Anonymous wrote:I agree with you. If an adult were a valuable team member on a project team but quit their job for some reason--maybe a better opportunity, maybe to become a SAHP, maybe they won the lottery--no one would bat an eye. Everyone is replaceable. And teams change for circumstances all the time.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Agreed!Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:This.Anonymous wrote:I am not a fan of any child being allowed to quit a sport's team midseason. It just sends the wrong message about commitment and teamwork. I would have your DS tough it out, if I were you, and learn from the experience.
Yup, none of our kids is allowed to quit any activity/sport midseason. They have to go to the end and then can elect not to play in the future. Otherwise, teaching kid that when life gets hard, they quit.
Another agreement.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I am not a fan of any child being allowed to quit a sport's team midseason. It just sends the wrong message about commitment and teamwork. I would have your DS tough it out, if I were you, and learn from the experience.
+1
I am also not a fan of 2 sports per season. They always end up letting one of the teams or coaches down due to conflicts.
By 2nd grade we were a 1-sport per season per kid family. They excel at many sports, we make them choose 1.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I am a former coach in a rec league. When you commit to play, they build a team. The the team has a specified number of players. For example, last season, we had 8 girls on the basketball team. One quit. Down to 7. One got hurt. Down to six. In the playoffs, team with a record of 8-2, had to forfeit because two girls were sick, so I had 4 girls. Quitting a team means you are letting everyone else on the team down.
you shouldn't have started the season with 8 players only. these are kids, not pros, and kids have other priorities and obligations far more important than 'not letting the team down.' oh and kids get sick and you can do nothing about.
Anonymous wrote:Agreed!Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:This.Anonymous wrote:I am not a fan of any child being allowed to quit a sport's team midseason. It just sends the wrong message about commitment and teamwork. I would have your DS tough it out, if I were you, and learn from the experience.
Yup, none of our kids is allowed to quit any activity/sport midseason. They have to go to the end and then can elect not to play in the future. Otherwise, teaching kid that when life gets hard, they quit.
Agreed!Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:This.Anonymous wrote:I am not a fan of any child being allowed to quit a sport's team midseason. It just sends the wrong message about commitment and teamwork. I would have your DS tough it out, if I were you, and learn from the experience.
Yup, none of our kids is allowed to quit any activity/sport midseason. They have to go to the end and then can elect not to play in the future. Otherwise, teaching kid that when life gets hard, they quit.
+1000Anonymous wrote:Its a crappy thing to do to a team.
It also sends a terrible message to a kid.
Flaky, annoying, undependable adults are those who as kids were allowed to quit things mid-way through. Their parents never taught them to respect their commitments nor to think of anyone beside themselves.
Anonymous wrote:This.Anonymous wrote:I am not a fan of any child being allowed to quit a sport's team midseason. It just sends the wrong message about commitment and teamwork. I would have your DS tough it out, if I were you, and learn from the experience.
Anonymous wrote:I am a former coach in a rec league. When you commit to play, they build a team. The the team has a specified number of players. For example, last season, we had 8 girls on the basketball team. One quit. Down to 7. One got hurt. Down to six. In the playoffs, team with a record of 8-2, had to forfeit because two girls were sick, so I had 4 girls. Quitting a team means you are letting everyone else on the team down.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Could you tell me why many think it's not ideal to quit a team sport in the middle of season, even if DC no longer enjoys it? I may not be thinking this straight but there's still more than a month left and DC is miserable already, and I fear forcing him to continue will kill it for him. That's the least I want to see happen.
Let him quit.
Adults walk away from situations that make them miserable all the time, and are called smart for doing so. If a child wants to walk away from something that makes him or her miserable, then the whole OMG commitment and character panic starts.
To which I say: baloney.
Value your child's peace of mind over the team. The team will manage. Your child shold know that his voice is being heard and that his inner balance is valued and respected.
Other posters, flame away, I don't care.