Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I tried a mommy and me creative movement class at Dance Place when DD was 2 since she seemed to enjoy yoga at daycare. She was wayyyyyy more interested in being the class clown, but other kids, including some younger than her, were fully participating and having a lot of fun. She's 4 now, still the class clown, and has been asking about ballet. We're going to try daddy and me ice skating instead.
Why aren't you doing ballet?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Don’t stress about the availability of all the baby classes. They are mostly ways for moms or nannies to have something to break up the day, get their kids out of the house, meet fellow moms/nannies with similar age kids. You can do some (and I personally enjoy having a few such things on the calendar) but you don’t have to take which ones or when too seriously.
My kid started developing some actual semblance of an interest in certain activities around 4.
Hey I have a question. I dont know a lot of people in the area. Can you advise on how I could go about meeting other moms/ nannnies for play groups before they are in school as you suggested above?
Anonymous wrote:Just signed up our 17 mo for swimming and he will do soccer next ; mostly just to get him out of the house and socialize with other kids since he’s home all day.
Anonymous wrote:Don’t stress about the availability of all the baby classes. They are mostly ways for moms or nannies to have something to break up the day, get their kids out of the house, meet fellow moms/nannies with similar age kids. You can do some (and I personally enjoy having a few such things on the calendar) but you don’t have to take which ones or when too seriously.
My kid started developing some actual semblance of an interest in certain activities around 4.
Anonymous wrote:Only start young if it's convenient and a fun activity for YOU. Keep the focus and fun and socialization rather than skill.
I had friends stressed about taking their toddlers and preschoolers to a zillion activities. Their calendars were so busy and they were always running around. We did nothing other than lots of free play until starting one organized activity for each kid in first grade. Parents taught swimming and bicycle. By late elementary school, kids asked to add or switch to another sport or dance.
Now that the kids are in middle school, there is zero difference in skill level for most things for the early starters compared to the late starters. It's important to stay active, but kids build more social skills if they get to self direct activities and learn how to problem solve in kid-led environments. I'd recommend a free and convenient neighborhood playgroup over an expensive series of classes for those reasons.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Only start young if it's convenient and a fun activity for YOU. Keep the focus and fun and socialization rather than skill.
I had friends stressed about taking their toddlers and preschoolers to a zillion activities. Their calendars were so busy and they were always running around. We did nothing other than lots of free play until starting one organized activity for each kid in first grade. Parents taught swimming and bicycle. By late elementary school, kids asked to add or switch to another sport or dance.
Now that the kids are in middle school, there is zero difference in skill level for most things for the early starters compared to the late starters. It's important to stay active, but kids build more social skills if they get to self direct activities and learn how to problem solve in kid-led environments. I'd recommend a free and convenient neighborhood playgroup over an expensive series of classes for those reasons.
I coached for quite a while. There is definitely a difference with early vs late starters in a lot of sports. Starting late matters so parents should keep in mind if they are ok/just looking for a more recreational experience vs competition-oriented. I firmly believe that all children have potential and private lessons can train up everyone to a reasonable level but prior experience does play a part technically as well as prior conditioning. I would not start as late as middle school for something like most dance and gymnastics without accounting for private lessons to catch up. Martial arts, fencing, volleyball are all fine later as is rowing. I would do soccer earlier, too.
There needs to be a balance in time spent in organized activities and free play. Don't overschedule and turn your child into a neurotic mess who can't self-direct, either. Keep it fun. Cross-training is important, too, so don't get locked into just one sport early.