The Power of Positive

3,500+ Partnerships with schools and youth sports organizations

PARTNERING WITH PCA

20,000+ Live group workshops for leaders, coaches, parents, and athletes

PCA TRAINING

20+ Million youth reached by our programs and resources since 1998

RESOURCES

WHY POSITIVE IS POWERFUL

A positive approach gets the most from youth and high school athletes, which is what coaches, parents, and the athletes themselves want. Staying positive also helps youth get the most out of sports.
Encouraging athletes with positive reinforcement helps them hear and heed the necessary corrections. With that winning combination of truthful, specific praise and constructive criticism, athletic performance improves and so do the chances that kids stick with sports longer and learn all the valuable life lessons inherently available through organized competition. Academic research and real-world scoreboard results from millions of coaches, parents and athletes that PCA has trained and educated prove what the pro and college coaches on PCA’s National Advisory Board already know: Positive is powerful.
“The difference a coach can make in a youth's life is enormous, and PCA is showing high school and youth coaches how to teach life lessons while preparing their team to win on the scoreboard.”

Doc Rivers
Head Coach, Philadelphia 76ers &
PCA National Advisory Board Member

Success Stories

Partner of the Month: Girls Play LA

PCA Receives Fiesta Bowl Charities Grant for 8th Straight Year, Continuing Legacy of Supporting Youth, Sports & Education in Arizona

PCA and the Red Sox Foundation Deliver on Culture, Practices, and Games

More Stories

The Core Concepts

ELM TREE OF MASTERY

Focusing on what you can control is the key to performance and success. Great coaches teach this! And a tremendous body of research backs this up! The scoreboard is an important part of youth and high school sports…but still just a part. Winning is neither everything nor the only thing. While youth learn how to compete, a necessary lesson now and throughout their lives, is to take a mastery approach to sports. That means focusing on what they can control: their Effort, Learning and ability to persist through Mistakes and adversity.

HONORING THE GAME

Sports done right can provide a great framework for developing integrity. Learning to treat people with dignity, especially under the pressure of competition, is one of the most valuable life skills we can learn through sports. We call this "Honoring the Game," behaving respectfully towards the Rules of Competition, Opponents, Officials, Teammates and Self. These are the ROOTS of competing with integrity and a healthy team culture!

FILLING EMOTIONAL TANKS

Each person has an “Emotional Tank” that works like the gas tank of a car. When the tank is empty, we go nowhere. When the tank is full, we can go nearly anywhere. Athletes with full E-Tanks feel connected to their team and coach, which enables them to learn, perform and compete better! The best mix for a full Emotional Tank is five parts specific, truthful praise for each piece of constructive correction. 5:1 is the Magic Ratio!

TRUSTING RELATIONSHIPS

One of the most important roles of a coach is being a trusted adult in athletes' lives. When athletes feel a sense of belonging and feel connected to the people around them they are more likely to collaborate more effectively, perform at a higher level, experience improved mental wellness, engage more fully in learning, and take on challenges without the fear of failure. Strong connections support all athletes, especially those who have experienced adversity.