See our blog entries below:
Drive to Self-expression is Universal
The School of Coaching has a particular responsibility to its clients and Alumni: to build the brand, to raise awareness of what ‘Effective Coaching’ is. Part of this responsibility is to do it globally.
The acquisition of the business by JMJ Associates, head quartered in Austin, Texas has made a transformational step possible. We now have the resources and the global footprint (JMJ have offices in the US, UK, the Middle East, Asia, Australia and South Africa) to bring life to the dream.
In May and June we have run our first Public Programmes in the US (an Executive Programme for leaders and senior managers) and a Coach’s Programme in Dubai, with a whole sequence of programmes to follow in both locations. We will be open for business in Australia by the end of the year. In all these locations there is also significant corporate interest in what we have to offer.
The JMJ Middle East office is in Doha, Qatar, last Sunday we led a conference there to a typically diverse audience. While respecting the cultural differences we were determined to push beyond all the stereotypes and ‘perceived wisdom’. The response was fantastic. Here is what is more true than ‘difference’: human beings are fundamentally wired-up the same way and that the drive to self-expression is universal, coaching, as we know it, is a force for that.
By Myles Downey at Monday, 28 June 2010
The Inner Game Documentary on Sky Sports
Trans World Sports has filmed a short documentary on “The Inner Game” of golf and tennis which is one of The Schools unique coaching models created by Tim Gallwey. The Inner Game is the final feature in the show and the duration is 9 minutes.
"The Inner Game" is used in The School's fundamentals of coaching the first three days of the Coach's Programme workshop. Myles Downey is one of the few trained ‘Inner Game’ coaches in the world.
The dates below are the time it’s showing in England
“There is always an inner game being played in your mind no matter what outer game you are playing. How aware you are of this game can make the difference between success and failure in the outer game.” Tim Gallwey
By Myles Downey at Friday, 4 June 2010