Anonymous wrote:I let my kids do it , they had already been on pre team which was 6 hours a week and they already loved their friends and coaches. It was 4 hr practices 3 times per week for gymnastics. 12 hours plus the meets. They were in 1st and 3rd at the time. After 3(2 for my younger girl) competitive seasons they both decided to move on and I was glad. It definitely sucked up a lot of their time and mine because they required volunteer hours as well. They did love it for the time they did it though, and sometimes miss it ,but it was also stressful as well the more they moved up in levels and that’s why they ultimately decided to move on.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My daughter has made the team for a sport that she has been doing for many years. She currently does 4 hours of practice a week right now. Practice will be 3 days a week for 3 hours at a time (Mon, Tues, Thursday from 5-8.) She is only 9, currently in 3rd grade. This would be for next school year. Skipping practice is highly discouraged plus travel competitions. This is going to put a strain on our family, miss family dinners, etc. She really wants to do it, and I am actually discouraging it - this isn't a parent living through their kid.
Would you let your kid do it for something they have worked very hard for?
Are most of the kids on the team homeschooled or online schooled? How is this schedule feasible for a child who goes to a traditional school?
School 8-3:30, gymnastics 5-8. What part are you missing?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:If your kid has the potential to go pro and really truly could make a good living as an athlete, I don't see the problem in making your life revolve around kidsports.
But very few are naturally gifted enough for the investment to pay off. Best case scenario your kid gets a sports scholarship to a no-name university and they graduate with a comm degree and work at a car dealership. Worst case scenario they become a kidsports coach and keep the scam going. You'd have been better off focusing more on academics and keeping the sports as a rec level hobby.
This is so weird. I was a competitive gymnast as a kid and grew up to be an attorney. I would actually say that a child who shows to the drive and commitment for 9 hours/week of practices and conditioning plus meets is the type of kid who is going to grow up to be successful. All my gymnastics teammates and myself took our studies seriously as well. This is not a group of kids known to slack off at anything.
My cohort of competitive figure skaters used to practice for 15-20 hours per week. Some of them had to be homeschooled to accommodate their skating schedule. Among the ones I was closest to, and remain in touch with after more than 20 years, we have a lawyer, a neurologist, another physician, an executive with an MBA, and one coach still involved in skating. Figure skating instilled competitive drive (and perfectionism), which translated into other aspects of life
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:If your kid has the potential to go pro and really truly could make a good living as an athlete, I don't see the problem in making your life revolve around kidsports.
But very few are naturally gifted enough for the investment to pay off. Best case scenario your kid gets a sports scholarship to a no-name university and they graduate with a comm degree and work at a car dealership. Worst case scenario they become a kidsports coach and keep the scam going. You'd have been better off focusing more on academics and keeping the sports as a rec level hobby.
This is so weird. I was a competitive gymnast as a kid and grew up to be an attorney. I would actually say that a child who shows to the drive and commitment for 9 hours/week of practices and conditioning plus meets is the type of kid who is going to grow up to be successful. All my gymnastics teammates and myself took our studies seriously as well. This is not a group of kids known to slack off at anything.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My daughter has made the team for a sport that she has been doing for many years. She currently does 4 hours of practice a week right now. Practice will be 3 days a week for 3 hours at a time (Mon, Tues, Thursday from 5-8.) She is only 9, currently in 3rd grade. This would be for next school year. Skipping practice is highly discouraged plus travel competitions. This is going to put a strain on our family, miss family dinners, etc. She really wants to do it, and I am actually discouraging it - this isn't a parent living through their kid.
Would you let your kid do it for something they have worked very hard for?
Are most of the kids on the team homeschooled or online schooled? How is this schedule feasible for a child who goes to a traditional school?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I’ve heard the upper guideline is an hour of sport per week per age. So for a 9 year old, that would be 9 hours a week.
It depends on the sport. For gymnastics, that makes sense. It is too little for ski racing, but much of the day is spent on a lift.
