I've only read this far, and I want to stop and thank youbouldertcr said:I just wanted to chime in to this discussion. I teach health & PE to students K-6th grade. I value what I do and more importantly love what I teach.
But, again - does it always have to be the SAME students? Respectfully, I think a lot of posters in this thread aren't understanding how demeaning it can be, or how it can affect one's self-esteem - likely because they were seldom, if ever, among the 'leftovers'.Someone is always going to be picked last.
But the math teacher is going to help the 'always picked last' student (although, generally, academic classes aren't run like PE classes; but if they were...) As for taunting and arguing? No, it's way more subtle than that - those loudly-whispered discussions: "Ugh, he stinks, he trips over his own feet, you gotta take him"; "No way, we were stuck with him last time, it's your turn!"; "Hey, why don't we ignore him and just start playing, maybe he'll just go sit over on the bench by himself and if the teacher says anything, we can say we forgot".
Once? Twice? A half dozen times? Okay. Two or three times a week, for eight months? Over a period of years? Eh, not so fine.
But, again - does it always have to be the SAME students? Respectfully, I think a lot of posters in this thread aren't understanding how demeaning it can be, or how it can affect one's self-esteem - likely because they were seldom, if ever, among the 'leftovers'.
But that's the thing - the PE teachers didn't resolve the issue. Every 'team' class was the same old story, same old rock and rollLisa loves Pooh said:And if there is such a problem, then it is up to the PE teacher to resolve that issue.
Oh, I don't remember, either. But if I went to a class reunion, I'm sure it'd come back to me. I don't go, though - even though they've almost all been held at a hall around the corner from where I live (note to self: see if they ever give out an award for who came the shortest distance) because I have no pleasant memories of high school. Always being picked last, or ignored, has a lot to do with that.cheermom1 said:Yes I was always the last one picked but I never thought it was that big of a deal. Like I said before I can't even remember who the captions were or that much about gym
My cousin was a phenomenal gymnast but she was AWFUL at volleyball. It was amazing. I always thought that athletic people were sort of generally good at everything.
Reminds me of the old saying, "Those who can't do, teach. Those who can't teach, teach gym."
Are there any others that are reading this thread and wondering if there is some weird connection between being picked last in gym class and a love of Disney??? I've never seen so many people post about being pick last in gym in my entire life.
My son says his PE teacher lets the kids who are picked last be the team leaders now and do the picking. Pretty smart if you ask me!
I just wanted to chime in to this discussion. I teach health & PE to students K-6th grade. I value what I do and more importantly love what I teach. My students look forward to PE class with excitement and energy. I do not just roll out the ball and let my students play while I am sitting in my office (although yes there are some who do in my profession).
I plan lessons for students to improve and develop skills, increase their conditioning level, learn cooperation, team work and sportsmanship and most importantly to have fun. I have seen countless times how students improve their skills by being taught properly, given constructive or positive feedback and time to practice in a physically and emotionally safe area. I don't have my students pick their teams. I divide students into teams a variety of different ways. For example, counting off is one way, grouping them by squad numbers (they are in squads for warm up exercises), picking up cards that have colors on and then teams are formed by all students having the card with the same color, I pick their teams, etc). I don't have students pick teams.
Also, my students learn fitness principals and concepts, lifelong physical activity skills, communication skills, self-control, motivation, work effort, sound nutritional principals, ways to reduce stress, etc. I focus on preparing students for the realities of life as they get older. When students become frustrated with themselves or with others, I teach them how to work through their frustration and how to deal with others in a positive, respectful manner. I teach students how to win with dignity and pride and to lose with grace and resiliency. Most importantly though, I allow them an opportunity to have fun!
Do I think Physical Education is important in schools? Oh yeah, I really do! Just ask your K-6th grade child. They would agree.
But that's the thing - the PE teachers didn't resolve the issue. Every 'team' class was the same old story, same old rock and rollThe difference between then and now is, back then, you sucked it up (and now you spend $150 three times a week for counseling... no, not really. $5 of drugs works just as well. No, not really. You live with it. You adapt.).
I really don't think that eliminating this ONE tradition is going to turn kids into self-indulgent wimps.
I'm all for criticism and competition, but I think that the judging should be done by those in charge -- yes, the way it is in the "real" working world. The guy who sits in the next cubicle doesn't get to decide what project you're not going to work on; your boss does. About the only career field that I can think of where open competition that comes along with verbal praise and verbal humiliation deliberately delivered in front of a group of peers is sales. I don't work in sales; never have, and never will. Getting trash-talked about every day in gym did nothing to prepare me for the working world. (Dodgeball DID leave me with two unset broken wrists, though. That's a lasting legacy.)
My feeling about the whole PE-pick tradition is that it is bad because it encourages children to publicly unleash their baser instincts, something that we normally tell them that they should not do. In the working world we normally don't get to choose who we work with; our supervisors do that. In my working world, grownups also learn to keep their personal opinions of same-level coworkers to themselves, and when we critique work within a group, we do it politely.
