Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I have a child like yours who is very unathletic. My son has had to work twice as hard as others to achieve less in physical activities.
While this coach was brusque and unfriendly, and I, too, would have been a little taken aback, I don't see why he should be obligated to be encouraging. At some point students with special needs have to compete on an even footing with those who are more able than they. If they can continue to strive and show what hard workers they are, and what mental strength they have, they will earn the respect they deserve.
It sounds like swimming classes, though, not some kind of competitive swim team. Coach is a jerk.
Anonymous wrote:I have a child like yours who is very unathletic. My son has had to work twice as hard as others to achieve less in physical activities.
While this coach was brusque and unfriendly, and I, too, would have been a little taken aback, I don't see why he should be obligated to be encouraging. At some point students with special needs have to compete on an even footing with those who are more able than they. If they can continue to strive and show what hard workers they are, and what mental strength they have, they will earn the respect they deserve.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Throughout his life, your son's going to meet people who are going to say critical, unhelpful things. Since you can't monitor and take steps to "fix" every one of these situations, you'll help him the most by talking to him about how to respond to these comments/support his resilience in the face of discouraging commentary and attitudes.
Wrong.
The coach works for the parents, kids, school or club. If this is a club for fun/recreation, the coach needs to drop the negative attitude.
This is not the Bela Karolyi/Nadia Comaneci story; the Olympics are not on the line.
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The coach needs to get some critical feedback on how to coach young kids who are learning to swim. Just b/c the coach may be a talented swimmer doesn't mean he/she is good at coacher.
You don't need to explain who the coach works for, or what level of athletics is involved; the OP was clear on these points. My recommendation stands. It's a helpful and constructive approach that will serve her son well in the long run.
Anonymous wrote:Where is this? What part of the country?
Het your kid away from this bozo. Swimming is about bettering your own times.
We have meets atound here where 250 kids enter one race and there are only 6-16 'places' given out, meaning most kids don't even place.
Would he stand there and call all 234 of those kids 'losers' or what?
I would work really hard to have that guy fired.
My kid is way below your kid I'm sure and he's been welcomed onto a lot of swim teams 'for regular kids' and the coaches (and other swimmers and parents) have slways been respectful and encouraging to him.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I have a child like yours who is very unathletic. My son has had to work twice as hard as others to achieve less in physical activities.
While this coach was brusque and unfriendly, and I, too, would have been a little taken aback, I don't see why he should be obligated to be encouraging. At some point students with special needs have to compete on an even footing with those who are more able than they. If they can continue to strive and show what hard workers they are, and what mental strength they have, they will earn the respect they deserve.
Swimming is a skill everyone needs to learn. Nowhere did OP suggest that this was a competitive situation. Unfortunately, some adults shouldn't be working with kids. If I were in your position, I would discuss with the director of the program, let them know about your child's limitations and ask for an instructor who can work with that. Every kid needs to get exercise, and swimming is a great life long activity.
The truth is that most things in this world are indirectly competitive, if not directly so. Evolution and survival of the fittest, and all that. I agree that OP should talk to her son. He has a wonderful work ethic already, so the path toward resilience is already well-established!
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I have a child like yours who is very unathletic. My son has had to work twice as hard as others to achieve less in physical activities.
While this coach was brusque and unfriendly, and I, too, would have been a little taken aback, I don't see why he should be obligated to be encouraging. At some point students with special needs have to compete on an even footing with those who are more able than they. If they can continue to strive and show what hard workers they are, and what mental strength they have, they will earn the respect they deserve.
Swimming is a skill everyone needs to learn. Nowhere did OP suggest that this was a competitive situation. Unfortunately, some adults shouldn't be working with kids. If I were in your position, I would discuss with the director of the program, let them know about your child's limitations and ask for an instructor who can work with that. Every kid needs to get exercise, and swimming is a great life long activity.
Anonymous wrote:I have a child like yours who is very unathletic. My son has had to work twice as hard as others to achieve less in physical activities.
While this coach was brusque and unfriendly, and I, too, would have been a little taken aback, I don't see why he should be obligated to be encouraging. At some point students with special needs have to compete on an even footing with those who are more able than they. If they can continue to strive and show what hard workers they are, and what mental strength they have, they will earn the respect they deserve.