Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Six month age groups
There is not a single negative to a six month age group.
![]()
Beyond Elementary school there isn't enough advantage to maintain the complexity.
Its not complex. Its very very simple.
Annnndddd...there absolutely are reasons to do this beyond elementary considering puberty isn't done until the middle part of HS.
Next
When you start combining teams, first to expand for 9v9 and then to 11v11 it is unnecessary. Dual age groups is excellent early on to make sure kids are learning the fundamentals in a more developmentally focused environment. But by middle school, frankly it is silly. Kids need to be placed based more on skill than age. We have gone round and round on this and the numbers just don't support dual age groups. The predictable size variance BASED on birth month can be thrown out the window. Genetics NOT birth month plays a greater role in size variance.
If you honestly think you could walk into a middle school and predict kids birth months with any accuracy based on size I have a bridge to sell you. You might not even be able to predict their birth year accurately in many cases.
You didn't make a reasonable argument. Most of it is nonsense.
By middle school size is more defined by individual genetics than birth month and a predictable linear growth chart through middle school.
What makes dual age groups useful in elementary school are it's obvious benefits but the predictability of implementing it properly. A kid born 10 months later than another kid will be predictably smaller at 7-8 years old.
By middle school that is all out the window because specific growth spurts as well as their intensity simply cannot be predicted in middle school based on birth month. If the intent is to have players of similar size grouped together it would fail miserably based on birth month in middle school. Do you understand this?
It not just about size. The lazy analysis is why the debate continues to happen. This is about human development...physically, mentally and emotionally. A tall well developed 12 years, while may look like a 18 year old, but is still mentally a 12 year. Why? Because physical and mental development do not go hand in hand. This is but one of 5,000 senerios.
I need you to understand this.....You should not filter kids out of a pipeline before they had a chance to develop as a human.
You see it is schools all the time. It is a FLAWED approach. Its proven to be wrong
Anonymous wrote:You should pitch your six month plan to US Soccer- I'm sure it will go well
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Six month age groups
There is not a single negative to a six month age group.
![]()
Beyond Elementary school there isn't enough advantage to maintain the complexity.
Its not complex. Its very very simple.
Annnndddd...there absolutely are reasons to do this beyond elementary considering puberty isn't done until the middle part of HS.
Next
When you start combining teams, first to expand for 9v9 and then to 11v11 it is unnecessary. Dual age groups is excellent early on to make sure kids are learning the fundamentals in a more developmentally focused environment. But by middle school, frankly it is silly. Kids need to be placed based more on skill than age. We have gone round and round on this and the numbers just don't support dual age groups. The predictable size variance BASED on birth month can be thrown out the window. Genetics NOT birth month plays a greater role in size variance.
If you honestly think you could walk into a middle school and predict kids birth months with any accuracy based on size I have a bridge to sell you. You might not even be able to predict their birth year accurately in many cases.
You didn't make a reasonable argument. Most of it is nonsense.
By middle school size is more defined by individual genetics than birth month and a predictable linear growth chart through middle school.
What makes dual age groups useful in elementary school are it's obvious benefits but the predictability of implementing it properly. A kid born 10 months later than another kid will be predictably smaller at 7-8 years old.
By middle school that is all out the window because specific growth spurts as well as their intensity simply cannot be predicted in middle school based on birth month. If the intent is to have players of similar size grouped together it would fail miserably based on birth month in middle school. Do you understand this?
It not just about size. The lazy analysis is why the debate continues to happen. This is about human development...physically, mentally and emotionally. A tall well developed 12 years, while may look like a 18 year old, but is still mentally a 12 year. Why? Because physical and mental development do not go hand in hand. This is but one of 5,000 senerios.
I need you to understand this.....You should not filter kids out of a pipeline before they had a chance to develop as a human.
You see it is schools all the time. It is a FLAWED approach. Its proven to be wrong
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Six month age groups
There is not a single negative to a six month age group.
![]()
Beyond Elementary school there isn't enough advantage to maintain the complexity.
Its not complex. Its very very simple.
Annnndddd...there absolutely are reasons to do this beyond elementary considering puberty isn't done until the middle part of HS.
