Student-Athlete Development Curriculum
“Inspiring Generation After Generation”
The 21 Elite Student-Athlete Development Curriculum has been established to guide players, and the people that coach them, through a level-appropriate system of basketball and volleyball development. Using scientific guiding principles developed by coaches, 21 Elite has designed a practical, functional and sequential development model to properly impart the game to a student-athlete.
The Student-Athlete Development Curriculum consists of four levels:
Introductory
Foundational
Advanced
Performance
SCHEDULE YOUR CHILDS FIRST SESSION
Your child will have the opportunity to try equipment, train, and get direct answers to all of their questions.
Each level takes the player through progressive development techniques based on their mastery of basketball and volleyball; and movement skills as opposed to their age, grade in school or physical attributes. This mastery of skills approach allows the player to develop physical literacy, learn basketball and volleyball vocabulary; and acquire the movement confidence needed to optimize their basketball and volleyball potential.
As explained in the sections that follow, the Student-Athlete Development Curriculum incorporates seven stages of long-term athlete development – Active Start, Fundamentals, Learning to Train, Training to Train, Training to Compete, Training to Win; then, Basketball and Volleyball for Life (Coaching). Although the curriculum removes age from the skill learning process, the long-term model provides age recommendations to demonstrate scientifically-proven learning capabilities. 21 Elite incorporated these age recommendations in creating the curriculum levels to show how the levels translate to real learning environments.
Through the long-term athlete development model, the Student-Athlete Development Curriculum addresses the topic of proper practice/training-to-competition ratios. 21 Elite has defined competition as the act of competing against another team, or imparting team strategies to prepare to compete against another team. Practice or training is defined as all activity related to a player’s individual skill development. Based on these definitions, the following is a summary of 21 Elite’s stance on practice/training-to-competition throughout the four levels.
Introductory Level
Introductory Level
Learn fundamental movement skills and build overall motor skills. Participation once or twice per week in basketball and volleyball but daily participation in other sport activities is essential for further excellence. Group skill competitions are recommended throughout this level. Introduction to team principles/concepts ONLY, avoiding actual 5x5 or 6x6 competition until fundamentals are further developed.
Foundational Level
Foundational Level
Learn all fundamental and basic basketball and volleyball specific skills, establish building blocks for overall basketball and volleyball skills. 70% of time is spent on individual fundamental training and only 30% of the time is spent on actual game competition. Teaching position concepts, but NOT assigning player positions at any point in the level. Divide actual competition between special games (1x1, 2x2, 3x3, skill games) and 5x5 or 6x6 play, trying not to focus on actual 5x5 or 6x6 competition until later in the level.
Advanced Level
Advanced Level
Build the aerobic base, build strength towards the end of the level and further develop overall basketball and volleyball skills. Build the “engine” and consolidate basketball and volleyball skills. Early in the level, 60% of the time is spent on individual training and 40% is spent on competition including 5x5 or 6x6 play, special games (1x1, 2x2, 3x3, skill games) as well as team-oriented practices. Later in the level, depending on mastery of skills, the switch can be made to a 50:50 training to competition ratio and positions can be assigned.
Performance Level
Performance Level
Maximize fitness and competition preparation as well as individual and position-specific skills. Optimize the “infinity” of skills and performance. Training to competition ratio in this phase shifts to 25:75, understanding that the competition percentage includes team-oriented practices and other competition-specific preparations.
SCHEDULE YOUR CHILDS FIRST SESSION
Your child will have the opportunity to try equipment, train, and get direct answers to all of their questions.