opening Ceremony.. Ice Dancing began to develop extensively in Britain. Paul Kreckow and Trudy Harris demonstrated their new Tango at Hammersmith rink and the first British Inter Rink Ice Dance competition was held at Bournemouth. It was won by Graham Sharp and Violet (Vita) Supple. Having organised a competition for male instructors in 1931, the NSA now set up an Open Professional Championship for Men, Women and Pairs (and from 1939 in Ice Dancing). These events continued until1956, and competitors included Howard Nicholson( Sonja Henie's Coach), the Swiss brothers, Jacob (Jacques) and Arnold Gerschwiler . ( Jacques lived to be over 100 from 1898 to 2000 and his brother Arnold is still going strong.). Also Herbert Aylward, Cecilia Colledge, Marilyn Hoskins, Jenny Nicks, Ronald Baker, Gladys Hogg, Len Liggett and Pamela Murray and many others. |
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1933 1934 1936 The Games were staged as a propaganda exercise for Germany's Nazi Government and teenage British skater, Freddie Tomlins caused a stir when he forced his way through the SS Guards to the autograph of the Fuhrer, Adolf Hitler. 1937 The NSA held the first British Ice Dance Competition ( which later became the Ice Dance Championship) . It was won by Reginald Wilkie (1907-1962) and Daphne Wallis. They had by then designed three new dance - The Argentine Tango, Paso Doble and the Quickstep. The first NSA Junior Women's Competition was held and later became the Junior Championship for Ladies. |
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1938 The NSA revised its figure skating tests, introducing a new Preliminary test and an Inter-silver test. The first Junior Men's competition was held , the forerunner of the Junior Men's Championship. |
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1939 In the World Championships in Prague, Megan Taylor and Daphne Walker were 1st and 3rd respectively and Graham Sharp and Freddie Tomlins took Gold and Silver in the Men's Championship. The first NSA Professional Dance Championship was won by Walter Gregory and Muriel Roberts. Walter Gregory is the inventor of the Rhumba. 1940-1943 Skaters went to War and some lost their lives amongst them, Walter Gregory, Freddie Tomlins and Tony Austin. Others fought with distinction. Graham Sharp became a Captain in the Army. Geoffrey Yates ( 1936 Olympics) a Major in the Royal Marines, Cecilia Colledge a driver in the Mechanised Transport Corps, Denis Silverthorne ( 1939 Junior Champion and Leslie Cliff ( Pair Champion) became officers in the RAF. |
Graham Sharp World Champion 1939 |
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1944 1946 Herbert James Clarke( Olympic skater in 1924) was elected the first , and to date the only, British President of the ISU. He held office until ill health forced him to retire in 1953. 1948 |
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1950 1951 John Dennis Cronshey achieved Britain's best ever result in the World Speed Championship ( Long Track, there was no short track at that time). He was 2nd to Hjalmar Anderson of Norway in Davos, Switzerland. The sons of Henry Vandervell (inventor of the counter turn in the 1860's) presented the NSA with the Vandervell Trophy to awarded annually the British skater who gives the best performance of the year. The first winner was Jeanette Altwegg.
