Anonymous wrote:How are they getting to their home school by 3:15 for practice?
Anonymous wrote:It is an opt in school. Any kid can choose to go.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Can e get back to discussing Skyview and sports try outs? Please and Thank you
Sorry, who died and made you the Thread Queen?
I started the thred and it clearly reads “Skyview Information for Families of Attending Kids” not “Random conversation about kids trying out for sports”
Starting the thread doesn't make you dictator of the conversation. Skyview parents and kids should be aware that there might be a bias against them when trying out for their base school sport.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Can e get back to discussing Skyview and sports try outs? Please and Thank you
Sorry, who died and made you the Thread Queen?
I started the thred and it clearly reads “Skyview Information for Families of Attending Kids” not “Random conversation about kids trying out for sports”
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:If I'm a soccer coach choosing from 130 boys, am I going to (1) pick any kids who have to be transported from another school and back, or (2) am I going to pick the kids who go to my school, who came to the off season workouts, and are already there ready to go for practices and games?
Hint, the answer is (2). Now, it may not matter so much with no cut or girls sports, but any little negative will swing the pendulum against you when a coach is choosing from a crowd.
oh please nowhere has 130 boys trying out for one sport. that's ridiculous.
Yes, they do. Heck, Carson has around 130 kids try out for Mathcounts, it is easy to see a large number of kids trying out for a sport.
Seriously!? That's kind of hilarious. I don't know anything about it, but is there some reason that a math club can't have everyone participate?
The room the club uses can hold 30 kids, I believe. The team of 4 is drawn from the 30 who make the team. The club is run by parent volunteers who probably don’t want to work with 130 kids. The volunteers teach skills to kids and run practice tests that they use to determine who makes the team of 4 and then the 6 other kids who will participate in Chapter as individuals. They offer other math competitions for the kids to participate in but you are still talking about teams of 4-5 kids. It is just how math competitions work.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Can e get back to discussing Skyview and sports try outs? Please and Thank you
Sorry, who died and made you the Thread Queen?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:If I'm a soccer coach choosing from 130 boys, am I going to (1) pick any kids who have to be transported from another school and back, or (2) am I going to pick the kids who go to my school, who came to the off season workouts, and are already there ready to go for practices and games?
Hint, the answer is (2). Now, it may not matter so much with no cut or girls sports, but any little negative will swing the pendulum against you when a coach is choosing from a crowd.
oh please nowhere has 130 boys trying out for one sport. that's ridiculous.
Yes, they do. Heck, Carson has around 130 kids try out for Mathcounts, it is easy to see a large number of kids trying out for a sport.
Seriously!? That's kind of hilarious. I don't know anything about it, but is there some reason that a math club can't have everyone participate?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It is bias. Coaches have biases.
You would know the kid wasn't at your school because he would be late for all your immediately-after-school activities, and you would get a list at tryouts of all the students grades and schools because they have to register ahead of time.
Not the same in every sport, every kid. I am not worried at all about my kid making the team next year.
Sure some sports are no cut, and girls sports are easy to make.
That's not true at all. Girls sports are very competitive in Fairfax County.
They are incredibly easy to make compared to boys sports.
#boymom amirite?
DP and girl dad. Boys sports easily have twice the number of kids trying to make the team as girls sports, so yes the girls sports are much easier to make the cut. If you can't see and admit this reality due to your ego or some other reason, then there is no logical way to reach you.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:If I'm a soccer coach choosing from 130 boys, am I going to (1) pick any kids who have to be transported from another school and back, or (2) am I going to pick the kids who go to my school, who came to the off season workouts, and are already there ready to go for practices and games?
Hint, the answer is (2). Now, it may not matter so much with no cut or girls sports, but any little negative will swing the pendulum against you when a coach is choosing from a crowd.
oh please nowhere has 130 boys trying out for one sport. that's ridiculous.
Yes, they do. Heck, Carson has around 130 kids try out for Mathcounts, it is easy to see a large number of kids trying out for a sport.
Seriously!? That's kind of hilarious. I don't know anything about it, but is there some reason that a math club can't have everyone participate?
Anonymous wrote:Can e get back to discussing Skyview and sports try outs? Please and Thank you