Scholastic Shooting Sports Foundation (SSSF)
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Youth shooting programs don't get nearly enough attention on this forum, and that's a shame — because the pipeline from scholastic programs to serious competitors is where a lot of the sport's future lives or dies.
The roots of the SSSF trace back to 2001, when the National Shooting Sports Foundation (NSSF) launched a scholastic trap program to introduce young athletes to clay target shooting through structured, coach-led teams. The concept worked — participation grew fast enough that the program expanded to include skeet and sporting clays within a few years.
I've seen this firsthand at club level — trap is genuinely one of the best entry points for young shooters. The fundamentals transfer everywhere, the equipment barrier is manageable, and a squad format means the kid isn't just standing there alone looking confused. Starting with structure matters.
The SSSF Basic Shotgun Coach Certification Program...delivers a 13-unit online curriculum covering equipment, safety, marksmanship fundamentals, mental game, team management, and ethics. It requires an 85% or better pass rate on unit quizzes and a final exam, followed by a mandatory in-person range day with hands-on evaluation.
That's not a rubber-stamp certification — that's an actual standard. Compare that to how most youth sports coaches get "certified" and you'll understand why this is worth calling out. The in-person range day requirement especially matters — you can pass a quiz about muzzle discipline without ever demonstrating it.
The mandatory background checks, tiered coach certification with real pass/fail requirements, and $10M liability coverage aren't window dressing — they reflect an organization that has thought seriously about the duty of care involved in putting adults and kids together on a range.
Any range officer or club administrator who's ever had to explain liability to a nervous board member knows exactly why this line matters. The $10M policy covering registered athletes, coaches, and volunteers at sanctioned events is the kind of thing that either exists or it doesn't — and a lot of local programs are operating without it and just hoping nothing goes sideways.
If you've had a kid come up through SCTP or SASP — or coached one — what did the transition into adult competition actually look like for them once they aged out of the scholastic program?
Read the full article in The Handbook → | By The Boise Gun Club Team
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