Category Para Athlete Show all
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Winning Medals with Equity and Diversity: A symposium championing equity and diversity in Paralympic sports
Share Winning Medals with Equity and Diversity: A symposium championing equity and diversity in Paralympic sports on Facebook Share Winning Medals with Equity and Diversity: A symposium championing equity and diversity in Paralympic sports on Twitter Share Winning Medals with Equity and Diversity: A symposium championing equity and diversity in Paralympic sports on Linkedin Email Winning Medals with Equity and Diversity: A symposium championing equity and diversity in Paralympic sports linkMadi de Rozario OAM PLY - Paralympic Athlete, Inclusive Futures Engagement Council Member and Griffith alumnus
EVENT OVERVIEW
Hosted online on Friday, 8 November 2024, this symposium, hosted by Griffith University’s Inclusive Futures: Reimagining Disability, as a member of the Queensland Para Sport Network, brought together interdisciplinary researchers, community partners, and athletes to amplify the vital role equity and diversity can play in improving the performance of Paralympic teams and enabling athletes to compete at the highest possible standard.
The symposium explored equity and diversity in elite paralympic sport through the lens of exercise and sport science, social justice, tourism and leisure, sport management, disability rehabilitation and inclusion. Building toward the Brisbane Olympic and Paralympic Games in 2032, this was a key opportunity for participants to incorporate the pillars of equity and diversity into their performance programs and research to drive performance.SYMPOSIUM SUMMARY
by Dr Georgia Munro-CookKeynote: Winning Medals with Equity and Diversity
Our keynote address for Winning Medals with Equity and Diversity was provided by Natalie Charlton. Natalie is the current Pathway Specialist for Paralympics Australia, with a legacy of building and delivering a variety of sports programs from grassroots community development through to performance pathways.
Natalie discussed the importance of thinking inclusively to ensure we meet our medal targets for Brisbane 2032. At the moment, we do not have enough athletes at the bottom of the talent pipeline or the sporting environments for athletes to grow and developments. By accessing a broader demographic of people and opening our sport system to everyone, we can grow our talent pool, but it is essential to create environments that centre athletes and their needs. Natalie provided her experience with the Northern Territory Sports Academy: Para Futures Program as an example of good practice.
Gender Inequity and Paralympic Sport
Dr Georgia Munro-Cook presented on the importance of gender equity and Paralympic Sport. Georgia has successfully represented Australia in Wheelchair Basketball and is now a champion of promoting intersectional approaches to create positive experiences for women in disability sport.
Georgia pointed out the gender disparities on the Australian Paralympic team, which only comprised of 44% women, much lower than the Olympic team which had 55.9% women athletes. She discussed some of what makes para-sport more difficult for women, including poor pathways, fast-tracked development, mixed-gender training and games, challenges with coaches, and the role of the media.
Optimising Performance and Participation for Indigenous and CALD athletes
Dr Kerry Hall gave us an insight into how Indigenous ways of learning can created culturally safe spaces in para-sport. Dr Hall offered a way of transforming sport cultures to centre athlete voice and ensure cultural safety. Dr Hall is a proud descendant of the Kuku Thaypan, Kuku Warra and Lama Lama Peoples from Cape York Peninsula, whose work aims to address access, engagement and inequity issues specific to First Nations Peoples through collaboration and prioritising community voices and perspectives.
Dr Diti Bhattachyarya revealed some of the issues that face Culturally and Linguistically Diverse (CALD) people in sport. She challenged the taken-for-granted assumptions organisations have about CALD diverse people, for example, the notion that CALD athletes are expected to be role models. Instead, she stressed the importance of cultural safety. Dr Bhattachyarya’s research relates to how sporting practices and fitness cultures can be used as a social conduit through which marginalised communities experience a sense of belonging and community.
Paradox of Equity, Diversity and Inclusion in Paralympic Classification
Professor Sean Tweedy is the Principal Investigator for the International Paralympic Committee’s Classification Research and Development Centre. He works to develop best practice and evidence-based methods for allocating athletes to classed. Professor Tweedy gave an excellent overview of why classification is important to enable para-sport, even if it is sometimes exclusive.
Equity and Design Thinking in Technology
Laurent Frossard is a bionic limb specialist passionate about developing ground-breaking prosthetic solutions. Laurent discussed how technology like bionic limbs can be both inclusive—allowing people with disability to engage with sport—and exclusive, as their incredible expense benefits high-income countries.