So yes, critique students' work, even let them critique in groups so long as everyone gets to voice an opinion. Let them compete, let them win and lose. Just don't regularly deliberately give them opportunities to publicly humiliate one another -- save that privilege for yourself.
But, again - does it always have to be the SAME students? Respectfully, I think a lot of posters in this thread aren't understanding how demeaning it can be, or how it can affect one's self-esteem - likely because they were seldom, if ever, among the 'leftovers'.
I don't have my students pick their teams. I divide students into teams a variety of different ways. For example, counting off is one way, grouping them by squad numbers (they are in squads for warm up exercises), picking up cards that have colors on and then teams are formed by all students having the card with the same color, I pick their teams, etc). I don't have students pick teams.
Also, my students learn fitness principals and concepts, lifelong physical activity skills, communication skills, self-control, motivation, work effort, sound nutritional principals, ways to reduce stress, etc. I focus on preparing students for the realities of life as they get older. When students become frustrated with themselves or with others, I teach them how to work through their frustration and how to deal with others in a positive, respectful manner. I teach students how to win with dignity and pride and to lose with grace and resiliency. Most importantly though, I allow them an opportunity to have fun!
Do I think Physical Education is important in schools? Oh yeah, I really do! Just ask your K-6th grade child. They would agree.
Conversely, though, children who are never picked, or are always picked last (with even the PE teacher sometimes saying, "you take her, and you take her") don't get a whole heck of a lot of problem-solving experience, other than to go off in a corner and pretend they have no feelings.Yes, the boss's evaluation of an empolyee is crucial, but in the 'team concept' work world nowadays, a person really needs to learn how to get along with others and to solve both professional and personal disputes. Children who are "sheltered" from any peer criticism or disappointments miss the problem-solving skills that are crucial to adult life.
In sixth grade, our class used to have a "recess" where we'd go out and play baseball. It wasn't an official recess, because the sixth grade teachers had discretion on whether to do it, and most didn't.
She'd pick 2 captains, and they'd pick. I was the youngest in the class, also the shortest and a girl, so I got quite used to being picked last or near the end. I don't remember it bothering me, because I was really a pretty bad baseball player, and I knew I was good at other things.
But what I remember, is that there was one kid in the class who had learning disabilities and would leave our classroom for 3 periods a day to be in a "special class." So you could imagine how he would have felt. But he was an awesome baseball player. He was always the first person picked. He was normally a very quiet person, shoulders slumped and you could tell he was trying to be invisible. But when it was time for the baseball game you could see him perk up, smile, talk with the other kids in class, and he would remain more engaged the rest of the day. So much of a difference that I can remember the change 24 years later.
I just wanted to chime in to this discussion. I teach health & PE to students K-6th grade. I value what I do and more importantly love what I teach. My students look forward to PE class with excitement and energy. I do not just roll out the ball and let my students play while I am sitting in my office (although yes there are some who do in my profession).
I plan lessons for students to improve and develop skills, increase their conditioning level, learn cooperation, team work and sportsmanship and most importantly to have fun. I have seen countless times how students improve their skills by being taught properly, given constructive or positive feedback and time to practice in a physically and emotionally safe area. I don't have my students pick their teams. I divide students into teams a variety of different ways. For example, counting off is one way, grouping them by squad numbers (they are in squads for warm up exercises), picking up cards that have colors on and then teams are formed by all students having the card with the same color, I pick their teams, etc). I don't have students pick teams.
Also, my students learn fitness principals and concepts, lifelong physical activity skills, communication skills, self-control, motivation, work effort, sound nutritional principals, ways to reduce stress, etc. I focus on preparing students for the realities of life as they get older. When students become frustrated with themselves or with others, I teach them how to work through their frustration and how to deal with others in a positive, respectful manner. I teach students how to win with dignity and pride and to lose with grace and resiliency. Most importantly though, I allow them an opportunity to have fun!
Do I think Physical Education is important in schools? Oh yeah, I really do! Just ask your K-6th grade child. They would agree.
But, again - does it always have to be the SAME students? Respectfully, I think a lot of posters in this thread aren't understanding how demeaning it can be, or how it can affect one's self-esteem - likely because they were seldom, if ever, among the 'leftovers'.
But the math teacher is going to help the 'always picked last' student (although, generally, academic classes aren't run like PE classes; but if they were...) As for taunting and arguing? No, it's way more subtle than that - those loudly-whispered discussions: "Ugh, he stinks, he trips over his own feet, you gotta take him"; "No way, we were stuck with him last time, it's your turn!"; "Hey, why don't we ignore him and just start playing, maybe he'll just go sit over on the bench by himself and if the teacher says anything, we can say we forgot".