Headline
1: LaDainian Tomlinson Angry
Over NE Patriots' Acts of Celebration During AFC divisional playoffs.
Headline 2: 31
Players Suspended Following On-Field Brawl During Miami –
Florida Int'l Football Game.
Headline 3: Parents Arrested
Following Brawl in Stands at Youth Hockey Game in Rome, NY.
One needs only pick up the newspaper to read yet another
example of athletes taunting one another, getting into brawls, being
caught using performance enhancing drugs, or parents attacking officials
or other parents at their children's sporting events. From professional
athletes, to college football teams, to parent behavior at youth
sporting contests, students are consistently exposed to examples
of poor sportsmanship and lack of character.
It seems as if unsportsmanlike behavior is also on
the rise in youth sports. Teachers don't have to tolerate this;
we should expect and demand proper behavior from our students, as
well as their parents. National Sportsmanship Day is in March. We
have a wonderful opportunity as educators to help guide our students
toward displaying proper sportsmanship.
Physical education is unique in that we can seamlessly
incorporate character-building within the framework of our teaching.
It can be something as simple as encouraging students to support
their peers and shake hands at the completion of a contest, or more
complex such as teaching them to call fouls or errors on themselves.
If teachers place as much weight on the demonstration of good sportsmanship
as they do on proper execution of skills, perhaps we'll see more
students acting like Marvin
Harrison and fewer acting like Terrell
Owens.
Ed Kuipec
Secondary Section Editor
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Character
Education Partnership. (2000). Guidelines
for Effective Character Education Through Sports. Washington,
DC: Beedy, J.P. & Gough, R.H.
Clifford, C. & Feezell, R.M. (1997).
Coaching
For Character: Reclaiming the Principles of Sportsmanship. Champaign,
IL: Human Kinetics.
Gough, R. (1997). Character
is Everything: Promoting Ethical Excellence in Sports. Fort
Worth, TX: Harcourt Brace.
Lickona, T. (1994). Educating
for Character. New York, NY: Bantam Books.
Smoll, F.L. & Smith, R.E. (1997).
Coaches
Who Never Lose: Making Sure Athletes Win No Matter What the Score.
Portola Valley, CA: Warde Publishers.
Wolfe, R. (1997). The
Concerned Parent's Guide to Competitive Youth Sports. Champaign,
IL: Sports Publishing, Inc.
Yeager, J.M., Buxton, J.N., Baltzell,
A.L., & Bzdell, W.B. (2001). Character
and Coaching: Building Virtue in Athletic Programs. Port Chester,
NY: Dude Publishing.
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I have been observing classes
in secondary PE and my teacher only uses captains to pick
the teams in gym class. The same girls and guys are picked
first every time and the same students are left waiting
on the line, begging for their name to be called. I am
not sure how you guys feel? Not only does this seem old
fashioned, but I believe there are several other ways
of choosing teams without causing embarrassment to almost
half the class. What are your ways or ideas of avoiding
this in class? Please share in the forum.
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GOOD CITIZENSHIP (added by Leon Letson) |
The
Citizens
Through Sports Alliance (CTSA), the largest coalition of professional
and amateur athletics organizations in the United States, offers
a tool kit to help concerned individuals develop a sense of community
and citizenship, and to promote good sportsmanship, strong character,
and respect for others. Read their eight-point
guide intended to help parents educate their children about
sportsmanship.
CTSA also offers printable codes
of conduct for athletes, parents, and coaches.
Athletes
for a Better World (ABW) is an organization devoted to developing
"character, teamwork, and citizenship through commitment to
an athletic Code for Living that applies to life, and to create
a movement that will play a significant role in the transformation
of individuals, sports, and society." They have also developed
a number of interesting programs that get student athletes involved
with community and leadership activities to help further their mission.
For more information, visit their Web
site.
The Center
for Sports Parenting (CSP) is "a Web-based initiative that
offers immediate and practical guidance to parents, coaches, educators,
administrators, officials, and all other individuals involved in
youth sports, equipping them with the information needed to handle
the psychological and physical challenges faced by young people
participating in athletics."
This site offers a great deal of useful
information for parents of children who play sports. The Top
Ten Sports Parenting Myths is particularly informative. CSP
also conducts Sports Parenting Workshops. Each program includes
a lecture, situational role-playing, interactive scenario-based
activities, a Q & A period, as well as private consultations
following the event.
