Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It’s not about “specialization” to me really, it’s that you’re choosing to do sports with very intense schedules for such little kids. I don’t see how you could take on more than one of those.
I would consider more than once a week for a first grade sport to be a pretty high level of commitment during the school year, tbh. For context. No iudgment, we all dive into something. But yeah, I don’t think you could possibly two sports with those schedules. When does he go to school??
This.
Anonymous wrote:It’s not about “specialization” to me really, it’s that you’re choosing to do sports with very intense schedules for such little kids. I don’t see how you could take on more than one of those.
I would consider more than once a week for a first grade sport to be a pretty high level of commitment during the school year, tbh. For context. No iudgment, we all dive into something. But yeah, I don’t think you could possibly two sports with those schedules. When does he go to school??
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It’s not about “specialization” to me really, it’s that you’re choosing to do sports with very intense schedules for such little kids. I don’t see how you could take on more than one of those.
I would consider more than once a week for a first grade sport to be a pretty high level of commitment during the school year, tbh. For context. No iudgment, we all dive into something. But yeah, I don’t think you could possibly two sports with those schedules. When does he go to school??
I think this is dependent on area. As I mentioned, people are judging us for NOT doing both when it’s already 3x a week for lax. Most people are doing two already in first grade. This is the norm. Super sporty area.
Add baseball in next year and it’s 6-7 days a week. This year it’s been 4 with overlap and it was too much that’s why my husband wants to drop down to just lax in the future which is what we did for my older boys and it worked out. They are busy but their schedule is manageable and the same which helps a lot.
These are ALL recreational teams, so cutting back to one day a week isn’t an option. That’s what is offered through our community programs. Our baseball team just follows the guidelines of the leagues but many coaches on other teams even add additional practice days.
Okay well then what is your question? It’s a ton.
Anonymous wrote:Take a look at your high school football, basketball and baseball games. The OVERWHELMING majority of these kids play varsity in multiple sports.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It’s not about “specialization” to me really, it’s that you’re choosing to do sports with very intense schedules for such little kids. I don’t see how you could take on more than one of those.
I would consider more than once a week for a first grade sport to be a pretty high level of commitment during the school year, tbh. For context. No iudgment, we all dive into something. But yeah, I don’t think you could possibly two sports with those schedules. When does he go to school??
I think this is dependent on area. As I mentioned, people are judging us for NOT doing both when it’s already 3x a week for lax. Most people are doing two already in first grade. This is the norm. Super sporty area.
Add baseball in next year and it’s 6-7 days a week. This year it’s been 4 with overlap and it was too much that’s why my husband wants to drop down to just lax in the future which is what we did for my older boys and it worked out. They are busy but their schedule is manageable and the same which helps a lot.
These are ALL recreational teams, so cutting back to one day a week isn’t an option. That’s what is offered through our community programs. Our baseball team just follows the guidelines of the leagues but many coaches on other teams even add additional practice days.
Anonymous wrote:First grade? So we’re talking a 6 or 7 year old?
Right now it’s not an even a question of specialization or “dropping” a sport… just stop having him do so much right now!
Anonymous wrote:It’s not about “specialization” to me really, it’s that you’re choosing to do sports with very intense schedules for such little kids. I don’t see how you could take on more than one of those.
I would consider more than once a week for a first grade sport to be a pretty high level of commitment during the school year, tbh. For context. No iudgment, we all dive into something. But yeah, I don’t think you could possibly two sports with those schedules. When does he go to school??
Anonymous wrote:It sounds like the issue is more scheduling vs specialization. Our DS is very athletic and played multiple sports when he was younger, but by hs the list had narrowed to one primary sport with two lower commitment sports. When he was young, we tried to have one primary sport per season (even though in reality a lot of sports are actually year round). If lacrosse works for your family, have that be the priority spring sport and then add in whatever else makes sense. Flag football was one that was very low time commitment that we added on for fall and spring. DS did rec or house basketball in the winter because that was typically a 1-2 day/week commitment.