Ninety-nine per cent of what we do is through the NCCP. We have separate certifications for different types of gymnastics, artistic women's gymnastics, men's gymnastics, trampoline gymnastics, active start, which is for the pre-school ages from two to five years old. These are all different streams and different types of certification, but all are within the national coaching certification program. There is mentorship and clinics and things that are very common in all the highly technical sports on top of NCCP. But NCCP is our base. It's absolutely where it starts.
We pursue what's called foundations which is a level 1. Basically it's the equivalent of the level 1 that you took years ago, but now it's a little different. That's the level you have to attain in order to coach pre-school or low level recreational gymnastics participants. That takes anywhere from six months to a year for someone to complete. It involves three weekends, first aid, respect in sports, a number of different areas of pedagogy. If someone wants to pursue higher level recreational or competitive, they must pursue level 2 certification and even level 3, which is where athletes are attempting to compete at a national championships level, and level 4, which is where high-performance athletes are looking to compete for Canada around the world.
It's like a martial arts belt system. There are a zillion level 1 certified coaches and then it drops enormously to level 2, and then even lower at levels 3 and 4. In trampoline gymnastics, there are fewer than 10 level 4 certified coaches in the country. The numbers are very small as you get higher in those levels.
Gymnastics is a bit different from soccer and figure skating, I believe. In a competitive stream an athlete might be a young athlete who is doing a low level technical skill but is actually pursuing competitive gymnastics, who might be training side by side with a recreational participant of similar age doing largely similar skills but who is on a different path. That competitive stream typically will have coaches who might be level 3 or 4 certified, even though they're working with young athletes, whereas we might have recreational participants who are older and may be doing slightly more advanced skills with coaches who are level 1 and level 2 certified. It's a streamed approach.