Abstract

BackgroundSport as a mechanism to build relationships across cultural boundaries and to build positive interactions among young people has often been promoted in the literature. However, robust evaluation of sport-for-development program impacts is limited. This study reports on an impact evaluation of a sport-for-development program in Australia, Football United®.MethodsA quasi-experimental mixed methods design was employed using treatment partitioning (different groups compared had different levels of exposure to Football United). A survey was undertaken with 142 young people (average age of 14.7 years with 22.5% of the sample comprising girls) in four Australian schools. These schools included two Football United and two Comparison schools where Football United was not operating. The survey instrument was composed of previously validated measures, including emotional symptoms, peer problems and relationships, prosocial behaviour, other-group orientation, feelings of social inclusion and belonging and resilience. Face to face interviews were undertaken with a purposeful sample (n = 79) of those who completed the survey. The participants in the interviews were selected to provide a diversity of age, gender and cultural backgrounds.ResultsYoung people who participated in Football United showed significantly higher levels of other-group orientation than a Comparison Group (who did not participate in the program). The Football United boys had significantly lower scores on the peer problem scale and significantly higher scores on the prosocial scale than boys in the Comparison Group. Treatment partitioning analyses showed positive, linear associations between other-group orientation and total participation in the Football United program. A lower score on peer problems and higher scores on prosocial behaviour in the survey were associated with regularity of attendance at Football United. These quantitative results are supported by qualitative data analysed from interviews.ConclusionsThe study provides evidence of the effects of Football United on key domains of peer and prosocial relationships for boys and other-group orientation for young people in the program sites studied. The effects on girls, and the impacts of the program on the broader school environment and at the community level, require further investigation.

Highlights

  • Sport as a mechanism to build relationships across cultural boundaries and to build positive interactions among young people has often been promoted in the literature

  • The Comparison school sample frame was much larger than that at Football United schools as it included the whole Intensive English Centres (IECs) student population, versus a sub-set of IEC students at the Program schools who participated in Football United as the sampling frame

  • Three girls participated in the survey at the first Football United school site, due to only a small number of girls participating in Football United that year at this site

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Summary

Introduction

Sport as a mechanism to build relationships across cultural boundaries and to build positive interactions among young people has often been promoted in the literature. This study reports on an impact evaluation of a sport-for-development program in Australia, Football United®. Australia accepts approximately 14,000 people either as refugees or on humanitarian grounds each year [1]. Of those who are accepted into Australia’s Refugee and Humanitarian program, just under one third settle in New South Wales [2] - Australia’s most populous state. Young people may need to learn a new language and negotiate a different culture, and face the additional challenges of their development stage, educational pressures and the centrality of peer relationships to their experiences [5,6]. How and to what extent peer and social bonds are formed amongst young people who are newly arrived in Australia, and between these young people and other young people in their school or community, represents an important area of study

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