Safe Return for Gaelic Games
Covid-19 Update – Safe Return to Gaelic Games
The GAA, An Cumann Camogaíochta and the LGFA have today published a plan for a safe return to Gaelic games for the three organisations.
The plan (attached) is the work of a specially appointed Advisory Committee, which included representatives of all three bodies, the GPA and a number of medical experts (see below for committee members).
It offers a route back to activity, subject to the government timelines being achieved in the weeks and months ahead.
It is broken down into sections covering Medical Advice; Preparing for a Safe Return; Information for Players and Team Personnel; Summary and Checklist; Roadmap for Return to Activity
Some of the stand-out elements of the report include:
· A gradual return to on-field non-contact activity in Phase Three of the Government plan in small groups.
· The need for an online education programme and new measures around temperature checking and completed documentation before training and games.
· A return to contact sport on July 20.
· Provisional windows for club activity and the return of inter-county training and competitions.
The document mirrors the Government roadmap and outlines the opt-in approach of the wider Gaelic games family regarding a possible return to activity and play.
It is being distributed to all units today with a view to providing them with time to put in place the necessary arrangements to facilitate a return to activity.
The members of the Covid-19 Advisory Group are:
Shay Bannon (Chairman) – existing Chairman of GAA Health and Safety Committee
Professor Mary Horgan, (U.C.C. and President of the Royal College of Physicians of Ireland)
Dick Clerkin (Chairman of GAA Medical Scientific and Welfare Committee) Dr Pat O’Neill (Dublin) Dr Kevin Moran (Donegal) Dr Jim O’Donovan (Limerick) Dr Sean Moffatt (Chair of Gaelic Athletic Medics Association and Mayo team doctor)
Paul Flynn (CEO Gaelic Players Association) Stephen Mc Geehan (Head of Operations, Ulster GAA)
Tony Mc Guinness (Events and Safety Manager, Croke Park) Sinéad Mc Nulty (CEO, Cumann Camogaíochta na nGael) Helen O’Rourke (CEO, Ladies Gaelic Football Association) John Horan (Uachtarán CLG) Tom Ryan (Ard Stiúrthóir CLG) Feargal Mc Gill (Director of Player, Club and Games Administration CLG)
GAA steps up IT education for club and county officers
- IT tutorials, help clinics and resources made available to club and county officers
- Education and support provided to save administration time and facilitate communication and collaboration in clubs and counties
- Online seminars delivered weekly via Microsoft Teams and available afterwards on the GAA Learning YouTube channel
- Joint approach between IT, and Officer Development Committees
- Led by Gerard Bradley (Tyrone), Noel Tierney (Westmeath), Michelle Healy (Galway), Terry Brady (Cork) and Eoghan Tuohey (GAA)
The GAA has ramped up its efforts since the introduction of COVID-19 restrictions to upskill its volunteer officers and full-time administrators in clubs and counties on their use of IT.
Emphasis has been placed on increasing the awareness of how to use Microsoft Teams for hosting meetings at club and county levels, and Microsoft Forms for managing voting on motions at County Committee meetings.
The development of tailored educational materials for GAA Officers has been led by Gerard Bradley, the current IT Officer with Tyrone GAA and member of the GAA’s IT Committee centrally. He remarked: “We have developed a series of short modules covering a variety of tasks using the Microsoft 365 package that has been made available to club and county officers. These training modules are targeted at an audience which has a wide range of I.T. skills. Our volunteers in particular need I.T. tools beyond email which can reduce the administrative burden of running the modern GAA at club or county level. The recent webinars provided online demonstrations and backup training materials which are particularly targeted at maintaining communications during the current pandemic. The most recent session provided an opportunity for clubs and counties to get solutions to I.T. queries and problems.”
Another member of the IT Committee, Noel Tierney from Westmeath, has worked in conjunction with Bradley to design and deliver tutorials via the online seminars. “In recent years, we’ve delivered many face-to-face sessions on the Office 365 suite of tools to GAA officers throughout the country,” Tierney says.
“With the constant turnover of club officers, the main priority for users in those two-hour sessions is Email and we’ve also tried to give a brief overview of both Calendar and OneDrive. Jarlath Nolan from Roscommon and I cover the midland and western circuit for Office 365 training. We’ve always felt that additional sessions would help encourage wider adoption of the extensive suite of tools that Microsoft provide, but Club and County Officers get really busy in spring and its unreasonable to expect them to travel long distances for additional training.