Matt McShane is an Australian Paralympian and an Industrial Designer with a passion for co-designing technologies to improve the lives of individuals with a disability. Matt again emphasised the inequities in access to technology, while also stressing the importance of centreing the athlete voice in technology design.
Panel Discussion
We had a fantastic panel discussion in which Michael Dobbie-Bridges, Robyn Smith, and Ben Newton had an illuminating debate centred around the following questions:
- How can we create a cohesive sport system and strong pathways for para-athletes by centring inclusion?
- How do inclusion and equity factor into our legacy planning?
- What is the role of policy in driving inclusion and equity?
- Brisbane 2032 – quality or quantity?
Michael Dobbie-Bridges is a celebrated Paralympian, representing Australia in wheelchair tennis. In addition to Michael’s considerable sporting achievements, he is an advocate for promoting inclusion and support for individuals with a disability, across multiple sectors including health care and employment opportunities and wheelchair sports. His expertise includes high-level policy development and driving meaningful change within the government administration industry.
Robyn Smith has worked at the National level in Sports Administration for the past 3 decades as Chief Executive Officer of Sport Inclusion Australia. Her role includes working closely with Government Agencies, Paralympics Australia and National Sporting Organisations, including School Sport Australia to develop appropriate inclusive services and opportunities for athletes with an impairment into the mainstream community. In 2022, Robyn was awarded the Medal of the Order of Australia for services to people with disability through sport.
Ben Newton is a respected Paralympian, coach, and accessibility advocate. He represented Australia in wheelchair rugby for two decades. In 2014 Ben was awarded a Medal of the Order of Australia for services to sport and is now Head Coach of the Queensland Academy of Sport High Performance Program and Assistant Coach for the Australian Steelers Development Program. Prior to his coaching roles Ben worked at Queensland Rail for ten years as the Principal Accessibility Adviser.
Wrap Up
In the last session of the day, to provide concluding remarks we invited Simone Fullagar on behalf of Griffith Inclusive Futures and Brendan Burkett on behalf of Queensland Para Sport Network for Performance Enhancement and Applied Research.
More information: Please contact inclusivefutures@griffith.edu.au
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Inclusive Futures Author Talk Series: Matt Levy OAM PLY "Going the Distance: Identify and create your own lane to success"
Share Inclusive Futures Author Talk Series: Matt Levy OAM PLY "Going the Distance: Identify and create your own lane to success" on Facebook Share Inclusive Futures Author Talk Series: Matt Levy OAM PLY "Going the Distance: Identify and create your own lane to success" on Twitter Share Inclusive Futures Author Talk Series: Matt Levy OAM PLY "Going the Distance: Identify and create your own lane to success" on Linkedin Email Inclusive Futures Author Talk Series: Matt Levy OAM PLY "Going the Distance: Identify and create your own lane to success" linkDisability Inclusion Author Talk Series: With guest speaker, Matt Levy OAM PLY Paralympian and author of ‘Going the Distance: Identify and create your own lane to success’. Hosted by Dr Maretta Mann.
Matt Levy OAM PLY with Dr. Maretta Mann
Last Tuesday, 27 February, Griffith Inclusive Futures: Reimagining Disability hosted esteemed guest Matt Levy OAM PLY, Australian Paralympian and author of “Going the Distance”.
In his talk, Matt shared his life journey, marked by early challenges due to being born prematurely with cerebral palsy, and emphasised the transformative role of swimming therapy in overcoming his physical limitations. Matt also discussed the impact of cerebral palsy on his daily life, highlighting the importance of recognising that disabilities affect individuals differently.
From top left to right: Matt Levy OAM; Julia Robertson together with Matt Levy and Mark Berridge; Attendees at the Author Talk held at Nathan Campus, Griffith University.
Matt has developed a framework based on his experiences. He stressed the significance of setting manageable goals, driven by passion and belief. He told us the story of where it all started for him, when he was left behind at the pool after the school swimming carnival. He found a way to navigate across Sydney via public transport to get home that took him over three hours and it taught him a crucial lesson in goal-setting.
Matt also detailed his remarkable achievements, participating in five Paralympic Games, emphasising that the journey and the learning experiences matter more than the accolades. Matt also reflected on a pivotal moment during the 2008 Paralympic Games when he realised the need for a change in attitude and commitment to continuous improvement.
He delved into the importance of having a dream, a desire, and creating tools for success. Matt shared the necessity of focusing on the purpose behind one's actions, particularly during challenging days, and encouraged attendees to make the most out of every moment, whether positive or negative.
Matt introduced his ‘action plan’, breaking down big goals into smaller, manageable steps, and underscored the importance of simplicity and a focused approach in achieving success, drawing parallels between his training sessions and broader life goals.
