southernbohemian
DIS Veteran
- Joined
- Sep 29, 2006
- Messages
- 540
My stepson really got into golfing this past summer. It's a sport that his father loves and has always encouraged them to do, but he really only got interested lately. He's a freshman this year and was very excited about signing up to take golf as a class.
He goes to a fairly large high school. At the beginning of the school year they had try-outs for the golf team. He tried out but didn't make it. So the next time he visited, we were asking him about his classes and he mentioned he had to switch from golf to track since he didn't make the team. I didn't understand, so he explained that you are only allowed to take the golf class if you make the team.
I guess I don't understand why this is okay? When I was in school (not so very long ago) extracurricular activities were just that. We had a P.E. class that all of the basketball players took, but that P.E. teacher also taught that class to other students the rest of the day. There was never the case of "Sorry, you're not on the basketball team so you can't play basketball during P.E." It seems wrong to me that a school would allocate an entire period of one teacher's day to teach a class to students who are on a certain team and no one else. Basically the coach is getting paid twice to coach a team (once during school and once after school) and getting out of teaching regular students.
Am I totally crazy? Can someone explain why this is okay?
I asked him how he was supposed to improve his golf if they won't let him take the class, and he explained that they expect you to take the class during middle school. Well, he didn't go to their middle school. And even if he was interested, I don't think the one he went to offered golf as a class. I guess I was off to think that you sent your kids to school to learn.
He goes to a fairly large high school. At the beginning of the school year they had try-outs for the golf team. He tried out but didn't make it. So the next time he visited, we were asking him about his classes and he mentioned he had to switch from golf to track since he didn't make the team. I didn't understand, so he explained that you are only allowed to take the golf class if you make the team.
I guess I don't understand why this is okay? When I was in school (not so very long ago) extracurricular activities were just that. We had a P.E. class that all of the basketball players took, but that P.E. teacher also taught that class to other students the rest of the day. There was never the case of "Sorry, you're not on the basketball team so you can't play basketball during P.E." It seems wrong to me that a school would allocate an entire period of one teacher's day to teach a class to students who are on a certain team and no one else. Basically the coach is getting paid twice to coach a team (once during school and once after school) and getting out of teaching regular students.
Am I totally crazy? Can someone explain why this is okay?
I asked him how he was supposed to improve his golf if they won't let him take the class, and he explained that they expect you to take the class during middle school. Well, he didn't go to their middle school. And even if he was interested, I don't think the one he went to offered golf as a class. I guess I was off to think that you sent your kids to school to learn.