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1952 At the first World Ice Dance Championships in Paris, Laurence Demmy and Jean Westwood were the winners and John Slater and Joan Dewhirst came second. 1953 At the World Championships in Davos, Switzerland, John and Jenny Nicks became World Pair Champions, Valda Osborn took Bronze in the Ladies Championship. In the Dance Championship, Laurence Demmy and Jean Westwood , John Slater and Joan Dewhirst, took Gold and Silver. Mollie Phillips became the first woman to referee any ISU Championship when she officiated in the Ice Dance Championships. (British victories and medallists were so numerous in the years between 1952 and 1984 that they are not listed here but on a separate page on the website. As at 2001 , Britain has won 16 European, 18 World and One Olympic Gold and many silver and bronze medals.) |
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In the Coronation Honours list, Queen Elizabeth ll appointed Jeanette Altwegg a Commander of the Order of the British Empire (CBE), the highest award given for services to skating. 1952-1978 1960
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1966 Eric Coggins OBE,NSA General Secretary since 1933, died suddenly. He was succeeded by his deputy Roger Drake, who served until his retirement in 1980. 1967 1969 1971 |
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1976 1979 A centenary history of the NSA had been written ( "Our Skating Heritage by Denis L.Bird) and a leather bound copy was presented to Her Majesty. The gala was preceded by a parade of past British Champions. |
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| 1980 At the XIII th Winter Olympic Games held in Lake Placid,Canada, Robin Cousins won the Gold medal in the Men's event. He also took the European Championship's in Goteborg, Sweden and finished 2nd in the World Championships in Dortmund, Germany. |
![]() Robin Cousins OLYMPIC CHAMPION 1980 |
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1984 1988 1989 1990 Compulsory or "School" figures (the tracing of turns or loops in figure eights or 3 circle patterns) were discontinued after the World Championships in Halifax, Nova Scotia. |
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1994 1994 1995 1999 2000
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| 2001 NISA moves to new headquarters at the Nottingham National Ice Centre after 106 years in London. |
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PRESIDENTS OF THE NSA AND NISA 1879 Charles Watson Townley, Lord Lieutenant of Cambridgeshire ( active President) 1891 Dr. George Cunningham MA. LDS. |
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Following a submission to UK Sport by NISA's National Performance Manager Catherine Barker, Figure skating is to receive World Class funding (now called World Class Pathway) for the first time since 1999, and will receive £496,000 over the next four years leading up to the Vancouver Olympics in 2010 although there will a funding review after year two.
Cath commented "I am delighted that the work that went into writing and developing the World Class Pathway Plans was well received by the Government and that Figure Skating now has, an accepted framework for the development of talent in Figure Skating, 8 years on from the funding withdrawal suffered by Figure Skating under former NISA Performance Director Kevin Bursey" The good news came on Thursday 27th July as UK Sport announced a £6 million package to support Winter Olympic and Paralympic sport up to and beyond the Vancouver Games in 2010. The money will be distributed across seven Olympic and two Paralympic disciplines on the basis of UK Sport's 'No Compromise' investment strategy. This targets resource predominately at sports and athletes considered to be genuine medal prospects in four years time. Liz Nicholl, UK Sport's Director of Performance said: "We have allocated funding to those sports that have shown they can deliver and have the future potential to win medals on the world stage. We have to be realistic, Great Britain will never be a top winter sports nation but we can achieve success if we target our investment effectively at the right athletes."
John and Sinead Kerr, identified as having genuine medal potential in Vancouver, will now receive as a minimum, Athlete Personal Awards (APA) of £13k each for the next four years. This APA is intended to provide a salary to athletes to enable them to train on a full time basis towards the achievement of Olympic success. In addition to the funding from UK Sport, services will now be drawn down from the Scottish Institute for Sport and the English Institute for Sport to deliver sports science support to the couple. Sinead Kerr said on hearing the news regarding the funding submission to UK Sport: "Without the support of UK sport, the opportunity of enhanced training facilities and sports science support and new coaching input would have been impossible to take up, so we are extremely grateful for their faith in us".
Figure Skating funding at lower level to Podium, includes support to a further 6 athletes who will receive targeted funding support to programmes geared at development levels within the British Squad. There will also be further support for British Squad athletes at talent levels and we currently await the outcome of this bid. Catherine Barker said "These underpinning bids equate to over £300, 000 investment over the next four years although this again will be reviewed annually with a full review of whether these funding streams will continue after year two."
Keith Horton, NISA General Secretary added, "the award of World Class pathway funding to Figure Skating is a major step forward for our sport and has most certainly been achieved through the development of a new four year plan for our figure skaters and the introduction of a new talent Identification programme. The ISU New Judging System has enabled us to target our skaters much more closely and by taking a large amount of the subjectivity out of the sport it has enabled
Government and the UK Sport decision makers to better understand how we intend to move forward and set clear and transparent targets for your aspiring Olympians".
However, as inevitably happens with Government Funding, this has come at a cost to the Association. During the next four years the total funding available to NISA from UK sport will actually decrease by 20% when compared to the previous four-year cycle 2002-2006. The hardest hit will be our Exchequer funded programmes, which have been totally withdrawn. Exchequer funding has been used during the past four years to develop and modernize NISA and agenda promoted by Government and fully endorsed by the NISA Management and Board. In addition to the loss of exchequer funding, our Short Track programmes will also see a reduction of 30%.
