Anonymous wrote:So OP's question was about a non-athletic kid, not a two-travel sport kid looking for a waiver....
So my on-athletic kid treated it like an immersion trip to exotic locations: he joined a different sport each year it was required to try out a bunch of different activities. For some sports you can be a team manager or game announcer. He learned a lot. Still not athletic, but can talk about a lot of different sports.
Anonymous wrote:I agree! Having a sport requirement issue right now with one of my kids who plays two time consuming travel sports and it is for lack of a better word really annoying. However, I don’t want my kids school to become a contract athlete school like SJC or GP, so it is hard to know how to have athletes who play on school sports teams - and attend the practices of those teams, not just games, but also balance the outside school commitments that kids make and want to do. I have no ideas.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:This is something parents should consider especially if their kid plays a club sport. Our kid was exhausted doing it all and not sure it was worth it. 1 season of something a year seems fair but the every season requirement is too much when you factor in the demands academically of going to a prep school. It is not unusual to have 3 hours of homework a night and if your kid is doing a sport or frankly a play and then doing their out of school sport and homework you cannot be surprised that these kids are too stressed.
Many schools with these requirements will provide waivers to kids who are serious athletes in a club sport.
Anonymous wrote:nope it is hard to get a waiver.
Anonymous wrote:This is something parents should consider especially if their kid plays a club sport. Our kid was exhausted doing it all and not sure it was worth it. 1 season of something a year seems fair but the every season requirement is too much when you factor in the demands academically of going to a prep school. It is not unusual to have 3 hours of homework a night and if your kid is doing a sport or frankly a play and then doing their out of school sport and homework you cannot be surprised that these kids are too stressed.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Reading the website and attending are 2 different things. My Bullis kid didn't do a single sport - did arts instead
It’s a whole separate red flag if the requirements as listed in the website are inaccurate…
Nah, it usually means they have a volunteer running the website instead of putting your tuition dollars in admin.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Reading the website and attending are 2 different things. My Bullis kid didn't do a single sport - did arts instead
It’s a whole separate red flag if the requirements as listed in the website are inaccurate…
Anonymous wrote:There are usually no cut sports (cross country, track) and/or options that do not require being the greatest athlete (no disrespect to these sports - still great options) like frisbee, fencing, etc.