Matt also emphasied the role of a supportive team, including family, friends, colleagues, and coaches, in personal growth., and highlighted the significance of engaging with one's inner circle through meaningful conversations, collaborations, and shared experiences.
Wapping up a most impactful Author Talk, Matt concluded by stressing the value of lifting each other higher and turning negatives into positives through supportive relationships.I was so inspired by Matt, who has achieved so much success by following a process of setting goals and then working towards them, and also of approaching the setbacks or disappointments as an opportunity for reflection, learning and growth.
Matt also encouraged others not to compare themselves with others, but to follow one’s own path.
I think everyone in the room left feeling encouraged by Matt’s practical and inspiring approach to reaching your potential.
From top left to right: Prof. David Thiel; Cathy Easte, Tara Horner and Matt Levy OAM PLY, Captioner Roxane Lane; and Nathaniel Audley, Tara Horner, Maureen Sullivan and Mark Berridge.
TRANSCRIPT:
If you wish to obtain a transcript of Matt’s keynote talk, please email the Inclusive Futures: Reimagining team at: inclusivefutures@griffith.edu.au
UPCOMING EVENTS:
Our next Author Talk guest is the highly esteemed Mary Li – Principal Repetiteur and Ballet Mistress with the Queensland Ballet and author of “Mary’s Last Dance”, to be held on Wednesday, 3 April 11.30am-1.30pm, at the Queensland Conservatorium (QCGU) Foyer, SO1, Southbank Campus, Griffith University.
Register for this FREE and inclusive event on this link: https://shorturl.at/JOV46
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Disability Inclusion Author Talk Series: Matt Levy OAM PLY 'Going the Distance'
Share Disability Inclusion Author Talk Series: Matt Levy OAM PLY 'Going the Distance' on Facebook Share Disability Inclusion Author Talk Series: Matt Levy OAM PLY 'Going the Distance' on Twitter Share Disability Inclusion Author Talk Series: Matt Levy OAM PLY 'Going the Distance' on Linkedin Email Disability Inclusion Author Talk Series: Matt Levy OAM PLY 'Going the Distance' linkInclusive Futures: Reimagining Disability invites you to attend our Author Talk event on disability and resilience, with esteemed guest Matt Levy OAM PLY, Australian paralympian and author of Going the Distance.
In 1987, Matt Levy was born prematurely at 25 weeks. He was diagnosed with cerebral palsy and severe visual impairment and has undergone 40-50 surgeries on vital organs. Matt’s determination and resilience led him to a career in swimming, where he proudly clinched gold for Australia at the Paralympic Games.
Representing his nation at five consecutive Paralympic Games, Matt has won 3 gold, 1 silver, and 5 bronze medals. His dominance extends further, having graced the pools at five World Swimming Championships, securing 20 international medals and holding 4 World Records.
Matt’s contributions to sport were honoured with an Order of Australia Medal (OAM) in 2014 for ‘service to sport as a Gold Medallist at the London 2012 Paralympic Games. In 2015 Matt was named Athlete of the Year with a Disability at the New South Wales Sports Awards and in 2018 he was named Swimming Australia’s Paralympic Program Swimmer of the Year. In November 2021, he received a New South Wales Institute of Sport Academic Excellence Award and was named the 2021 Sport NSW Athlete of the Year with a Disability.
Since retiring from the pool, Matt has authored 3 books, including: ‘Keeping your head above water’ (2020), ‘Brandon Dreams Big: 7 easy steps to get where you want’ (2021), and ‘Going the distance: Identify and create your own lane to success’ (2023). More recently, Matt has turned his hand to philanthropy and supporting young people with disability to achieve their own dreams and goals through education, including becoming a patron of the Griffith University Matt Levy Inclusive Futures Scholarship.
Event Details
Date: Tuesday, 27 February 2024Time: 11.20am – 12.30pm
Venue: N53, -1.22 Nathan Campus, Griffith University
Map: https://www.griffith.edu.au/__data/assets/pdf_file/0032/244976/nathan-campus-map.pdf
Accessibility: This event will be accessible including being held in an accessible space, complete with accessible parking (limited), live captioning, Auslan Interpreting, and with a PowerPoint which can be shared ahead of the presentation. A transcript will be available after the event. Please note any accessibility or dietary requirements on your registration.
RSVP:
Please confirm your attendance before Thursday, 22 February 2024.Click on this link to register your interest or use the QR Code below.
Contact us:
inclusivefutures@griffith.edu.au