Plateforme Level Extreme
Abonnement
Profil corporatif
Produits & Services
Support
Légal
English
How to make more little democrats
Message
De
22/03/2013 08:47:42
 
 
À
21/03/2013 16:42:46
Information générale
Forum:
News
Catégorie:
Régional
Divers
Thread ID:
01568950
Message ID:
01569016
Vues:
41
>>>Removing scoring from sports is not a means of protecting kids from disenfranchisement. I was heavily involved with AYSO, American Youth Soccer Organization, the largest youth sports group in this country, so will reply. (Don't you hate those letters to the editor which begin, "As someone who...."? Subtext: I know more about this than you do). What AYSO teaches is that kids develop at fairly predictable stages, and tailors the program to those stages of development. Younger kids play on smaller fields with simpler rules, because that is what they can process. A U-8 field is exactly one quarter the size of a regulation soccer field. Some penalties are not enforced, namely offside. It's too much for them to keep track of. Sometimes with the younger kids it's a miracle when they keep track of who their teammates are and which way they are going. That's not making fun of them, just recognizing cognitive development. For all we know Einstein may have been slow to tie his shoes.
>>>
>>>As their minds and bodies grow they move up to bigger fields. That was always a pleasure to observe. Those little kids who bundled up like survivalists on cold days in early spring or late autumn have gone on to play travel team, high school soccer, college soccer. One of them plays soccer for the University of Arkansas. I claim no credit for that, she arrived as an 8 year old already knowing a wealth about soccer from her dad, but it still gives me pleasure. We never know who that 8 year old might turn out to be.
>>>
>>
>>I agree. I've been coaching little league baseball since my son started T-Ball (he's 13 now). I've been amazed at the development of some of the kids over the years. Some kids that seemed destined for a couch their first couple of years are becoming shining star players. Others head the other way :(
>>
>>I've never seen any of them get crushed and disenfranchised if they lose a game or don't play well. All that means is there is room for advancement, and we work at it.
>>
>>
>"I've never seen any of them get crushed and disenfranchised if they lose a game or don't play well. All that means is there is room for advancement, and we work at it."
>
>I think it really depends on how the adults around them react to it. As an example, if you say something to the effect of "I'm sorry you lost, you did your best but sometimes that's just the way things work out." as opposed to "You LOST?? You SUCK!!" (massively paraphrased), you give the child (or children) the correct message of "You go out there, you do your best and that's what really matters."

For sure. We had one dad in Little League who was determined that his son would be a star and get an athletic scholarship. The kid was good, but not great. The dad's behavior eventually led to his being banned from the games.

Tamar
Précédent
Répondre
Fil
Voir

Click here to load this message in the networking platform