Additionally, at each program, an information
packet that can be used in conjunction with the presentation, or
as a stand-alone resource on sports parenting issues will be distributed.
You can contact CSP through the Institute for International Sport
at csp@internationalsport.com
or (401) 874-2375 for more information.
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POOR
SPORTSMANSHIP (webmaster) |
N.J.
youth football coach arrested
for role in brawl. Coach may face 1½ years in prison and
a $10,000 fine.
Parent
and Coach Fistfight at Youth Hockey Game - The brawl began when
the father of a player from the visiting team lost his temper and
started screaming and cursing at the kids from the opposing side.
The referee kicked him out of the arena but it didn't end there.
After the game, the coach of the Connecticut Wolves tracked that
father down, chewed him out and then beat him down. Read more.
Violence
increasingly part of youth sports.
Brawls, assalts, even deaths part of troubling unsportsmanlike trend
It was the most infamous
moment in Stockton sports last year, 36-year-old Cory Petero, an
assistant youth football coach , charging onto the field to blind
side a 13-year-old opposing player.
A few months later, there
was another such incident - spectators pouring from the stands after
a fight between girls basketball players Joyelle Amick of St. Mary's
High and Fremont's Williko Hudson.
The Stockton incidents and numerous others
elsewhere - such as the fatal brawl between Massachusetts hockey
fathers in 2000, and the case of a French tennis parent charged
with poisoning his child's opponents in 2006 - suggest there has
been a decline in recent years in the principle of sportsmanship
at the high school and youth sports levels. Read more.
When
Parents Behave Badly at Kids' Sporting Events - Jeff Leslie
still remembers the little girl standing on the mound, trying to
play ball. "She was pitching out there and all of a sudden
she broke down crying," the volunteer president of the Jupiter-Tequesta
Athletic Association recalls. "The coach went out to talk to
her and she said, 'My dad is embarrassing me to death.'"
The child, like many others, had a father
who spent much of his time during the game yelling and screaming
at coaches, and at members of opposing teams. It is with such children
in mind that Leslie's six thousand member league has decided to
require parents to attend a mandatory "ethics" course.
Read more.
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TEEN
SLEEP DEPRIVATION (webmaster) |
Teen
Sleep Deprivation A Serious Problem - Think you're sleep-deprived?
Consider the schedule of this typical 14-year-old: He rises at 6
a.m. to go running. Then he dresses, eats breakfast, and arrives
at high school in time for his first class at 7:40. After school,
there are piano lessons and homework, in addition to Boy Scouts
and other activities. He usually falls asleep by 10 or 11 p.m. --
and must fight the temptation to doze throughout his morning classes
the next day. But wait, you say. He's managing nearly eight hours
a night -- an amount some working parents would kill for. What's
wrong with that? Find out.
Sleep
Deprivation - Most of us feel sleep deprived. In fact, in a
recent "Sleep in America" poll by the National Sleep Foundation,
almost 2/3rds of Americans say they don’t sleep well at least
three nights a week. Half of all adults can’t get up without
an alarm and on average, we're getting less than 7 hours of sleep
per night. Lots of very good information offered here.
Sleep:
Understanding the Basics - A very in-depth, multi-page, informative
article you should read.
Schools
Waking Up to Teens' Unique Sleep Needs: Some officials are pushing
back start times to give students the slumber their biology craves.
Brown University Prof. Mary Carskadon thinks most U.S. school systems
should pay close attention to what she found in the saliva of teenagers.
If they did, she said, high schools would start later than they
do, and teachers would educate students about a subject as basic
as reading and math: sleep.
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SPORTS:
WHEN WINNING IS THE ONLY THING, CAN VIOLENCE BE FAR AWAY? -
The acceptance of body contact and borderline violence seems to
be based on the idea that sports is an area of life in which it
is permissable to suspend usual moral standards. Studies show that
athletes commonly distinguish between game morality and the morality
of everyday life. A college basketball player says, "In sports
you can do what you want. In life it is more restricted". A
football player says, "The football field is the wrong place
to think about ethics." Read more.
Violence
in Sports. ERIC Digest 1-89 - Sports violence can be defined
as behavior which causes harm, occurs outside of the rules of the
sport, and is unrelated to the competitive objectives of the sport.