Next
When you start combining teams, first to expand for 9v9 and then to 11v11 it is unnecessary. Dual age groups is excellent early on to make sure kids are learning the fundamentals in a more developmentally focused environment. But by middle school, frankly it is silly. Kids need to be placed based more on skill than age. We have gone round and round on this and the numbers just don't support dual age groups. The predictable size variance BASED on birth month can be thrown out the window. Genetics NOT birth month plays a greater role in size variance.
If you honestly think you could walk into a middle school and predict kids birth months with any accuracy based on size I have a bridge to sell you. You might not even be able to predict their birth year accurately in many cases.
You didn't make a reasonable argument. Most of it is nonsense.
By middle school size is more defined by individual genetics than birth month and a predictable linear growth chart through middle school.
What makes dual age groups useful in elementary school are it's obvious benefits but the predictability of implementing it properly. A kid born 10 months later than another kid will be predictably smaller at 7-8 years old.
By middle school that is all out the window because specific growth spurts as well as their intensity simply cannot be predicted in middle school based on birth month. If the intent is to have players of similar size grouped together it would fail miserably based on birth month in middle school. Do you understand this?
It not just about size. The lazy analysis is why the debate continues to happen. This is about human development...physically, mentally and emotionally. A tall well developed 12 years, while may look like a 18 year old, but is still mentally a 12 year. Why? Because physical and mental development do not go hand in hand. This is but one of 5,000 senerios.
I need you to understand this.....You should not filter kids out of a pipeline before they had a chance to develop as a human.
You see it is schools all the time. It is a FLAWED approach. Its proven to be wrong
that's totally correct, but why stop at 6 months, lets have birth month age groups. Just think how proud DD will be when her team captures the Jeff cup in the U10January platinum division- granted it was a two team field and a 6 on 7 game because fielding teams is hard, but who cares- developmentally appropriate winning!
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Six month age groups
There is not a single negative to a six month age group.
![]()
Beyond Elementary school there isn't enough advantage to maintain the complexity.
Its not complex. Its very very simple.
Annnndddd...there absolutely are reasons to do this beyond elementary considering puberty isn't done until the middle part of HS.
Next
When you start combining teams, first to expand for 9v9 and then to 11v11 it is unnecessary. Dual age groups is excellent early on to make sure kids are learning the fundamentals in a more developmentally focused environment. But by middle school, frankly it is silly. Kids need to be placed based more on skill than age. We have gone round and round on this and the numbers just don't support dual age groups. The predictable size variance BASED on birth month can be thrown out the window. Genetics NOT birth month plays a greater role in size variance.
If you honestly think you could walk into a middle school and predict kids birth months with any accuracy based on size I have a bridge to sell you. You might not even be able to predict their birth year accurately in many cases.
You didn't make a reasonable argument. Most of it is nonsense.
By middle school size is more defined by individual genetics than birth month and a predictable linear growth chart through middle school.
What makes dual age groups useful in elementary school are it's obvious benefits but the predictability of implementing it properly. A kid born 10 months later than another kid will be predictably smaller at 7-8 years old.
By middle school that is all out the window because specific growth spurts as well as their intensity simply cannot be predicted in middle school based on birth month. If the intent is to have players of similar size grouped together it would fail miserably based on birth month in middle school. Do you understand this?
It not just about size. The lazy analysis is why the debate continues to happen. This is about human development...physically, mentally and emotionally. A tall well developed 12 years, while may look like a 18 year old, but is still mentally a 12 year. Why? Because physical and mental development do not go hand in hand. This is but one of 5,000 senerios.
I need you to understand this.....You should not filter kids out of a pipeline before they had a chance to develop as a human.
You see it is schools all the time. It is a FLAWED approach. Its proven to be wrong
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Six month age groups
There is not a single negative to a six month age group.
![]()
Beyond Elementary school there isn't enough advantage to maintain the complexity.
Its not complex. Its very very simple.
Annnndddd...there absolutely are reasons to do this beyond elementary considering puberty isn't done until the middle part of HS.
