Anonymous wrote:I would think an intense commitment to an extracurricular speaks as much as doing many activities only on the surface level. If you’re worried about it, maybe he would still have time to do a service trip over a holiday break or during the summer? Those trips can be great experiences and shouldn’t eat up practice time on the regular.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP here. Thanks to all PPs for the helpful input. The goal is not a scholarship but to use athletic recruitment as the hook to get into an elite school.
Moving the family to Montana would probably do more.
+1
Nailed it.
Anonymous wrote:OP here. Thanks to all PPs for the helpful input. The goal is not a scholarship but to use athletic recruitment as the hook to get into an elite school.
Anonymous wrote:OP here. Thanks to all PPs for the helpful input. The goal is not a scholarship but to use athletic recruitment as the hook to get into an elite school.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP here. Thanks to all PPs for the helpful input. The goal is not a scholarship but to use athletic recruitment as the hook to get into an elite school.
Moving the family to Montana would probably do more.
Anonymous wrote:OP here. Thanks to all PPs for the helpful input. The goal is not a scholarship but to use athletic recruitment as the hook to get into an elite school.
Anonymous wrote:If his sport makes him happy and gives him energy and makes him feel good about life I’d let him pursue it at the level he wants. Maybe it will help him get into college, maybe it won’t, but if he loves it it will help him get through high school, which is a worthy goal in and of itself.