GIRLS IN CHARDG Leadership Program 2.0
Previous participants say they gained leadership strategies, emotional intelligence and confidence.
"I would recommend this course to others because it helped me understand more about myself and more about leadership. Also, I really enjoyed the group calls because it was amazing to listen and ask questions to some great guest speakers."
- Simran
"I would recommend this course to others because it helped me understand more about myself and more about leadership. Also, I really enjoyed the group calls because it was amazing to listen and ask questions to some great guest speakers."
- Simran
Right Way believes in empowering girls to feel strong, valued and confident in their abilities as women and athletes.
We want to make sure that girls in our community feel equipped. We want to guide them as they discover their leadership voice. We want to show them the many forms leadership can take. We want to create a network of role models for the next generation of women in sport. Our 6-week "Girls in CHARDG" course is a holistic, character-centred leadership program stemming from the Right Way philosophy. This is an exciting opportunity for female athletes to connect with their peers, learn about themselves and grow into someone they are proud of. Program will be run by Coach Clare Murphy. Who? Girls in grades 8-12 (register individually or as a team)
What? Pillars: Leading Yourself, Leading Others, and Servant Leadership In Action Lessons: Commitment, Character, Confidence, Communication, Connection, and Comfort Zone When? Program runs as requested How? Online Delivery
Investment: $150 per person or $1500 per team (20 players max) |
"According to Gatorade’s recent study, girls are dropping out of sports at 1.5x the rate that boys do by age 14. By age 17, more than half of girls will quit playing sports altogether." These stats continue despite knowing that "participation in sports can lead to higher grades and higher educational aspirations" and "96% of female C-suite executives (you know, those boss ladies with CEO, CFO, and COO titles) participated in sports as teenagers."
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