“Webinars and other resources such as short videos hosted on the GAA E-Learning platform are other channels we’ve explored to deliver training and support to GAA Officers at club and county level. Initially, I was sceptical about webinars for GAA IT training, but circumstances in recent months have forced us to consider alternative approaches – like many organisations, the GAA has had to become very agile very quickly. I’ve been pleasantly surprised at how well they’ve gone. First of all, the technology to deliver the webinars is improving constantly. We use Microsoft Teams and it has proven to be very stable and reliable during the sessions we’ve held in recent weeks.
“Secondly, all of the webinars so far have involved at least two or more associates presenting the material – two or three different voices during the sessions is much more effective than one presenter carrying total responsibility. It adds a bit of energy to the sessions, and a second opinion is on offer when someone asks a tricky question! We know each very well at this stage, and whenever there is a technical glitch, a second presenter can step in and keep the session moving or answer any urgent questions via the chat feature.
“We’re acutely aware that some webinar attendees are very familiar with the Office 365 applications while others are relative newcomers, so we try to pitch it at a level where participants can leave the session feeling that they’ve learned something. We’re also conscious that it’s important to involve participants in the webinars, so we try to interact as much as possible with attendees and answer as many questions as possible. I’d never have imagined even five months ago that counties and clubs would be holding executive meetings via Microsoft Teams or voting on motions via Microsoft Forms. What’s even more encouraging is that club and county officers now have expertise in IT tools that are highly sought after by employers.
“Our work for the year isn’t finished yet, and we’ll be more than happy to provide additional webinars on Microsoft Teams, Forms and OneDrive. In the long run, from a club and county perspective, OneDrive is the most valuable, yet under-utilised component of the Office 365 suite, as it provides gigabytes of GAA controlled file storage, in the cloud, to every GAA club in the world.
“Currently, even though we’re all missing GAA activity on the field during the long summer evenings, GAA volunteers all over the world are taking full advantage of this once in a generation opportunity to take a massive leap forward in the adoption of communication and collaboration technology across the GAA and its sister associations. Please keep an eye on the webinar schedule and let us know what else we should cover. In future sessions, we hope to showcase clubs or units who are using the Office 365 suite extensively, in particular features such as Forms and OneDrive for collecting and sharing data.”
The most recent webinar on 21 May acted as an IT Clinic for County Officers. Participants were surveyed in advance on technical problems they were experiencing, and a panel of IT Officers was assembled to prepare tutorials and answer questions on the webinar. Cork GAA IT Officer, Terry Brady, gave an overview on how Microsoft OneDrive can act as an “online filing cabinet” for Officers to store documents, and how officers can control which individuals and groups with both GAA and non-GAA e-mail accounts can view, or edit documents.
Michelle Healy, Galway GAA IT Officer, has been present on all seminars to help officers with queries within the Q&A chat feature in Microsoft Teams. Michelle, who is also Secretary of the Ahascragh Fohenagh Club, spoke about how a smarter use of the Microsoft 365 system can make a difference to clubs and counties.
“We are fortunate to have Microsoft 365 systems freely available to the GAA community to enable us continue to operate our activities seamlessly, where needed. In recent weeks, club and County Board Officers had to very quickly transition to using online communication and collaboration channels fully. Many users would be familiar with email, in recent weeks they have experienced the additional benefits available through the active use of the tool suite in the Microsoft 365 portfolio. These systems have enabled many to conduct their business successfully, remotely and online.
“We have also learnt that we do not need to bring groups together in person, face to face, for every discussion item that needs to be debated. This is a culture shift from how we traditionally ran meetings and courses. The effective use of IT enables us to have better flexibility and participation and hopefully we continue to leverage the use of IT to create efficiency going forward. We have had the opportunity to both learn from and support each other with practical IT solutions during this time. The IT community are very supportive and available to help where needed and I would encourage those who require support or have improvement ideas to contact us. Strong teams working together off the pitch are most important at a time like this.”
Over the last few years, the GAA’s IT and Officer Development Committees have worked closely together to provide training to club and county officers on using Microsoft 365. Workshops have been delivered on-demand in counties under the auspices of the Club Leadership Development Programme (CLDP).
