Laura, one of my readers, has a four year old
boy and she asked me an interesting question: what is the best time to enroll kids
in organized sports. Here is my respond:
Kids must be kids and they need to have a childhood. Some
parents have very ambitious plans for their children but involving children in an
organized sport should wait till they are nine or ten years old. Some parents
want their kids to be successful athletes and because of that they put those
kids on a risky journey with a very small chance for success. In some sports,
such as gymnastics, tennis, baseball, etc. kids must start very young in order
to expect success. But is that what kids really need? My belief is that first
and foremost we must develop children’s psycho-motor abilities while they are
very young and second, we must develop their appreciation and love for sports.
Parents should be their children’s first coaches. By involving kids in many
different games, certain abilities will start developing: coordination,
flexibility, strength, stamina, speed, etc. I would always recommend enrolling
young children in swimming or gymnastics training but only if the coaches’
approach this training as a game. Children must play and as soon as their
involvement becomes too serious that would be when it is time to pull them out.
If you put children in a serious training process when they are for example
only six years old when they turn 20 they will already have 14 years of
athletic experience and they will stay active in that sport only if they have
talent that can promise successful career. But if they are not one of these
very talented people, you can rest assured that if they do not dislike the sport
already, they will start disliking it very soon. In my professional experience
and studies that I have read about, children’s early involvement in organized
sports suggests to me that the ideal time to start children’s involvement in
organized sports is between the ages of 9 to 12. This is the time when children
are better mentally and emotionally equipped to deal with the discipline that
serious sports training demands. Also, at this age they do not only do what
they see, now they also can understand the coaches’ feedback and correct both
technique and behavior. Kids who start serious training later develop
appreciation and love for the sport; they have greater chance to stay
physically active for a very long time, sometimes forever. Kids who get
involved in organized sport very young will most likely recognize that sport is
the reason why they did not have the same happy childhood as many of their
peers and they will not have many reasons to love sport when they grow up.
We must understand tremendous importance of parents’
involvement in children’s physical, emotional, and mental development. Parents
who truly care for their own child will do more for their child’s development
than any coach or nanny in the world; your commitment to parenting is all your
child needs at a very young age. Unfortunately, many parents believe that
paying somebody for professional services can replace play time with their own
child. Good luck with that concept.
No comments:
Post a Comment