KSHSAA Spirit Safety Meetings 2010-2011
Required - Schools N-Z
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Head Spirit Coaches/Advisors (grades 7-12) shall attend a mandatory meeting, intended to promote and provide fundamentals of the activity and participant safety, every other year or in the first year of their employment. Schools' whose city name begins with letters A-M will attend every odd year. Schools' whose city name begins with letters N-Z will attend every even year.
- Spirit rules meetings will be conducted at KSHSAA Fall Spirit Spreader Clinics
- Spirit Coaches/Advisors shall complete a test with information provided and discusses at the spirit safety meeting.
- Schools failing to submit the mandatory spirit safety test will be listed in the Activities Journal and subject to a $25 penalty.
Attention spirit Coaches and Activity Directors
KSHSAA member schools may NOT attend competitions or evaluative events unless the event is listed on our KSHSAA “approved list”. Only certified teachers or Rule 10 coaches may sponsor students at these types of events. If you receive a brochure or invitation to attend a Cheer Competition, Dance Festival, or Drill Team Championship, etc. you need to check the KSHSAA “approved list” link on our front web page (http://www.kshsaa.org/Approved.pdf) before signing up. If the event isn’t on the list and you want to attend, contact the host school and ask them to contact Reg Romine at KSHSAA to see if the event can be approved. Do not rely on a brochure or invitation that says it is KSHSAA approved. Check the official website “approved list” to make sure.
Remember, during the school year, only member association schools may host spirit competitions or evaluative events.
Artificial Noisemaker Limitations
Artificial noisemakers (including megaphones, cow bells, thunder sticks,
air horns, sirens, etc.) are not to be used and bands
are not to play (including the beating of drums) while the game
is in progress, indoors or outdoors. If
the host school administration questions the safety or appropriateness
of any noise maker it shall not be permitted. Please refer to the
KSHSAA Music Manual, page 21, relating to when bands can play.
By policy of the KSHSAA Executive Board, use of fireworks, cannons, air
concussion cannons, hand-held explosives, and other devices, is not permitted
at any KSHSAA post-season athletic event. Member schools
have the authority to determine if they permit such devices at their
regular-season events
Cheerleaders and dealing with officials
Cheerleader positioning – Facilities vary greatly from one school to the next. Some facilities have ample space and some do not. Both cheerleaders and officials need to work together to assure the safest possible environment while the game is in progress. There are some things we can do as cheerleaders and officials to avoid any problems around the court or field.
- Understand the cheerleader’s role – Remember that cheerleaders have worked long hours practicing just like the teams have in preparation for the game. Cheerleaders can and should be an ally in good sportsmanship management throughout the game. However, protecting the players and officials must be the #1 priority.
- Attentiveness – Officials are watching the players, not the cheerleaders. Cheerleaders must always remain alert and ready to move out of the way while the game is in progress. This becomes increasingly challenging depending on the facilities, size of squad, and the space available from the playing surface to the cheerleaders.
- Work with officials before the game – Regardless of the sport, officials are required to be present long before the game starts. There is ample time for the cheerleaders, cheer coaches, and officials to visit about cheerleader location before the game. Officials and cheer coaches should survey the area and help cheerleaders determine the safest place to cheer. Cheerleaders tend to position themselves on the baseline, especially at basketball games. When there is little room on the baseline for the officials, it’s a problem. Officials should handle this by requesting cheerleaders to move long before the game begins so the game starts without a hitch, or if numbers dictate, suggest that they limit the number of cheerleaders on the sideline by alternating quarters. It is important for cheerleaders to remember they may never be inside the 3-second lane extended to the wall or bleachers when the game is in progress.
- Safety first – Cheerleaders should never be hesitant to cooperate; however, if this happens, officials are instructed to explain to their coach or advisor that their positioning is a safety issue. Cheerleaders need to know they may be requested to move in order to protect them, the players, and the officials from potential injury. Just like any other injury situation, when in doubt, officials, cheer coaches, and cheerleaders need to err on the side of safety.
- Involving the host administrator – If there is a major disagreement between cheer coaches and officials, the host administrator should be consulted to help you take care of the situation. Once the administrator understands the official is simply trying to protect the game’s participants and protect the school from any possible litigious situations, the cooperation should get easier. If there are continual problems associated with the cheerleaders positioning, contact the KSHSAA.
Why should you send your students to KSHSAA
sponsored summer cheer & dance camps?
- KSHSAA catastrophic insurance only applies to KSHSAA camp students.
- All safety rules will be modeled by our cheer/dance teaching staff
during our camps.
- All safety rules will be enforced throughout the camp; this will
get students in the habit of following the same rules their coaches
must enforce during the school year.
- KSHSAA provides a camp director 24 hours a day for added supervision
and organization.
- All practice facilities for both
Dance and Cheer will be air-conditioned.
- Your students will NOT be solicited to attend National Competitions
during our camps. Keep in mind; National Competitions are prohibited
for Kansas schools to attend.
- Students will only be taught stunts that are legal according to KSHSAA
rules. Some camps follow NFHS safety rules which include basket
tosses that are illegal in Kansas.
- Our camps are the only camps which provide the mandatory coaches
safety rules meetings.
- Our camps are among the lowest priced non-commuter camps in the state.