Anonymous wrote:OP your kids just weren’t that athletic. FACTS
Anonymous wrote:OP your kids just weren’t that athletic. FACTS
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Your post is giving me anxiety, my kids are in elementary. So are you saying that we should invest in math tutors?
Unless you can do it yourself YES
Anonymous wrote:Your post is giving me anxiety, my kids are in elementary. So are you saying that we should invest in math tutors?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I’m sending my youngest to college next year. He got into a good school early addmission and all of my kids did well. But as I look back on this parenting experience it occurs to me that the kids with the fanaticaly involved parents did the best - academically and athletically.
When the kids were in early elementary school, I remember shaking my head as my fellow parents talked about advanced math tutoring for their kindergartener or plotting to get their second grader on the most competitive travel team. At the time it seemed so silly to chart out the life of a kid who still needed naps. However, looking at those kids now - those are the kids who are going on to play sports at top colleges.
My takeaway is that even if you are a committed free range parent - your kid is in a competitive environment competing for scarce opportunities to go to top schools and play for competitive school teams.
I’m not unhappy about how my kids turned out or their experience in high School. But I don’t think I realized the the decision not to push advanced math in grade school meant a diminished opportunity to go to Tech or UMD. I definitely didn’t realize that only doing town baseball (and not travel) meant that they wouldn’t make the highschool team.
It not like my kids were slouches. They played on at least one rec team every season. Swim team in the summer and got good grades and scores on standardized tests.
But I can’t shake the feeling that I’ve pushed harder our results would’ve been much better.
Yes to the bold. If any of this matters to parents, and the children have the capacity and capability (the latter are super important, critical), there needs to be a plan. If the children do not have the capacity and capability, they no amount of pushing would advance them. They key I think is knowing your kid and understanding their potential, and then lining up the opportunities accordingly.
I haven't gotten far in this thread but it seems sick.
So the two measurements of good parenting are these successful outcomes: 1) college acceptances 2) playing sports at a college (related to 1)
No. Good parenting means making the most of your kid's potential. Your kid may not have what it takes to get into college or play sports at any level, so obviously those can't be measures. The measurement of success is whether you as a parent figured out what your kid's potential was, and whether you helped your kid achieve that. For some kids, their max potential is just to be nice people, and if you've taught them how to be nice, then you've achieved success.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My experience has been the opposite of OP’s. The pushy parents eventually got rebellion. My child is at a top college, well adjusted, and not resentful of me for breathing down his neck.
+1. I had a pushy mom and went to a top college. I’ve hated her and had a crap relationship with her for years.
You can have a crap relationship with any parent. Pretty sure she could have neglected you or remarried and you could have a crap relationship too.
I had a pushy mom. My best friend’s mom was so nice, extremely passive and was not pushy in any way. My friend loves her mom and has a good relationship with her but she also blames a lot of her problems on her mom. I don’t have the best relationship with my mom. She isn’t pushy anymore but just annoys me. I turned out well, went to good schools, married well, etc.
Stop justifying crazy
Anonymous wrote:OP, their kids are doing well **in school**.
The real world might be a different story. When they get into the workplace, the rat race, and have to deal with conflict, being told no, and roadblocks to progress.
No manager wants to pick up Line 1 and hear an employee's mom asking why their kid didn't get the promotion.
Anonymous wrote:OP here I’ve been accused of being a “laid back snow plow parent” and “checking out on my kids” the trolling on this site is ponderous.
My post is part lament and part warning. I thought that we were active parents with well adjusted kids that were doing pretty well. Particularly in early elementary school I thought the parents pushing their kids into ever higher math groups and scheming to get their 2nd graders into the most competitive travel team were slightly unhinged. But now looking at the results I think I was wrong.
The facts are these.
1. Up through middle school I had good and happy kids they did well in schools and standardized tests and participated in rec sports every season. We sat with them while they did thier homework, went to thier games met with their teachers and even coached a few of their teams.
2. In high school- They did well academically and took a few APs. But they were not among the most advanced kids. My eldest never made the highschool baseball team and my youngest seeing his brother ‘s struggles switched to lacrosse. Both participated in varsity sports (cross country, track and lacrosse for our youngest)
3. Both were accepted to good but not elite colleges. Whereas many of the kids we started with are going to elite school and/or recruited athletes.
4. I’m not unhappy with their experience or results but In retrospect I think if we had pushed more in elementary school we would’ve gotten better results. I think they would have certainly played highschool baseball if we had taken it more seriously.
As I wrote before - when they were smaller we didn’t want hectic nights and weekends so we didn’t prioritize travel sports. The kids were happy and doing well in school so we thought there was no need to push them into more advanced classes.
I understand that we are very fortunate that our kids are happy healthy and going to good schools but looking back we missed opportunities. Would pushing have substantially changed the outcome- I don’t know. But the cost for that pushing would not have been that much more than we were already doing.
Anonymous wrote:Yeah no amount of travel sport will help your child get into a good college if they are just not talented enough. My friend has her kids in a sport since they were 5 and then they did travel as well. Neither of her kids could even get into varsity in high school because even varsity is extremely competitive in the good schools. Athletic ability in a sport is largely an innate talent and cannot be taught.
Academically as well some kids are just brighter and can understand new material easily whereas others struggle. Tutoring may help till middle school but by high school, you have to have a strong understanding of concepts in order to do well. Most kids are average and there is nothing wrong with that!