Excellent advice and suggestions, especially re cost, communication and transportation! My contribution: approach the Principals and PE teachers of the ES, MS and HS in your target areas. Offer to have a team or members of a team to come in and run a clinic or demonstration (or two or three) during the school day. Then follow up with after-school activities. Consistency and structure are key. This will help you build the program. As the children and their parents become used to the organized activities of the sport you may be able to develop a small league. If you can get two or three schools to do an after-school program one day a week then you can have a little competition between the schools! Fun! And, slowly, you expand your program. You will get buy-in from Principals and/or PE teachers as it is fairly well recognized that children who participate in organized sports gain skills that transfer into academic skills. Good luck to you! |
+1. My athletic skills didn't appear until high school. So start young, like PP 8:31 suggested. Little clinics and stuff to help develop skills and enjoyment of sorts. |
Hispanic is a very broad term though. In my neck of the woods, the majority of hispanics are from El Salvador and maybe Bolivia, and I think they comprise a majority of the FARMS kids. But as a PP suggested it might not necessarily be financial. I have known of the boys doing soccer. maybe there is a cultural component. |
| I'm Eastern European and my family moved out here when I was 8. Between trying to make ends meet and the language barrier, my parents wouldn't have known where/how to sign me up for anything. I was great at sports at school though. |