RETHINKING
SCHOOL SPORTS
This
morning, National Public Radio reported on efforts to change the
focus of varsity sports in New York City. Turns out that in a city
with an estimated 50% overweight school-age population, some have
suggested that varsity sports needs to be more inclusive, and focused
on getting more kids active.
I continue to be astonished that our thinking about school sports
remains so firmly entrenched - stuck - in perpetuating old values
and traditions, rather than directed toward how sports could better
serve young people in our public schools. Where in school policy,
in any American school district, is it written that athletics should
be organized primarily for the purpose of winning trophies and championships?
Yet in practice, creating winning teams is so often the sole focus
of our coaches. As a result, we routinely lose valuable opportunities
for achieving those benefits that athletic participation offers
for students of ALL ability levels.
Compare the situation of physical educators and coaches - ironically,
often the same people. Class sizes in PE are frequently too large,
and filled with students who are unskilled and unmotivated. Students
are expected to learn in cramped facilities with insufficient equipment.
In contrast, coaches enjoy small groups of already motivated and
athletically talented students who rarely lack for equipment.
What puzzles me is why more people don't ask 'which of these two
programs is most important to the mission of the school?' Should
it be the group that is part of the regular curriculum and includes
all students, or the group that is an extra to the curriculum and
in most schools caters to a small elite of have's rather than have
nots?
Lest I am now caste as being opposed to public school athletics,
I should hasten to add that I believe athletics can be a truly valuable
addition to all schools. As noted elsewhere on this page, athletics
offer students opportunities for personal development unavailable
in the regular curriculum. But the point that is so often overlooked
is that most of these benefits can be experienced by all students
interested in participating, and not just the highly skilled.
How absurd is it that schools routinely invite students to participate
in athletics - promoting the benefits of being part of a team -
and then a few weeks later exclude those very students who stand
to gain the most from participation? If athletics are good for students,
surely they are good for all students? Why are athletics only good
for students when we need more members on our teams, and not good
when we have too many members?
Unfortunately, traditional athletic thinking is that there simply
is no way to make athletic participation possible for all students
who, regardless of ability, might be interested in involvement.
A lack of funds fuels complaints and excuses inaction. But, this
is just a cop out. It's simply not true. Rather it's a lack of creative
thinking.
More than ever today, we need school sports leaders who begin with
the fundamental belief that athletics are good for all students,
and that one way or another all students can participate. No exclusions.
No cuts. No excuses about lack of facilities, equipment, or coaches.
Instead we should begin with the premise that our school athletic
programs will somehow accommodate all students who are willing to
turn out and meet our training expectations.
Of course this won't be easy. Of course more money would help.
But let's recognize that we cannot expect a different result if
we continue to do things the same way. Schools might need to change
the sports they offer. Schools certainly need to come up with creative
ways to involve large numbers of students in learning and competitive
opportunities.
If not all students can play on the competitive varsity teams,
how can we include all students in a quality learning experience?
Limited facilities? Then come up with creative scheduling alternatives.
Lack of equipment? Do some fundraisers. Sell the value of athletics
to parents. Wear t-shirts instead of fancy uniforms. Other schools
don't have teams to compete against? Regular inter-squad competition
is fine.
Above all let's quit the excuses and find solutions. Creating a
positive athletic environment that the entire community of students
and parents support is not impossible. No one is saying it will
be easy. But with a change in attitude it's certainly not impossible.
Too often athletic program administrators are unwilling to risk
change. They perceive challenges as insurmountable obstacles. They
believe parents and community will revolt if the focus isn't exclusively
on game results. But this is not true. Most parents simply want
a good experience for their children. They want the focus to be
on students not trophies. Of course we like to win games, but even
more we want to see that our children are having a good time, with
good people, learning important life skills. When this happens,
guess what? Teams are more successful.
What do students learn who are excluded from our athletic programs?
That they aren't good enough? That by their early teens it's too
late to learn athletic skills? What sort of preparation for life
is this? And what nonsense! If this were true, why do we bother
putting them in any classes?. Using that logic, we should abandon
the entire academic curriculum, save money, and put them all to
work!
