You sound unhinged. Not a great temperament to be volunteering with little kids. Maybe give it a rest and look into therapy or anger management? |
| I stopped staying when they lasted more than an hour. It also depended on how long the drive was from home. It did not depend on the age of the kid. |
| At what age did you start loading the car up with baskets of clean laundry to fold while you watch a movie in the car in the parking lot of the evnt? I dreamed of doing this but never did. |
They surprise me too in the opposite way. Are the people staying at practice the same people who still choose to stay as a drop-off birthday party at age 10? |
I’m the PP and I dropped off at parties starting in K unless parent specified no drop off (like trampoline park etc they sometimes want parents to stay until 3rd or so). Maybe because my kids play rec sports only, so the teams have plenty of goofballs etc on them and I don’t want to leave some poor volunteer coach with a team of 10 seven year old soccer players who are rhnning around misbehaving for an hour? I do seem to see travel sport parents drop off much earlier. But those kids are more motivated and serious, and the coaches are paid and have assistants |
| Holy cow, these people are volunteers! You stay and ask what you can do to help. Leaving your kid with an overworked volunteer is a dick move, especially when they’re <10. |
Not true in my experience. Parents are allowed to watch but can't go on deck and some of the places you are allowed to watch from aren't great/close. |
| 2nd grade |
| When I coached T-ball I had to send out email blasts to remind parents to stay with their kids. If a kid has to go to the bathroom I can't leave the other kids to escort them, and sometimes the bathrooms are far or could have anything going on in there. If you would at all be concerned about your kid unsupervised and out of sight at the bathroom then they definitely aren't old enough to be dropped off at practice. |
| Feel free to mind your own business, OP. |
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2nd grade, but if I knew my kid didn’t need my support/was very serious. I was always close by (walking around neighborhood adjacent to field, running an errand in plaza, or honestly sitting in my car).
For games, I attend. |
| For us the transition was from everyone staying to people asking other parents to watch their kids. So, 3 parents would be there and each would have a group they were in charge of. |
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Depends on the sport, and age of the kids and family... if the family has multiple kids, they were more likely to go make better use of their time.
I'd say I noticed some family left at age 9 and most families left by age 11 to go exercise or run errands. Age 8 and under you should check w the coach to make sure it's ok or check with another parent to let them know you are gone. IN travel sports it's ok for the parents to leave the kid w/o telling the paid coach. But usually the parent tells another parent when they are younger. By 11/12 totally normal for only a few parents to attend. 5/6 only if Coach and another parent says ok and your kid knows. |
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Swim and gymnastics we weren’t allowed to stay (especially post Covid). So my kids were 7 when I was dropping off there, but those are paid coaches.
Rec soccer, after I got to know the coach, I would sometimes leave starting at age 5/6 if I had to run another kid somewhere, but my son is awesome about direction following and again, I knew the coach Once my son was on pre-travel they asked the parents to leave. I stayed in my car until I knew how everything was run and knew my son had my number memorized, he was 7. Dance- I only stayed when class was an hour, because it didn’t make sense to leave and come back. I can’t think of a single time my kids needed me in any of those practices except for injuries in gymnastics. In which case, coaches called and we came and picked up (or not if she was fine). If a rec coach needs parents to stay, they should absolutely tell parents that, because unless my kid is out of control, I would assume they have it handled. (Or I would offer to volunteer if there was no co-coach! I think two coaches is the minimum). |