Leonard identifies two forms of aggression in sports. Instrumental
aggression is non-emotional and task-oriented. Reactive aggression
has an underlying emotional component, with harm as its goal. Violence
is an outcome of reactive aggression. Read more.
A
Coach's Letter to Parents - Here are some hints on how to make
this a fun season, with lots of positive memories for your kids
and your family.
Kids'
games can bring out the worst in parents - This is a letter
to parents from a coaches wife. A pretty good letter/article, and
I recommend reading it.
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Sexual
misconduct in schools extensive - Department of Education study
documents crisis that demands action, not rhetoric, from lawmakers
and school officials. U.S. Department of Education released a study
by a Hofstra University professor analyzing sexual mistreatment
of K-12 students by teachers and other adult school workers and
volunteers. The report, ordered by Congress, generated lots of headlines,
but was treated superficially by many media outlets. Read more.
Coaches
continue working for schools and private teams after being caught
for sexual misconduct - The bond between athlete and coach can
be powerful, and the one between a 15-year-old Port Townsend girl
and a 34-year-old basketball coach was especially strong. The girl,
raised in a troubled home, saw Randy Sheriff not only as a mentor
on dribbling and jump-shooting, but as surrogate parent, confidant,
and "the greatest dad in the world." Read more.
Misconduct
often goes unpunished by districts - When a friend told coach
Stu Gorski in 1995 that Mount Adams School District had hired "a
phenomenal wrestling coach," Gorski froze. "Tell me you
didn't hire Randy Deming," he pleaded. The district had. Gorski,
a football and golf coach in Whatcom County, knew Deming for years
as a rival coach at nearby Blaine High School. Gorski also knew
of Deming's reputation as a groper of girls who had even been charged
with child molestation. Read more.
State
failing to weed out unfit coaches - When the Tahoma High School
boys basketball coach stepped outside his apartment with a star
player on the girls basketball team, he didn't know an investigator
for the district was lurking nearby with a video camera. Read more.
Unregulated
private coaching ripe for abuse - Every year during basketball
season, the stories would come out, passed in the bleachers from
parent to parent: Coach Tony Giles molested his players. Read more.
Stories
on misconduct by coaches overcame effort to shield records -
Like a one-two punch, today's investigative report on sexual misconduct
by youth coaches assaults our sensibilities. The first blow is the
sickening story of coaches who prey on the girls in their charge;
the second is the system that allows it. Read more.
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FEATURED
WEB SITES (webmaster) |
ToneTeen.com
- A kids and teens resource for health and fitness. ToneTeen was
created to educate kids & teens about health and fitness. With
free access to articles, exercises, charts, and many other useful
tools, ToneTeen hopes to inspire and motivate children & teens
to develop healthy habits that will last a lifetime.
iVillage
- Ah, the teen years. Your child is probably bursting with independence,
but you know she's still in need of a guiding hand. Here, all the
info you'll need to do the job well.
teenadvice.com
- There's a lot of very good material here. Look it over, and plan
on spending some time. Read the information on pear
pressure. Very good. |
CONTROLLING
RELATIONSHIPS (webmaster) |
BOOK
- But I Love Him: Protecting Your Teen Daughter from Controlling,
Abusive Dating Relationships. Parents of teen daughters listen up:
according to Dr. Jill Murray, more than one in three girls will
be involved in an abusive relationship. But I Love Him gets to the
heart of this scary topic as painlessly as possible. With so much
focus on physical concerns these days, it's not often that such
emotional issues are confronted early enough to prevent them from
becoming physical as well. Find out more.
Teen
Dating Abuse Survey 2006: a 16 page downloadable PDF report.
In March 2006, Liz Claiborne Inc. commissioned Teenage Research
Unlimited (TRU) to conduct a survey to delve deeper into the issue
of teen dating abuse, gauging the degree to which teens have been
involved in abusive/controlling relationships, and to understand
youth perceptions regarding what is and is not acceptable behavior
in a relationship.
The findings were astounding. The results
show that alarming numbers of teens experience and accept abusive
behavior in dating relationships, and that the problem gets worse
as teens get older and into more serious relationships. Many teens
also feel physically and sexually threatened. Read this brief, and
download the full report.
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