Next
When you start combining teams, first to expand for 9v9 and then to 11v11 it is unnecessary. Dual age groups is excellent early on to make sure kids are learning the fundamentals in a more developmentally focused environment. But by middle school, frankly it is silly. Kids need to be placed based more on skill than age. We have gone round and round on this and the numbers just don't support dual age groups. The predictable size variance BASED on birth month can be thrown out the window. Genetics NOT birth month plays a greater role in size variance.
If you honestly think you could walk into a middle school and predict kids birth months with any accuracy based on size I have a bridge to sell you. You might not even be able to predict their birth year accurately in many cases.
You didn't make a reasonable argument. Most of it is nonsense.
By middle school size is more defined by individual genetics than birth month and a predictable linear growth chart through middle school.
What makes dual age groups useful in elementary school are it's obvious benefits but the predictability of implementing it properly. A kid born 10 months later than another kid will be predictably smaller at 7-8 years old.
By middle school that is all out the window because specific growth spurts as well as their intensity simply cannot be predicted in middle school based on birth month. If the intent is to have players of similar size grouped together it would fail miserably based on birth month in middle school. Do you understand this?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Six month age groups
There is not a single negative to a six month age group.
![]()
Beyond Elementary school there isn't enough advantage to maintain the complexity.
Its not complex. Its very very simple.
Annnndddd...there absolutely are reasons to do this beyond elementary considering puberty isn't done until the middle part of HS.
Next
When you start combining teams, first to expand for 9v9 and then to 11v11 it is unnecessary. Dual age groups is excellent early on to make sure kids are learning the fundamentals in a more developmentally focused environment. But by middle school, frankly it is silly. Kids need to be placed based more on skill than age. We have gone round and round on this and the numbers just don't support dual age groups. The predictable size variance BASED on birth month can be thrown out the window. Genetics NOT birth month plays a greater role in size variance.
If you honestly think you could walk into a middle school and predict kids birth months with any accuracy based on size I have a bridge to sell you. You might not even be able to predict their birth year accurately in many cases.
You didn't make a reasonable argument. Most of it is nonsense.
Anonymous wrote:Birth year is the best way to go. Its much easier to say everyone all the 08s or all the 09s .
Rather than having possible confusion like all kids born in 08 but before December 3rd . All other kids born in 08 after December 1st plus some of the kids born in 09 but not all kids. and oh yeah don't forget about the 07s that were born after December 1st .
Plus if you use school year so you kids can play with classmates. Every class has the few kids that are a year older due to various reasons failed grade , new to country, or starting a year late because parents didn't prepare their kids at age 4 and 5. So that doesn't work out either.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Six month age groups
There is not a single negative to a six month age group.
![]()
Beyond Elementary school there isn't enough advantage to maintain the complexity.
Its not complex. Its very very simple.
Annnndddd...there absolutely are reasons to do this beyond elementary considering puberty isn't done until the middle part of HS.
Next
When you start combining teams, first to expand for 9v9 and then to 11v11 it is unnecessary. Dual age groups is excellent early on to make sure kids are learning the fundamentals in a more developmentally focused environment. But by middle school, frankly it is silly. Kids need to be placed based more on skill than age. We have gone round and round on this and the numbers just don't support dual age groups. The predictable size variance BASED on birth month can be thrown out the window. Genetics NOT birth month plays a greater role in size variance.
If you honestly think you could walk into a middle school and predict kids birth months with any accuracy based on size I have a bridge to sell you. You might not even be able to predict their birth year accurately in many cases.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Six month age groups
There is not a single negative to a six month age group.
![]()
Beyond Elementary school there isn't enough advantage to maintain the complexity.
Its not complex. Its very very simple.
Annnndddd...there absolutely are reasons to do this beyond elementary considering puberty isn't done until the middle part of HS.
Next
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Six month age groups
There is not a single negative to a six month age group.
![]()
Beyond Elementary school there isn't enough advantage to maintain the complexity.
Its not complex. Its very very simple.
Annnndddd...there absolutely are reasons to do this beyond elementary considering puberty isn't done until the middle part of HS.
Next