Haig Oundjian, Chairman of NISA, commented "whilst we are delighted at this great news for Figure Skating, we must remain somewhat cautious about the overall impact which this new approach to sport funding will have. Of particular concern will be the impact on our Short Track World Class Performance Programme, and also our ability to deliver core functions to all NISA members".
That means when you are abroad, you can go on the internet and go through the history class you missed in the morning.
This is fantastic. The curriculum is to bed, said Oundjian, who as a schoolboy had to travel miles early every morning to train for ice skating before going to school.
When I was called up to my first Olympics, I was doing my A levels. The headmaster wrote a letter to the Olympic Association asking if they could postpone it a couple of weeks, so I could take my mocks, he related.
That was the thinking in those days. Sport was an amateur thing. It was something you did for pleasure and not something you did for a career.
The world has changed but we have not changed with the rest of the world. John Currie, Haig Oundjian, Torville and Dean are people of the past. They skated to success when there was just talent and that is all that counted but now there is professionalism. France has shown us. Schools in France have sport built into their day.
We have, at Watford, youngsters who have homework to do. There is nothing to cater for the development of his education and his football career. Why should your sporting talent become a negative for education Oundjian asked.
While the new £24m Harefield Academy will not be solely about sport and education, for there are considerable facilities to be developed for art, there are other far-reaching considerations behind the ethos of the Academy, which has been designed with girls and boys in mind.
The French maintain that over 70 per cent of school-leavers stay in sport whereas, in this country, we are down to about 25 per cent, said the Watford director, who pointed out the effect of social factors inherent in such comparative figures.
The John Penrose School, currently a very open and accessible site, is subject to regular excesses of vandalism.
So many of the unruly members of our society are not bad, but bored and unfulfilled, said Oundjian.
Youngsters are adults who do not have transport are essentially stuck in the village and you have the attendant social problems of kids hanging round street corners and smashing up bus shelters etc.
People should be able to play sport and every child at school should not be elitist but inclusive. You and I might not be good at football but we enjoy having a knock-about, and why shouldn't we be able to indulge in that?
The design for the new Academy provides sports facilities on one side and teaching and academic education on the other part of the plot. Significantly, the public entrance by the library is in the centre, making access easy for members of the community after school hours.
Deputy-head Gary Bashford reflects the delight of all staff at the intended development.
It is a breath of fresh air. The buildings are run down and dilapidated over a number of years. They are very heavily used very day, which shows a need in Harefield.
John Penrose is a school in challenging circumstances and only such schools have been adopted nationally as part of the scheme. Things have improved there but, because if the infrastructure, they can only take it so far so small winder “this Academy idea, with high quality state-of-the-art facilities is a boon to us, the students and to the community.
The new Harefield Academy will be run on continental lines, and the expectation is that the school will open at 7am.
We changed to a continental day a couple of years ago, starting at 8.15am until 2.10pm but we don't go home. We offer a voluntary third session and most of our sixth formers opt for that, taking GNVQs, said the deputy-head.
We will be able to integrate into the Academy concept of a continental day quite seamlessly. The expectations is the school will be open at 7am offering a breakfast sessions because some kids do not eat healthily – a packet of crisps and a coke on the way to school.
There will be an internet café to utilise before lessons and the facility will be open seven days a week, up to 15 hours per day.
As Hornets vice-chairman David Meller pointed out, the concept of Watford's involvement in such a scheme has been the brainchild of fellow director Oundjian.
He kept banging on about it and we thought his idea was a bit fanciful but after a few years, I thought let's look at this. The more I looked into it, the better I liked it, said Meller.
Oundjian explained: it has been my mission because of my personal sporting experience, to press for this concept. A lot of market research has been undertaken. I remember when I accompanied Trevor Brooking, when I suggested to the Government representative, let's change 25,000 schools. I wanted to get sport in schools and have streaming and opportunities as they do in North America, Holland and France. ‚I was told to forget such a view but I suggested that if we do one school along such lines, we could set up a blueprint.
I went to the board at Watford and gave them all my research. I had started in 1997 but we found in 1999 that there had been such a major sea-change, with the Government really wanting to improve the opportunities for children, and it is not just academics, but life opportunities.
We had this Academy programme and fellow directors David Meller and Mike Sherwood were particularly keen on working with me. So, in 2001, they get involved. The club endorsed it and a working party was set up with three of us.
Meller is self-admitted a pushy individual who hates committees and seek progress at all stages. He also has the political contacts.