What despairs me most about this situation is that it perpetuates
itself year after year. Young people today, preparing to become
tomorrow's coaches, aren't thinking any differently. But why would
they? They are products of the programs I've described. They are
the former students who excelled in athletics and enjoyed all the
benefits. They don't know the negatives. They don't have any empathy
for the lesser skilled. They don't know what it's like to be excluded
and told they aren't good enough. In most cases they are not overweight
or physically inactive. They love athletics and respect their former
coaches. In fact they want to be just like them. And unfortunately
they will.
In this month's section I've chosen to refocus us on the purpose
of interscholastic athletic programs. I believe that we need to
think more about why students choose to participate in athletics.
Too often we bring our adult perspectives to coaching. We want students
to experience what we think they should get from athletics. Instead,
we should focus on what they want. The research clearly shows that
most participants want to have fun, learn skills, and be with their
friends. Winning is lowly rated in terms of importance.
We need to return an educational perspective to interscholastic
sports, and avoid being confused by what we see in colleges and
professional leagues. Let's make it clear. We are not in the business
of community entertainment. Our mission is to prepare young people
for life. Athletic programs offer a wonderful opportunity for personal
development. Unfortunately, today's public school athletic programs
will never fulfill their potential until athletic administrators
cast off the traditional thinking that impedes progress.
Stephen C. Jefferies, PhD
Central Washington University
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Making
Youth Sports a Positive Experience - This article is
a PDF file, 12 pages long. It is exceptionally good, so if you can't
read it now print it out for later reading.
Put
the "Coaching" back into, well...Coaching
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Winning
isn't everything - Read this letter, then check out
Disabled Sports
USA. |
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Below,
you will find blocks of information. Immediately following each block
will be the source of the information.
The evidence
supporting sports participation for young people is overwhelming...It
has the power to combat everything from racism to low self-image,
to the high-school drop-out rate.
(Sue Castle, Executive Producer of PBS Sports:
Get in the Game)
Female high school athletes are:
1. 92% less likely to get involved with drugs
2. 80% less likely to get pregnant
3. 3 times more likely to graduate than non-athletes
(Womens Sports Foundation)
80% of women identified as key leaders in Fortune 500 companies
participated in sports during their childhood and self-identified
as having been "tomboys."
(Linda Bunker Univ. of VA 1988)
50% of sports participants drop out by the time they reach early
adolescence.
(Institute for the Study of Youth Sports)
High school athletes in North Carolina:
- make higher grades
- get into less trouble
- graduate at a higher rate
- drop out less often
- have higher GPAs than non-athletes
(NC High School Athletic Association, 1977)
Research has shown that students who participate in interscholastic
sports are less likely to be regular and heavy smokers. Students
who play at least one sport are 40% less likely to be regular smokers
and 50% less likely to be heavy smokers. Regular and heavy smoking
decreases substantially with an increase in the number of sports
played.
(Escobedo LG, Marcus SE, Holtzman D, Giovino
GA. Sports participation, age at smoking initiation, and the risk
of smoking among US high school students. JAMA, March 17, 1993;
269:1391-1395.)
Many of the current trends in high school sports are not defensible
as part of an educational experience...The justifiable existence
of interscholastic athletics lies in the educational values obtained
from them by the athletes. (NASPE, 1993)
Compromising the educational value of interscholastic athletics
in order to emphasize winning is indefensible.
(NASPE, 1977)
Boards of Education, superintendents of schools, and principals
with input from athletic directors and coaches, must take full control
of the interscholastic athletic programs within their school systems
to ensure that the educational benefits of athletics receives the
proper emphasis. (NASPE, 1993)
I am opposed to sports being exclusive, where the only children
who have a chance to succeed are those who are already skilled.
(Rainer Martens, Joy and Sadness in Youth Sports)
Whether elimination is intentional or unintentional, it has similar
effects. Kids come to feel unworthy, unwanted, and unacceptable.
(Terry Orlick & Cal Botterill, Every
Kid Can Win, 1975)
It is absurd that on the one hand we feel that sports are good
enough for kids and on the other we set up a system which eliminates
poorer performers, girls, late-maturing boys, kids who are not aggressive
enough, and so on...It is ridiculous to promote participation...then
to cut interested individuals from the teams, or to in any way limit
their participation.
