Child Development & Safe Sport
Healthy development and safe sport for young athletes: scientific tracking tools and evidence-based safeguarding principles.
Who is it for?
Families
Track your child's growth and development with scientific methods.
Coaches
Build a safe environment suited to age and maturation.
Clubs
Establish a child-protection policy and safe-sport culture.
Physicians
Combine development and maturation analysis with clinical assessment.
What we offer
Development tracking tools
Scientific methods for height prediction, nutrition screening and maturation analysis.
Child-protection content
Guides on safe sport, bullying prevention and avoiding overtraining.
Sources & trust signals
Transparent content with scientific references, privacy/security and medical notes.
Why evidence-based?
The Child Development Passport rests on Neyzi references, established height-prediction methods and maturation analysis. Safeguarding content is grounded in UNICEF and IOC principles. Every decision prioritises the child's best interest.
Featured guides
Preventing Overtraining and Burnout in Young Athletes
The risks of early specialisation, the signs of overload and burnout, and load management that protects the young athlete.
→Preventing Peer Bullying in Sport
Recognising bullying in the team environment, building a preventive culture and responding correctly to incidents.
→Child Protection in Sport: Core Principles of a Safe Sporting Environment
Core principles for clubs, coaches and families to create a safe sporting environment: policy, training, reporting and oversight.
→Frequently asked questions
What is the Child Development Passport?
A scientific tracking tool combining height prediction, nutrition screening and maturation analysis, offered at cocukgelisim.spor2030.com.
Does a small club need a child-protection policy too?
Yes. Size doesn't matter; a written policy, codes of conduct and a designated officer are the foundation.
Who prepares the content?
It is prepared by the Spor 2030 editorial team and reviewed by child-protection and development advisors.
If you suspect a child is in immediate danger, contact the authorities without delay.