It resulted in a trip to Number 10 Downing Street to meet the head of policy.
It was Meller who homed in on Harefield, for the villages gain is Hertfordshire Education Officer, only to discover he was against the programme and refused to make a Herts. school available to the Watford group which, for a Hertfordshire club was disappointing.
We were looking at a school in Watford that had a huge plot of land and was ideal because it was in a dreadful state but Hertfordshire were against the scheme, said Oundjian.
Meller, through contacts, then found the John Penrose School in Harefield.
But Hillingdon was already working on an Academy concept at Evlyns, which is now Stockly Academy, where the main thrust is on technology.
David contacted Philip O'Here, corporate director of education for Hillingdon, and they came up with John Penrose School, which is geographically close to Hertfordshire. We would be become a part of a family of schools doing out-reach and in-reach across boundaries.
We will have fantastic facilities. The school will grow from 600 to 1,000 pupils, Oundjian explained.
But for the financial problems what have beset the Hornets over the last few years, it could have been the Watford Academy at Harefield. The club was scheduled to be the main sponsor but has had to take a supportive role, while three of the directors and one of the major investors have become the main sponsors.
Even so, there will be benefit to Watford.
All our members of our Academy at Watford and all our first-year professionals will be able to come here for further education. It is what the FA Academy want us to do but do not actually stipulate. It would become part of the time-table, said Oundjian.
This would be an added string to Watford's bow when attempting to sell the club to the parents of potential Academy scholars. While it is always argued a young player will have more chance of breaking into the first team at Vicarage Road compared with the opportunities at Premiership clubs, being able to offer structured and compatible schooling would be something unique for a Football League club.
Children, when they are taken onto the books of a professional side, do lose sight of education. They think they are certain to make it and, when they don't as most of them don't, they have nothing to fall back on.
This is way they will be able to learn while training to become a footballer.
In a sense, the proposed Academy at Harefield is part of the ethos of Watford; a quantum leap in the concept of the Watford Learning Centre which Oundjian created with Watford's director of marketing Ed Coan, which has won the club two national awards.
The biggest failure in football is that kids do not have any balance to their education. If you did interviews with most of the kids and current young players you would find they have jeopardised their education. They have to do training at different times.
This is really exciting: Sport England, the British Olympic Association, UK Sport, Youth Sports Trust along with the FA and Football League have been consulted. This is football leading the way for all sports. Everyone supports this project and, as you would expect, the endorsement in the local consultation document from the village has been terrific. Football can drive, said Oundjian.
The FA Academy of Watford will be based her in the longer term. The range of facilities will be phenomenal. Football will drive it and the football club will want to be based here using the facilities and developing further areas.
We have been told this will become an Olympic Training Centre and that fact will go up with the Olympic rings on the new building.
It is not just about football but also about health. We need, through schools to address the 15 per cent of obesity in children. This school will be a template.
We will attract talented athletes within a catchments area, who are either with an Academy or a centre of excellence or on a performance squad or the world-class start programme and they will be invited to join the school.
Gymnastics in the area is quite big, with significant clubs near by, but the youngsters are attending full-time school and trying to do training in the evening or the early morning.
The idea that they can have mornings off and train here, and return for that we will have world-class performers who will bring coaching to the school.
UK athletics will have a base ten minutes down the road at Brunel University, which is expanding near here. There will be a direct link to a sports medical centre.
There will be coaching and academic catering as part of a full and balanced education. Although it will be a sports centre, we will have a performing arts centre as well, with a dance hall, a central auditorium and a great stage.
The mission is to provide education, sport, fitness and health. We want children to have the opportunities in life that they would never have got without it.
We also want kids here to start training for the 2012 Olympics.
While the sponsors of the school will be entitles to place ten per cent of the intake, local children will be guaranteed a place.
The sponsors are three Watford directors plus shareholder Jonathan Green. They will also become trustees of the school along with Harefield Hospital's top specialist Professor Sir Magdi Yacoub and Hillingdon Council's Philip O'Here.
They form the board trustees.
The Academy concept up and down the country will be run by the DFES. For that reason, they are not popular with some local education authorities (LEA), but the Harefield Academy, with the presence of Philip O'Here, are intending to work with the LEA.
The school and the sponsors await the Government green light in January, a year after they were given the Amber light and £250,000 to develop the concept with architects' drawings, studies etc.
