Posts Tagged ‘YOG’

Formal and Informal Welcomes to Singapore

Sunday, August 15th, 2010

Team GB are greeted by a piper at the British High Commission in Singapore ahead of the announcement of sprinter David Bolarinwa as the flag bearer for last nights opening ceremony.

These formalities where followed by a more informal welcome ceremony for all athletes back at the Youth Olympic Village which was opened by the Young Ambassadors playing in the Samba band we had formed when we participated in the Community Drumming programme during the Culture and Education Programme Seminar back in March.

We’re in the Village People!

Thursday, August 12th, 2010

The past couple of days since our arrival in Singapore have largely been spent settling into the Olympic Village. For the coaches this means liaising with their Sports reps and finding out the training times they have been allocated and negotiating transport and other logistical hurdles in order to make sure that the athletes get the best preparation possible and feel most comfortable in the competition environment. For the athletes settling in has involved getting comfortable in their rooms, exploring the Olympic Village and getting used to the competition environment with some light training.

The realities of coping with the time change, jet lag, the heat and humidity as well as the expectations and hopes that rest upon each coach and athlete demand that this is a patient process. At this point it is very much about building a good base, literally in this context, from which we can move forward into the competition period over the next couple of weeks.

Spirits are good in the camp and after the first few days of travelling and living together the athletes are beginning to get to know each other and really experience the first of the Olympic Values, of which the Youth Olympic Games is a celebration, that of friendship.

There is a “Wow!come Session” being held tomorrow, which will celebrate the arrival of all athletes to the Youth Olympic Village – you can watch it live online here.

For some pictures from the Olympic Village click here.

Visualising Performance; What can Designers and Olympians learn from each other?

Wednesday, April 14th, 2010

I immensely enjoyed (late) last night’s first episode of Olympic Dreams, which you can catch on BBC iPlayer here and follows a number of young British athletes and former and future Olympians as they prepare for London 2012. The documentary gives a fascinating insight into the balancing act that is the life of an elite athlete, particularly an upcoming elite athlete. I’ve talked often on this blog about some of my own experiences performing this balancing act and a big part of my role as Young Ambassador for the Youth Olympic Games is assisting the members of TeamGB with this balancing act of juggling training and a social life with the demands of education.

These challenges are far from unique to elite athletes however, I’m sure all of us are familiar with the pressures associated with ensuring good performance in either our personal or professional lives or indeed in our hobbies or sporting commitments. For me as someone with fairly a dominant kinaesthetic and visual learning style, visualising performance was always a huge part of ensuring I achieved what I set out to do. I was excited to see Tom Daley talk and demonstrate his pre-dive visualisation process in last night’s documentary and it reminded me of my undergraduate dissertation project ‘Insight‘ a mobile phone and augmented reality environment to aid athletic performance.

Canadian Cross-country skier Chandra Crawford using music to help prepare her performance at the Vancouver Games (c) Vancouver Sun

Canadian Cross-country skier Chandra Crawford using music to help prepare her performance at the Vancouver Games (c) Vancouver Sun

I’ve often found however, that visualisation (and supporting performance preparation with music) can also be really effective in terms of helping prepare for lectures or presentations that I’ve given, thinking through in my mind where and what I’ll be presenting and how I anticipate the audience to react.

This is an approach that is also increasingly employed in the design world and by service design consultants to help their clients achieve innovative and creative insights or ensure effective service design and delivery. Vocal proponents of these theatrical, role play and embodied approaches to service design include Adam Lawrence (who is well worth following on Twitter, if you don’t already).

Fast Company also covered a related notion a while back, talking about how standup comedy helps design and creativity. As one of the coaches in last nights documentary pointed out – its really about standing up and delivering your performance when it matters – how different they is this to so many other aspects of life? What can the way sports people deal with this pressure do to help us inform our own processes and (quite literally) practice? These principles are similar in justification to why experience prototyping and test-rigs are such effective tools for new product and service development – as just like Tom Daley they allow stakeholders to act our their performances whilst developing them. This process in turn makes those performances ‘more real’ every time they are iterated or evolved – making the experience more realistic every time it is enacted. The outcomes of this aren’t always positive however, and the downsides of realistic training environments and visualisation is something that @georgejulian has blogged about recently.

Prototypes - another form of visualisation (from Ergonomics - Real Design at The Design Museum

Prototypes - another form of visualisation (from Ergonomics - Real Design at The Design Museum

One of the big attractions for me of Service Design as a discipline is the myriad ways, tools and processes that it affords practitioners and participants to help people visualise their needs and demands from a service or the complex socio-technological systems and relationships that make up the service. I wonder how Service Designers and designers more generally, might be able to collaborate with sports psychologists and athletes to share practice and experiences on new and creative approaches to visualisation and expression. Would this be of reciprocal benefit – in other words would sports people benefit from more creative and collaborative approaches to preparing for competition?

I also wonder if there is a career pathway or opportunities for athletes to support the design and development of user experiences and the design of products, systems and services after, or in order to support, their careers as full time athletes?

What the Olympic Values Mean to Papua New Guinea

Sunday, April 4th, 2010

A few days ago I asked people to submit any reflections or thoughts they were willing to share on what the Olympic meant to them personally. To get the ball rolling I thought I’d share some video I took last week when I was in Singapore as part of the Youth Olympic Culture and Education Programme Seminar. I asked my fellow Young Ambassador from Papua New Guinea Shannon Andrews what he thought he and his team of athletes could gain from competing in the Games in Singapore this August. The interview took place as we were walking through Chinatown.

I think this an awesome insight and a really honest reflection from Shannon and would like to take this opportunity to thank him for sharing it. It is clear that Singapore is a fascinating example of a multi-racial community being united by a common sense of identity, this can act as a role model to a country such as Papua New Guinea which Shannon told me has over 800 different dialects and many tribal identities and affiliations.

I think for me this is part of what I really admire about the Olympics and excites me about my role as a Young Ambassador for Great Britain (itself, uniquely, a nation formed of four other nations) is the power of sport and the Olympic ideals in uniting people irrespective of political, social or religious background. I also think that, as Shannon alludes and as I mentioned a few days ago, the power of the Olympics in bringing people from all over the globe together with shared aims, ambitions and interests can offer us much cause for optimism.

What do you think about the Olympics and its values of friendship, respect and excellence? Do you share the optimism they offer or do you think they are too idealistic? Do you feel that you can point to examples of these values in your local communities? If you can I’d be really interested to hear about it and help the Team GB athletes competing at the Games this summer bring their Olympic experiences back to their local communities. Please use the comments box below or contact me on Twitter.