Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:DS is in 5th grade, which is middle school here. We aren't huge sports watchers or followers at home, but he does play some sports. When I realized that his baseball coach asked him is favorite player and he couldn't answer I knew we needed a bootcamp. So over the summer we covered the basics, watched SportsCenter, got familiar with the local teams, etc. I truly think it helped him to be comfortable going into middle school and be able to be a part of the lunch conversations. One thing that threw me off was the amount of soccer talk, so I had him research that on his own.
Excellent helicoptering mom!
Anonymous wrote:DS is in 5th grade, which is middle school here. We aren't huge sports watchers or followers at home, but he does play some sports. When I realized that his baseball coach asked him is favorite player and he couldn't answer I knew we needed a bootcamp. So over the summer we covered the basics, watched SportsCenter, got familiar with the local teams, etc. I truly think it helped him to be comfortable going into middle school and be able to be a part of the lunch conversations. One thing that threw me off was the amount of soccer talk, so I had him research that on his own.
Anonymous wrote:I think maybe expose them to differebt things, but if they're not interested, they're not interested. Especially for trying to fit in with other kids. I think parents should really stress that kids be themselves and not to care so much about what other ppl think. I will, however, think kids should be encouraged to be k8ds as long as possible. Especially in today's world.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I don't mean try to force a kid to be someone they're not. I mean like a boy who doesn't naturally show interest in professional sports - do you try to make sure they still have some exposure and awareness so they can fit in to the general tween boy culture to the extent they want to down the road?
(The example I gave is just an example and i still me fully letting the kids decide on their activities / interest, but also keeping typical cultural things in their life even if they're not naturally drawn to them purely for the sake in being able to engage in the preteen equivalent and water cooler talk and / or not stand out as the "weirdo" in a big ruthless middle school.
I know professional sports is just an example, but where does it end? Should kid know the names of every NFL team, be able to put together a good March Madness bracket, identify the last 5 winners of the World Series, name the top pro basketball players? What about movies? Do you make your kid watch the Marvel movies, Keeping Up with the Kardashians, etc?. And then do the same for music and video games?
Anonymous wrote:I don't mean try to force a kid to be someone they're not. I mean like a boy who doesn't naturally show interest in professional sports - do you try to make sure they still have some exposure and awareness so they can fit in to the general tween boy culture to the extent they want to down the road?
(The example I gave is just an example and i still me fully letting the kids decide on their activities / interest, but also keeping typical cultural things in their life even if they're not naturally drawn to them purely for the sake in being able to engage in the preteen equivalent and water cooler talk and / or not stand out as the "weirdo" in a big ruthless middle school.
Anonymous wrote:I don't mean try to force a kid to be someone they're not. I mean like a boy who doesn't naturally show interest in professional sports - do you try to make sure they still have some exposure and awareness so they can fit in to the general tween boy culture to the extent they want to down the road?
(The example I gave is just an example and i still me fully letting the kids decide on their activities / interest, but also keeping typical cultural things in their life even if they're not naturally drawn to them purely for the sake in being able to engage in the preteen equivalent and water cooler talk and / or not stand out as the "weirdo" in a big ruthless middle school.