(Terry Orlick & Cal Botterill, Every
Kid Can Win, 1975)
Sports tend to select out physically mature youngsters...This selection
process often eliminates later maturing children from sports.
(Rainer Martens, Joy and Sadness in Youth
Sports)
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Sports - a Mirror of American Society? |
"The
great value of sport is that it teaches us to recognize the difference
between winning and striving for excellence, the better but much
harder achievement. More important, sports teaches us how to handle
failure, to get up and try again when we lose. That's the most valuable
lesson, since we lose more than we win in life."
Recently, in a weekly commentary
on CBS News, correspondent Bob Schieffer observed that throughout
history - from the Greeks, then Romans, and to the present day -
the games that people play, and the way they play them, has helped
us to understand core values of each society's
The Greeks believed that the body and mind were harmoniously interrelated
- sound body, sound mind. The way they developed and exercised their
bodies reflected this belief, and of course led to the emergence
of the peace-promoting Olympic Games. In contrast, fiercely competitive,
and often violent combative sports, reflected the Romans' penchant
for war and conquest.
Sixty years ago, Adolf Hitler attempted to use sports to show the
superiority of Nazi Germany. And throughout the last century, continuing
to the present day, communist nations have endeavored to use international
athletic competitions to illustrate the weaknesses of democratic
societies.
In his commentary Schieffer wonders what will future generations
think of us when they look at our sports:
"Basketball players brawling with fans,
a college football player photographed kicking an opponent in
the head on the sidelines, all this against a continuous background
of millionaire players whining about money and drug testing."
Schieffer wonders what is happening to our sports. He notes that
from children's sports and up, the emphasis on winning at any cost
has led us to accept any behavior that gets the desired result.
In noting the valuable life lessons sports can teach us, Schieffer
believes that somehow those lessons have been lost in modern sports.
He writes:
"If we are blind to that and do nothing about it, then the
core values which have been the strength of this country are changing.
We cannot let that happen."
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Learning From the NBA Brawl |
It's now been
a few weeks since the well-publicized basketball brawl involving
out-of-control professional athletes and spectators.
Different perspectives have been offered to explain the behaviors
and point guilt at those involved. Fines, suspensions, and criminal
charges have attracted most of the media attention. But a more pertinent
question to those of us interested in school and youth programs
is how this event might impact our athletes. What did we learn?
And perhaps most importantly how can coaches use this event as a
lesson for the young people in our youth and school programs?
Unfortunately, fighting and abuse among athletes and spectators
is no longer an unusual occurrence at any level. Since their inception,
and clearly connected to the importance of the game results, violent
acts between athletes, parents, spectators, coaches, and officials
have become commonplace. It’s the emotional highs that competitive
sports elicit that attract our participation when young, and sustain
our support later as parents and fans. And it’s the same emotions,
when unchecked, that explain how nice people sometimes behave badly.
School coaches and young athletes need to be taught that sports
are neither inherently good or bad. It’s the way they are
played that determines the outcomes – good and bad. And the
way sports are played is mostly determined by the way they’re
coached. Unfortunately, coaches, athletes, and spectators can impact
game results though inappropriate behaviors. And the real and imagined
pressures that our school coaches feel explain – but do not
excuse – poor behaviors.
But what is often overlooked is the responsibility shared in these
negative outcomes by the very organizations charged with facilitating
school and youth athletic programs. If, as most people agree, the
excessive focus on winning is the main cause of negative behavior,
the emphasis that sport organizations put on game results clearly
influences the behavior of participants.
Local, state, and national governing bodies expend most of their
energies on scheduling competitions, debating rules, and publicizing
winning performances. True, they occasionally pay lip service to
things like “sportsmanship” and report the benefits
of participation, but attention to the value of sports is secondary
to the competitive results.