Anonymous wrote:No, nothing that breaks the bank or overschedules them or myself.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:If your kid has the potential to go pro and really truly could make a good living as an athlete, I don't see the problem in making your life revolve around kidsports.
But very few are naturally gifted enough for the investment to pay off. Best case scenario your kid gets a sports scholarship to a no-name university and they graduate with a comm degree and work at a car dealership. Worst case scenario they become a kidsports coach and keep the scam going. You'd have been better off focusing more on academics and keeping the sports as a rec level hobby.
The grapes are sour with this one
NP. The PP is right. Sports are overrated. Sports should be a means for keeping active, heathy, and recreation- not an all encompassing pastime that your child puts more time and energy into than anything else. Vast majority of kids are better served from putting the bulk of their time and effort into academics and keeping sports as a fun past time.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My daughter has made the team for a sport that she has been doing for many years. She currently does 4 hours of practice a week right now. Practice will be 3 days a week for 3 hours at a time (Mon, Tues, Thursday from 5-8.) She is only 9, currently in 3rd grade. This would be for next school year. Skipping practice is highly discouraged plus travel competitions. This is going to put a strain on our family, miss family dinners, etc. She really wants to do it, and I am actually discouraging it - this isn't a parent living through their kid.
Would you let your kid do it for something they have worked very hard for?
What sport makes a 9-year-old practice 3 hours a day 3 times a week besides gymnastics swimming
Figure skating. Competitive dance. AAA hockey (inclusive of off-ice).
Anonymous wrote:No. We don't let our kids do team sports for this reason. A third grader doing 12 hours a week and traveling? No.
Anonymous wrote:If your kid has the potential to go pro and really truly could make a good living as an athlete, I don't see the problem in making your life revolve around kidsports.
But very few are naturally gifted enough for the investment to pay off. Best case scenario your kid gets a sports scholarship to a no-name university and they graduate with a comm degree and work at a car dealership. Worst case scenario they become a kidsports coach and keep the scam going. You'd have been better off focusing more on academics and keeping the sports as a rec level hobby.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My daughter has made the team for a sport that she has been doing for many years. She currently does 4 hours of practice a week right now. Practice will be 3 days a week for 3 hours at a time (Mon, Tues, Thursday from 5-8.) She is only 9, currently in 3rd grade. This would be for next school year. Skipping practice is highly discouraged plus travel competitions. This is going to put a strain on our family, miss family dinners, etc. She really wants to do it, and I am actually discouraging it - this isn't a parent living through their kid.
Would you let your kid do it for something they have worked very hard for?
What sport makes a 9 year old practice 3 hours a day 3 times a week besides gymnastics swimming
OP here. It is one of those two.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:If your kid has the potential to go pro and really truly could make a good living as an athlete, I don't see the problem in making your life revolve around kidsports.
But very few are naturally gifted enough for the investment to pay off. Best case scenario your kid gets a sports scholarship to a no-name university and they graduate with a comm degree and work at a car dealership. Worst case scenario they become a kidsports coach and keep the scam going. You'd have been better off focusing more on academics and keeping the sports as a rec level hobby.
The grapes are sour with this one
Nah. Sugar, the grapes are gonna be sour with you when you see the college prospects for slightly above average athletes with below average academic achievements. Shoulda spent all that time and money on Kumon classes and an English tutor instead of chasing a ball around. Elite athletics is genetics. You either got it or you don't. 10 hours a week of practice can't make up for the genetic lottery.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My daughter has made the team for a sport that she has been doing for many years. She currently does 4 hours of practice a week right now. Practice will be 3 days a week for 3 hours at a time (Mon, Tues, Thursday from 5-8.) She is only 9, currently in 3rd grade. This would be for next school year. Skipping practice is highly discouraged plus travel competitions. This is going to put a strain on our family, miss family dinners, etc. She really wants to do it, and I am actually discouraging it - this isn't a parent living through their kid.
Would you let your kid do it for something they have worked very hard for?
What sport makes a 9 year old practice 3 hours a day 3 times a week besides gymnastics swimming