Bob Slydell
DIS Legend
- Joined
- Mar 25, 2004
- Messages
- 11,087
HayGan said:I have made general statements in regards to the overall situation and have not pointed fingers at anyone. Quite frankly, if someone was pushing their child to extremes I doubt that that would admit so here.
My thought is that very young children (under the age of 5 - typically) are not physically or emotionally prepared for organized sports/activities which involve a great deal of time and effort. Young children do not have the coordination/physical and/or emotional capabilites to be involved in many things that some parents have them involved in. It causes frustration and can promote lack of self-confidence in many children. I agree that some children can certainly grow and develop self-confidence from the same activities. I personally think that we as a society are pushing our children into growing up way to fast in general. Organized sports/activities is just one example of the overall problem, IMHO.
Nobody's saying you're pointing fingers.

I still disagree with your overall sentiment, though. Yes, I agree that it can be harmful to push young children to do more than they're ready to do, but again, if you take a good look at most youth sports programs you'll see that for the first couple years of sports, there's very little focus put on the competitive aspect and more focus on learning the sport and having fun. The time spent in most of these activities is also tailored to the age groups as well. My 5 year old's soccer team, for example, plays once a week for one hour. There's no practices except for the first half hour of each week's game. Even swimming classes start with shorter classes at preschool age and increase in length as the child gets older (and thus has more attention span).