Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The list of sports and participation is vaguely interesting to me, though the fact that it combines all school types really muddies the water and (IMO) makes it less clear what the state of play actually is in DC public schools.
Agree that the recommendations are garbage. More baseball fields?! Really?! The city has a LOT of baseball fields and they are historically underutilized relative to all other field types.
My kingdom for a report that leaned into actually preparing DC kids to build the skills for long-term health - lifting/training, cross country, swimming, etc.
Something tells me you do not have a baseball player in your family. DC does not have many under utilized 90 foot baseball fields at all. And the few that exist are ALWAYS sold out every single year year round when permits open up. Many schools (public and private alike) bus to Nats youth facilities to play and often don’t have access for regulation size fields for practice.
Anonymous wrote:The list of sports and participation is vaguely interesting to me, though the fact that it combines all school types really muddies the water and (IMO) makes it less clear what the state of play actually is in DC public schools.
Agree that the recommendations are garbage. More baseball fields?! Really?! The city has a LOT of baseball fields and they are historically underutilized relative to all other field types.
My kingdom for a report that leaned into actually preparing DC kids to build the skills for long-term health - lifting/training, cross country, swimming, etc.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:How about building a decent competitive pool in wards 6/7/8?
It’s a widespread problem. Even with DPR’s excellent facility at Wilson up the street, the Hardy swim team practices and the much-harder-to-get-to pool at Roosevelt.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It's funny how the wokerati and the Klan often end up at the same place. The essence of this sports initiative is that blacks just aren't that smart, but they're good at sports. Let that sink in for a minute or two.
You’re the only person saying anything like the offensive sentiments that you are attributing to others. You seem not so bright.
I'm the only person saying it out loud. That's the difference.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It's funny how the wokerati and the Klan often end up at the same place. The essence of this sports initiative is that blacks just aren't that smart, but they're good at sports. Let that sink in for a minute or two.
You’re the only person saying anything like the offensive sentiments that you are attributing to others. You seem not so bright.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Audio of the first meeting is here:
https://dme.dc.gov/page/dc-sports-review-study
Their finding are idiotic. Lots of focus on baseball as a high school sport. The notion that DCPS kids — who don’t grow up playing baseball outside of upper NW and don’t play travel —- will be national standouts is laughable.
If anything, high school sports would be dramatically improved by more indoor basketball courts.
DCPS elementary kids play games in their lunchroom at some schools. For high school kids, the struggle for gym space is unbelievable.
The premise was idiotic so it's not surprising the findings were idiotic. They're really not doing the vast majority of kids any favors by leading them to believe that professional athletics is a viable career path. They may as well have classes in picking lottery numbers.
Sports are great for kids, but they should be focusing on creating more opportunities for participation.
I watched the video, and what struck me was that the emphasis was much more on adults than kids -- increasing salaries, creating more positions, making part-time positions full-time. There was never any evidence presented that there are vast numbers of DC kids who are on the cusp of turning pro, the only thing holding them back is that the AD at their school is part-time and their coach is underpaid. It seems that in fact the opposite is true, if kids have talent the opportunities find them.
The key goal is off: They want to keep top athletes in the city. But are concerned about keeping top students?
We all know the answer is no. And no parent is going to turn down an offer from GDS to have their kid play a sport to stay at a DCPS school. Top athletes have been recruited away from public schools for a very long time. But these are few and far between. I’m all for more competitive sports for kids but not with the goal for them to go D1. That’s just a high bar and many kids make it to D1 because they families can afford to pay for travel teams and spend their weekends traveling all over the country so scouts can see their kids.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Audio of the first meeting is here:
https://dme.dc.gov/page/dc-sports-review-study
Their finding are idiotic. Lots of focus on baseball as a high school sport. The notion that DCPS kids — who don’t grow up playing baseball outside of upper NW and don’t play travel —- will be national standouts is laughable.
If anything, high school sports would be dramatically improved by more indoor basketball courts.
DCPS elementary kids play games in their lunchroom at some schools. For high school kids, the struggle for gym space is unbelievable.
The premise was idiotic so it's not surprising the findings were idiotic. They're really not doing the vast majority of kids any favors by leading them to believe that professional athletics is a viable career path. They may as well have classes in picking lottery numbers.
Sports are great for kids, but they should be focusing on creating more opportunities for participation.
I watched the video, and what struck me was that the emphasis was much more on adults than kids -- increasing salaries, creating more positions, making part-time positions full-time. There was never any evidence presented that there are vast numbers of DC kids who are on the cusp of turning pro, the only thing holding them back is that the AD at their school is part-time and their coach is underpaid. It seems that in fact the opposite is true, if kids have talent the opportunities find them.
The key goal is off: They want to keep top athletes in the city. But are concerned about keeping top students?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Audio of the first meeting is here:
https://dme.dc.gov/page/dc-sports-review-study
Their finding are idiotic. Lots of focus on baseball as a high school sport. The notion that DCPS kids — who don’t grow up playing baseball outside of upper NW and don’t play travel —- will be national standouts is laughable.
If anything, high school sports would be dramatically improved by more indoor basketball courts.
DCPS elementary kids play games in their lunchroom at some schools. For high school kids, the struggle for gym space is unbelievable.
The premise was idiotic so it's not surprising the findings were idiotic. They're really not doing the vast majority of kids any favors by leading them to believe that professional athletics is a viable career path. They may as well have classes in picking lottery numbers.
Sports are great for kids, but they should be focusing on creating more opportunities for participation.
I watched the video, and what struck me was that the emphasis was much more on adults than kids -- increasing salaries, creating more positions, making part-time positions full-time. There was never any evidence presented that there are vast numbers of DC kids who are on the cusp of turning pro, the only thing holding them back is that the AD at their school is part-time and their coach is underpaid. It seems that in fact the opposite is true, if kids have talent the opportunities find them.
Anonymous wrote:They are paying someone for this?
How about using the money to improve the 2% math proficiency at Dunbar instead? Or have they given up on educating these kids?