Most of these kids don't work, or a lot of summer jobs start much later than what they used to. |
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Our practices start at 7:15 and begin with the 8&U then move up from there. 13&O is the last practice group. The kids that need to work (not many) are allowed to practice with masters in the morning. |
After years of the older kids having the first practice, a younger parent put out a biased survey to move the practice times - eg there was no where on the survey to indicate older kid time preferences. Now older kids have last practice. We ended up leaving for another pool with better practice times. Pool doesn’t have any 15-18s anymore. |
Really? Our older kids like having the last practice. The hated getting up early. They are generally the group that doesn't need their parents to get them to practice so they prefer sleeping and showing up to the pool. Little kids need parents to drive them and get them to camps. So logically it makes more sense. |
I think separating 13-14 (where the kids can’t work and are mostly still in MS) from 15-18 (HS kids that may have jobs) probably would help with this. Do a 10U, 11-14 and 15-18 practice. |
It might help parents but it would not help swimmers or coaches. You would then have to divide what you work on within the practice session and do different sets. Skill and speed wise the group to lump together is 13&U. Not to mention 9-10s are working on turns which 8&Us do not Then add that socially a 14 year old is not going to want to practice with an 11 year old. A lot of 11 year olds are still quite "young" and should probably not be with high school kids. |
This is why you group them into different lanes. |
| Most of these are neighborhood pools. 13-14 year olds are perfectly capable of getting themselves to practice (bike/walk) without their parents. Our 13+ all love the later practice and the chance to sleep in during the summer. As most of the jobs are of the lifeguard variety, they don't start work until after. |
They already do divide what they work on with specific lanes. In every age group there are lanes of kids that are more advanced than others and the lanes are coached accordingly. Most 11 year olds are headed to MS, so putting them in a practice group with other MS kids is fine. The 13-14 year olds are in a lane with the other 13-14 year olds, it’s really not that big of a deal. |
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What NVSL summer team is running mandatory DOUBLES
We run are youngest kids last. Most of our teens are coaches so they practice and then life guard or coach and the little kids can stay and play after their practice |
How is this even remotely okay for summer swim |
Y’all really don’t get sarcasm. |
It’s a joke. |
Our first practice was 8am, not terribly early. Practice is now 10am. Unless you lifeguard, it doesn’t work with summer jobs - example is camp counselors, |
Completely agree with this. For summer swim, which is *supposed* to be focused more on the fun side of sport than the competitive side (understanding that competition is certainly a very important element), it makes a lot more sense (to me at least) that we give parents the opportunity to get their younger kids to camps by having them in early practice, and also allowing older kids to sleep in by having their practices be later. In the end, it's really whatever works for any given pool. I'd love 7:00 am practices, personally, but would the coaches, never mind the nearby residents that already don't like 7:45 am practices? Some pools have early-morning masters programs, while others don't. Size of the team, size of the pool (8 v. 6 lanes, for instance), and the relative size of the age groups also all matter when trying to come up with practice times. No option will please everyone - you just need to implement with the one that will please the most on your team! |