Eoghan Tuohey, GAA Officer Development Coordinator, currently coordinates the organisation of the CLDP. He noted that the Officer Development Committee has seen a strong increase in the demand for all IT-themed modules in the last year.
“The “Getting Work Done in Office 365” module was one of the most popular offerings in the CLDP, because it focussed on practical things officers could do to make their lives easier right away,” Tuohey states. “We hope that Club Officers in the GAA, LGFA and Camogie Association continue to avail of the supports on offer.”
In addition to the provision of training, the GAA has increased the priority given to the promotion of Club resources. Jack McCarney (GAA Club Administration Coordinator) has worked closely with the IT Committee to create a Club Folder Structure for Clubs. This is a set of sample documents and folders which GAA clubs can copy and use. To start with, a club secretary template has been created which includes files in the following folders:
- Insurance
- Transfers
- Safeguarding
- Sponsorship
- Games
- Events
- AGM
- Garda Vetting
- Minutes Property
To learn more, visit: https://learning.gaa.ie/clubfolderstructure
Wednesday Webinar
Profile of Sean Crowley GDA : Cork City Southside & East Cork (temporary)
The area I cover is Cork City south side clubs and clubs just outside the city, I have also I’ve being filling in as the GDA in East Cork the last few months with Shane Supple after moving onto full time administrator of Rebel Og.
Clubs
Before the lockdown in my job I was supporting clubs with Coaching workshops focusing on fundamental skills and exercises for younger age groups. Also, this is the last year of the benchmarking program so I was meeting clubs to put plans in place for the season and try and improve on previous years.
During the lockdown we have being running a lot of online content for coaches and players across the county. My main role is the running of online Foundation courses every week on Mondays and Thursdays with and average of 40 coaches a night logging in across the county. I have worked closely with Shane Supple Coach education coordinator and the GDAs from each area when rolling the courses out.
We are also working hard at the moment putting training session templates in place for clubs to use when training can resume sometime in the future taking into account the social distancing that could still be in place.
Development Squads
My main area of work in the development squads is to oversee the East Cork region in both Hurling and Football at U14 level.
U14 Hurling – We have 86 players on the Hurling panel with 3 hurling squads in East Cork. Along with help from Brendan Healy, Pat Walsh, Fergal Condon, Derek Barrett and James Nyhan we had done a number of sessions already in Lisgoold back in January and February with the players working on improving the basics, breaking the tackle and High ball.
U14 Football- We have 57 players on the East Cork Football panel with 2 teams for the year playing games across the county and outside the county later in the season. We have had a number of matches and sessions already overseen by Conor Murphy, Brendan O Riordan, Coleman O Driscoll, Jim Crowley , Con Leddy and Padraig O Connor with support from Conor Counihan.
U15 Hurling
I have being also supporting Paudie Murray Cork U15 Hurling manager with the East Cork squad who were starting to get up and running for the year with a few practice games before the lockdown. They are getting online physical and skills programs for the moment.
Post primary schools
I have being helping schools that have very big numbers particularly at U14 level with coaching support and also running Blitz/tournament for them in Hurling. We had run our first blitz up on Monday Ag in February with another 2 days to follow. The idea of the tournament/blitz was to allow schools enter multiple teams for players not getting games on the 1st teams. The response from the schools was very positive and we look forward to again running this in the future.
I have also being helping schools with TY course. We had just started a new art course with all the transition year students in Carrigtwohill Community College. It was a 6 week program with assistance from Niall McCarthy. The students were visiting the local primary school Scoil Chliodhna CNS coaching the kids in fundamental exercises and skills. Unfortunately we did not get to run the 6 weeks with the lockdown. The response from it from both schools was hugely positive and it is hoped that it will continue into the future.
During lockdown I have being put on a Munster GAA group reviewing activity across the province at post primary level and also coming up with any new programs that could be run to assist schools in promoting our games.
Primary schools
I have being busy working with club coaches that visit primary schools. I also helped a number of schools with indoor hurling blitzes at the start of the year in Carrigtwohill Community hall.
Carrigaline CC and Midleton CBS planed on hosting primary school blitzes in April. I was coaching and setting up coaching visits with local schools.
We have also being supporting schools that registered as 5 Star Centres for 2019/20. With coaching and any additional support required.