We got into 20th position – the last of the application to be adopted. For Harefield, it is a terrific prospect. No Academy that has already been given the amber light has failed to receive the green light, said Meller.
It started off as a vision of Haig's, I got it to happen and now we have a working party. We are the main four backers and the club is involved.
I do most of the work in the government side and with architects. Haig is very involved on the sporting side. Michael and Jonathan work a great charity', table tennis for kids', taking them off the streets, and that will be incorporated.
We do not intend just to be cheque-writers but to have an active involvement in the school.
We are not going to be elitist. Everyone who lives in the village will be able to come, and we will have kids bussing in from other areas. We know we will be successful if we have kids on a waiting list. We will be taking kids of mixed ability.
We want the facilities used by special needs children, adults and kids form other schools. We get this great cheque but we have to make sure it works properly.
Watford are already involved with local schools at an Academy level.
Watford will continue to work with Cavendish School in Hemel Hempstead and try to get them a covered area, this again representing this family of schools, said Oundjian.
I mean, just one covered indoor area for a population of around 3m? You need 300. Everyone needs that – look at the climate we live in. France has illuminated indoor facilities in every community of 10,000 people, paid for by the government.
Harefield is just the start.
'Every skater, who has the talent and the commitment to succeed at the highest levels, should have a clear pathway from learn to skate to the achievement of skating excellence'.
Did you know?
Both Queen Victoria and Prince Albert were enthusiastic skaters.
All NISA policies are available through this website.
Please select from the list.
About NISA - Policies - Parents Guide
(December 2004)
I would like to take the opportunity to update you on some of the work that NISA has been working on over the last 6 months within the area of Child Protection.
The National Ice Skating Association strives to ensure that children, young people and vulnerable adults are protected and kept safe from harm whilst participating in ice skating activities.
The first NISA Child Protection Policy was written in 2002 and has recently been extensively reviewed by the NISA Child Protection Steering Group to create two new documents for the Association:
The documents have been revised to ensure that they comply with the standards
developed by the NSPCC Child Protection in Sports Unit. They cover a wide range of issues such as safe recruitment procedures, good practice guidance and responding to concerns. The policy will be mandatory for all officials, staff and affiliated clubs.
NISA started to distribute the documents for Coaches, Judges, Official's and affiliated Clubs (Secretaries) at the skatesmart.com British Ice Figure and Dance Championships 2004. Copies are currently in the process of being sent out to Coaches, Judges, Official's and affiliated Clubs who did not collect them during the championships. Please note, three pages within the documents are to be signed (by Coaches, Judges, Test Organisers, affiliated Clubs and any other ‘officials') and returned to NISA prior to 1st February 2004.
The documents are also available to download below (for club members, parents etc.).
Child Protection Procedures (England & Wales) - Click here to download
NISA Policy Manual for Officials - Click here to download
Over the next 4 years NISA, along with many other sports governing bodies, is required to meet various standards set by the Child Protection in Sport Unit and Sport England. NISA has now successfully achieved the required Preliminary Level of the NSPCC Standards for safeguarding and protecting children in Sport and the award will hopefully be presented to the NISA Board of Directors in February 2005.
NISA are in the process of applying to CRB (Criminal Records Bureau) as an organisation to undertake CRB checks on our coaches, judges and officials (Home country equivalent checks will also be undertaken). This will be in addition to the current process of self declaration. We hope to be able to start CRB checks from March 2005.
Within clubs/rinks we would like to see a network of Club Welfare Officers who act as a point of contact locally for child protection information. Could I ask clubs/rinks to contact me directly if they already have such a person in place or if they would like further information.
A dedicated email address for child protection has now been set up at
childprotection@iceskating.org.uk
If you have any questions about this area please do not hesitate to contact me at keith.horton@iceskating.org.uk
Many Thanks
Keith Horton
General Secretary
Stop Press - Disability Open Day at the NIC
(December 2004)
I would like to take the opportunity to update you on some of the work that NISA has been working on over the last 6 months within the area of Child Protection.
The National Ice Skating Association strives to ensure that children, young people and vulnerable adults are protected and kept safe from harm whilst participating in ice skating activities.