Until these organizations change their focus, it’s silly to
expect different results. Maybe it’s time for us to recognize
that more students are being left out of our athletic programs than
are being included? Maybe the epidemic in youth and adult obesity
can help us realize that promoting a healthy citizenship is at least
equally as important as awarding cups and pennants destined to gather
dust on shelves and walls? |
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Improving Youth & School Sports |
In the past few years several
new sport organizations have emerged. Their mission has been to
improve the quality of sport experiences for young people. What
follows is a brief review of some selected organizations whose
web sites you might enjoy visiting:
Positive Coaching Alliance:
(PCA)
"Transforming youth sports so sports can transform youth"
Established at Stanford University in 1998 by Jim Thompson, the
Positive Coaching Alliance (PCA) believes that winning is a goal
in youth sports, but that there is a second, more important goal
of using sports to teach life lessons through positive coaching.
According to the PCA, American youth are dropping out of sports
at an alarming rate. They believe that a major contributing factor
is the "win at all cost" mentality of many parents and
coaches that creates a pressure filled environment for the kids,
and ultimately turns them away from sports.
The PCA provides live, research-based training workshops and
practical tools for coaches, parents, and leaders who operate
youth sports programs to get them on the "same page"
about what it means to Honor the Game. Positive Coaching Alliance
educates adults who shape the youth sports experience by offering
partnership programs with YSO's, schools, cities, and national
sports governing bodies. PCA also provides corporations with the
opportunity to offer sports parent workshops to their employees.
To learn more, visit the Positive
Coaching Alliance web site.
If interested, you can also subscribe to a free (occasional)
emailed newsletter.
Publications that support this organization’s goals can
also be ordered
online.
North American Youth Sport Institute
The North
American Youth Sport Institute (NAYSI) was created by Jack
Hutslar in 1979. Based in North Carolina, this organization offers
publications and workshops focused on improving youth sport experiences.
Coaches can pursue a free online course designed to accompany
Dr. Hutslar’s book BEYOND X's and O's, and become part of
the NASYI Coaches’ Registry.
The NAYSI offers a free monthly online newsletter that includes
a question and answer service for youth and school coaches, teachers,
parents, and students. For more information visit the NAYSI
web site.
Athletes
for a Better World
"Athletes are our world’s most
popular heroes, admired and often emulated by those who watch
them. But, in recent years, the behavior of an increasingly
larger number of athletes has damaged the image of sport and
is negatively impacting the values and actions of coaches, parents,
fans, and young people who view extraordinary athletes as their
role models."
The mission of Athletes for a Better World (ABW), created in
1998 by Fred Northrup, is to use sports to develop character,
teamwork, and citizenship through commitment to an athletic
Code for Living (see box insert following this article). ABW
believe that this code applies to life, and is striving to create
a movement that will play a significant role in the transformation
of individuals, sports, and society.
Athletes for a Better World (ABW) provides free printed materials
designed to assist athletes, coaches, teachers, program directors,
and parents in establishing the Code for Living as an integral
part of their personal, team, and family lives. It is organized
regionally, and offers workshops for those interested in supporting
its educational mission.
To learn more, visit the Athletes
for a Better World web site.
Citizenship Through Sports Alliance
The Citizenship
Through Sports Alliance (CTSA) is the largest coalition of
professional and amateur athletics organizations in the United
States focused on character in sport. CTSA promotes fair play
at all levels - youth leagues to professional sport - to reinforce
the value of sport as a test of character. Since 1997, CTSA has
been building a sports culture that encourages respect for self,
respect for others, and respect for the game.
The CTSA's website - www.sportsmanship.org
- features links to alliance members and "It's Up to Us,"
a community-organizing tool kit for grass-roots community efforts
to teach, learn, and practice good citizenship. The tool kit is
"user friendly," with a menu of ideas, activities, and
materials geared to community needs.
This web site is an excellent resource for links to other organizations
interested in promoting the educational value of sports participation.
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Sports & Entertainment Law Journal |
Title:
The Challenge Facing Parents and Coaches in Youth Sports: Assuring
Children Fun and Equal Opportunity.
This is a POWERFUL
PDF document 33 pages long. Much is covered, including the fun
and emotional needs of children, and why so many of them drop
out of sports so early in their lives. This is a journal
worth printing out to share or refer to later.
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If you have
ideas, comments, letters to share, or questions about particular
topics, please email one of the following Coaching Section
Editors: |
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