Coaching for Civic Leadership

Zach Moo Young

The Coaching for Civic Leadership Project is an inquiry into the art of coaching for civic leadership. To coach for civic leadership is to improve our society by the way you coach – the act of coaching with an eye toward developing leadership, problem solving, and social interest and understanding. Through this project, I’ll interview coaches who give a damn, exploring what it means to ‘coach while woke’ with their team, in their community, and the public conversation we are having as a nation divided. Why do some coaches speak out? What led to their social consciousness? What do their players expect from them? How are they empowering young people to make a difference? These are the sorts of questions for which I seek answers. Thanks for joining me. I can’t wait. CoachingforCivicLeadership.com

Episodes

  1. Coach Josh Meyer

    08/05/2021

    Coach Josh Meyer

    A few years ago, Coach Josh Meyer and his team, the NCAA Division 2 Men’s college basketball team at Saint Michael's College in Vermont, made headlines. During the 2017-2018 season, before games as the national anthem played, the team took a knee in solidarity with Colin Kaepernick’s protest against police brutality, and oppression in all forms. But that was just the tip of the iceberg. His students have graduated from what he calls their life lessons 101 curriculum, with a degree that is grounded in leadership, community, critical thinking and contextual awareness. After 20-years as a coach and teacher, I was fortunate to have the opportunity to catch Josh during a time of reflection on his coaching career, the coaching profession, sports, and social justice. -- More on Josh: Josh earned his master of education degree at the Harvard Graduate School of Education, where he worked with Professor Sara Lawrence-Lightfoot and Coach Tommy Amaker to produce the "coach as teacher" project, which explores teaching and learning in co-curricular environments. Social justice, restorative practices and mindfulness guide Josh's approach to leadership, and he is also the author of an incisive piece for Inside Higher Ed called, “Why Coaching for Social Justice Matters” Most recently, Josh has been doing equity related work for the city of Burlington, Vermont as the Restorative Practices Coordinator for the Burlington School District, and is excited to join All Heart Inspirations, a business started by his partner, Ferene, that creates heart-centered spaces through storytelling, workshops, community engagements, culinary food and more. *Cover photo by James Buck

    1h 31m
  2. Lindsay Kagawa Colas

    06/09/2021

    Lindsay Kagawa Colas

    Lindsay Kagawa Colas joined Wasserman in 2009 and is currently Executive Vice President, Talent and The Collective. With a focus on representing cultural conversation influencers, Colas oversees the careers of many influential Olympic medalists, including WNBA players Diana Taurasi, Breanna Stewart, Sue Bird, Brittney Griner, and Maya Moore, swimmer Simone Manuel, beach volleyball player April Ross, fencer Ibtihaj Muhammad and Paralympian, Scout Bassett (Track and Field). Colas is widely considered to be a pioneer in the representation space, having negotiated the first ever Inclusion Rider into an athlete contract and the first maternity protection language into a major shoe and apparel deal. She is the most dominant agent ever in the WNBA, representing five of the last six #1 overall draft picks, the starting five on the 2016 Olympic team, half the 2018 WNBA All-Star team and eight of the last nine WNBA MVPs.  Prior to Wasserman, Colas worked for BDA Sports Management, helping to manage premier NBA talent and founded both the Women's Elite Division and the agency's charitable giving arm, BDAgiving. Colas received her Bachelor of Arts degree in Political Science and Master of Arts in Sociology from Stanford where she was an All-District 8 performer and two-year captain of the women's volleyball team, which during her tenure, appeared in two National Championship matches and won an NCAA title in 1997. She was a Sports Business Journal Forty Under 40 Award winner in 2018 and lives in Portland, OR with her husband and two sons.   Follow her at @KagawaColas.

    51 min

About

The Coaching for Civic Leadership Project is an inquiry into the art of coaching for civic leadership. To coach for civic leadership is to improve our society by the way you coach – the act of coaching with an eye toward developing leadership, problem solving, and social interest and understanding. Through this project, I’ll interview coaches who give a damn, exploring what it means to ‘coach while woke’ with their team, in their community, and the public conversation we are having as a nation divided. Why do some coaches speak out? What led to their social consciousness? What do their players expect from them? How are they empowering young people to make a difference? These are the sorts of questions for which I seek answers. Thanks for joining me. I can’t wait. CoachingforCivicLeadership.com