The first NISA Child Protection Policy was written in 2002 and has recently been extensively reviewed by the NISA Child Protection Steering Group to create two new documents for the Association:
The documents have been revised to ensure that they comply with the standards developed by the NSPCC Child Protection in Sports Unit. They cover a wide range of issues such as safe recruitment procedures, good practice guidance and responding to concerns. The policy will be mandatory for all officials, staff and affiliated clubs.
NISA started to distribute the documents for Coaches, Judges, Official's and affiliated Clubs (Secretaries) at the skatesmart.com British Ice Figure and Dance Championships 2004. Copies are currently in the process of being sent out to Coaches, Judges, Official's and affiliated Clubs who did not collect them during the championships. Please note, three pages within the documents are to be signed (by Coaches, Judges, Test Organisers, affiliated Clubs and any other ‘officials') and returned to NISA prior to 1st February 2004.
The documents are also available to download below (for club members, parents etc.).
Child Protection Procedures (England & Wales) - Click here to download
NISA Policy Manual for Officials - Click here to download
Over the next 4 years NISA, along with many other sports governing bodies, is required to meet various standards set by the Child Protection in Sport Unit and Sport England. NISA has now successfully achieved the required Preliminary Level of the NSPCC Standards for safeguarding and protecting children in Sport and the award will hopefully be presented to the NISA Board of Directors in February 2005.
NISA are in the process of applying to CRB (Criminal Records Bureau) as an organisation to undertake CRB checks on our coaches, judges and officials (Home country equivalent checks will also be undertaken). This will be in addition to the current process of self declaration. We hope to be able to start CRB checks from March 2005.
Within clubs/rinks we would like to see a network of Club Welfare Officers who act as a point of contact locally for child protection information. Could I ask clubs/rinks to contact me directly if they already have such a person in place or if they would like further information.
A dedicated email address for child protection has now been set up at
childprotection@iceskating.org.uk
If you have any questions about this area please do not hesitate to contact me at amanda.hembrow@iceskating.org.uk
Many Thanks
Amanda Hembrow
National Sports Development Officer
A copy of this document can be downloaded here.
NISA Policy Manual for Officials - Click here to download
Guidance for NISA Judges/Officials regarding conflicts of interests
Sporting Equals: Policy Statement
In pursuance of this policy the National Ice Skating Association reserves the right to discipline any of its members/ employees who practise any form of discrimination on the grounds of a person age, gender, ability, religion, ethnic origin, creed colour, social status or sexual orientation.
The National Ice Skating Association will monitor and evaluate this policy on an on going basis and inform its members / employees of its impact.
Eastern | East Midlands | London | North East | North West | South East | South West | West Midlands | Yorkshire | Wales | Scotland | Northern Ireland
Application, Entry and Membership forms can be downloaded here.
To download the relevant form, simply right-click on the link and 'Save Target As . . . ' which will allow you to save the file to disk. Then all you need to do is print the form, fill it out and send it to NISA at:
National Ice Skating Association (UK) Ltd
Grains Building
High Cross Street
Hockley
Nottingham
NG1 3AX
National Test Application Form
IJS Competitive Test Application Form.doc
Permit Categories and Criteria
Open Competition Event Administration flowchart
Open Competitions E1 Date registration
OpenCompetitions E2 Announcement & Judge application
Open Competitions E3 Permit Application
E3A Permit Application IceShow, Exhibition, Gala
Open Competitions Dance Referee Report
Open Competitions Dance Judge Assessment Form
Open Competitions Singles Pairs Judge AssessmentForm
Open Competitions Singles Pairs referees Report
Anti Doping A brief guide to TUE Forms Including the NISA Anti Doping Policy and forms availabe to download
To query whether any drugs you are taking for medical purposes are permitted in Competition / Training please visit the Drug Information Database.
Simplified Guide To Eligibility Rules Elig1
Eligible Skaters Renumeration Agreement for Team Skate GB Members Only Elig. 2
NISA Skaters (Retained) Eligibility Participation In Sanctioned Activities Application Form Elig3
NISA Coach Annual (Retained) Eligibility Elig4
NISA Retained Eligibility Annual Elig5
NISA Reinstatement As An Eligible Skater Person Form Elig6
For an application form, please click here
This section contains the Portfolios for all the Functional Directors. The portfolios can be downloaded as Microsoft Word Documents.
A copy of both these documents in PDF format can be downloaded here.
You may require Acrobat Reader to view these files, however, if you do not have Acrobat Reader don't worry, as you can download it free by clicking on the link below:
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