Anonymous wrote:In 4th and 5th gr, DD played travel soccer, aau basketball and swam and decided herself to drop travel soccer in middle school. DS played lacrosse and baseball every spring until he choose to focus on lacrosse. We enabled them to pursue their interests and it worked for our family.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:We never let our kids pick more than one sport per season. They get to pick the sport they really want to play that season and we sign them up. It's crazy to take on too many activities, especially at a young age. It interferes with your entire week: dinnertime, homework, bath/bedtime, everything. It's not worth and it's just too disruptive to the family.
I actually find it less insane at a young age because if you miss a practice or a game it's not that big of deal. It's when they get older that it becomes more difficult.
I guess it depends on what you want to teach your kids. The whole point of joining a team is making a commitment and honoring that commitment by showing up and doing your best. We truly don't think our kids are going to be playing for the Yankees someday. However, do know that they'll have to be valuable team players at all different levels. Just because you're on a team of 5 and 6 year olds doesn't make your commitment to the other 5 & 6 year olds any less important. After all, the coaches, other players, and other players' parents have all honored their commitment to show up. What makes your kid's soccer game more important than his baseball game on any particular Saturday?? That's why we insist on picking your poisons (if you will) and standing by the choice you make every season.
Your kid must suck.
Parents like you crack me up. Yes, the commitment to a bunch of 5 and 6 yr olds by another 5 and 6 yr old is pretty much non-existant because they are at the mercy of what their parents want. I really doubt that if Jr. at the age of 5 misses a couple soccer games that he will forever and ever believe that you do not need to be committed to anything in life.
Exactly. I love it when some kids can't make the game. It means my kid gets to play the whole game and isn't sitting on the bench waiting to play. I hate it when everyone shows up and the 5 and 6 year olds have to sit for half the game.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:We never let our kids pick more than one sport per season. They get to pick the sport they really want to play that season and we sign them up. It's crazy to take on too many activities, especially at a young age. It interferes with your entire week: dinnertime, homework, bath/bedtime, everything. It's not worth and it's just too disruptive to the family.
I actually find it less insane at a young age because if you miss a practice or a game it's not that big of deal. It's when they get older that it becomes more difficult.
I guess it depends on what you want to teach your kids. The whole point of joining a team is making a commitment and honoring that commitment by showing up and doing your best. We truly don't think our kids are going to be playing for the Yankees someday. However, do know that they'll have to be valuable team players at all different levels. Just because you're on a team of 5 and 6 year olds doesn't make your commitment to the other 5 & 6 year olds any less important. After all, the coaches, other players, and other players' parents have all honored their commitment to show up. What makes your kid's soccer game more important than his baseball game on any particular Saturday?? That's why we insist on picking your poisons (if you will) and standing by the choice you make every season.
Parents like you crack me up. Yes, the commitment to a bunch of 5 and 6 yr olds by another 5 and 6 yr old is pretty much non-existant because they are at the mercy of what their parents want. I really doubt that if Jr. at the age of 5 misses a couple soccer games that he will forever and ever believe that you do not need to be committed to anything in life.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:We never let our kids pick more than one sport per season. They get to pick the sport they really want to play that season and we sign them up. It's crazy to take on too many activities, especially at a young age. It interferes with your entire week: dinnertime, homework, bath/bedtime, everything. It's not worth and it's just too disruptive to the family.
I actually find it less insane at a young age because if you miss a practice or a game it's not that big of deal. It's when they get older that it becomes more difficult.
I guess it depends on what you want to teach your kids. The whole point of joining a team is making a commitment and honoring that commitment by showing up and doing your best. We truly don't think our kids are going to be playing for the Yankees someday. However, do know that they'll have to be valuable team players at all different levels. Just because you're on a team of 5 and 6 year olds doesn't make your commitment to the other 5 & 6 year olds any less important. After all, the coaches, other players, and other players' parents have all honored their commitment to show up. What makes your kid's soccer game more important than his baseball game on any particular Saturday?? That's why we insist on picking your poisons (if you will) and standing by the choice you make every season.
Anonymous wrote:There's nothing about doing one sport per season that says you have to commit to that sport forever. Trying lacrosse in the fall doesn't mean that you have to play lacrosse in the spring. Play soccer in the spring! I think parents get wrapped around the axle of making sure their kids "try" everything. Let them pick what they want -- not what you think they need to try.
Anonymous wrote:Homework should definitely come first. There's no doubt about that. Also, I believe that when you're balancing things like an occasional (i.e. twice a year) band concert or mandatory religious training, you're not making the same assessments that you would be when you're choosing the soccer game over the baseball game.
Kids are busy with all sorts of activities, but this thread was specifically directed at the number of sports teams a kid should join in any one season. The point I was trying to make was that we shouldn't overextend our child's commitments to sports teams. It's not fair to the team you're "dissing" that week -- even if you played for them in a separate game 3 days prior. Make your commitments and honor them - that is all.