| If espn had a list of sports by difficulty it would rank pickleball dead last behind fishing |
I can't fish |
But I bet you can play pickleball! |
honestly it seems like a stupid sport, and I was never much of a tennis player, but A) i can't see why anyone would care what someone else's kids do B) PP is right, maybe there are better things for your kid to do, but there are definitely worse, and that includes virtually anything inside. |
| I play basketball at Lewinsville park in McLean, and it is right next to the PB courts. I see so many young men and women play PB that even my 23-year-old son, who played D1 tennis, is now joining the PB crowd. He said that it is a great way to make new friends, and it also improves his dating prospects. |
Are you willing to pay more property taxes so that more PB courts can be built? The school has finite resources and a limited budget. |
The corollary sports require a certain number of participants to have special needs. This isn't the "make the varisty" cut throat scenario most of the posters think it is. They used to do handball in the fall, but are trying pickleball this year. In the winter it's bocce and in the spring it's softball. All are "adaptive" in the sense that they have special rules for kids in wheelchairs etc. |
They are trying out pickleball to see how it goes. These teams require a certain number of students with disabilities to be included on the roster. DS has special needs and handball was offered last year. He did not play handball because it really was beyond his physical capabilities. He had a wonderful experience playing bocce with fellow students from his LFI program as well as kids in general education. Softball was pretty painful to watch, but it was really interesting to see how they adapted the game (e.g., some kids hit off a tee, kids in wheelchairs had a designated runner, etc). This whole thread seems to be missing the whole point of this being a sport that at it's core will be for kids with special needs. |
This is a likely reason it was selected as a corollary/inclusive sport. The inclusive sports are intended to include a mix of kids with and without special needs. Some parents whine about how it's not fair that Johnny in the wheelchair gets the same varsity credit for pickleball when Larla has been in private training for tennis since she was two so her earning a Varsity letter in tennis really means something. |
Um could it be the location where you play? Like um duh. |
The parents of the smart Asian kids probably advocated for it. |