Tuesday, February 24, 2015
What If?
What if a child just wanted to be a child and dream different things and be different things every day and be happy and free, feeling loved and safe? What if as adults, we took joy in the very simple things our children love and supported them instead of pushed them? What if letting a child live in the moment while dreaming about the future through free play,fun creativity, and imagination, set them to a path they could enjoy and embrace instead of worry about? It takes baby steps to fix the problem. We do not want to try and change the culture the same way it manifests itself. Its all about the journey. Sometimes you have to treat the symptom to relax the patient first, then treat the disease. Peace of mind is victory
Sunday, February 15, 2015
GUEST BLOG LIFE ON THE PLAYGROUND
Life on the Playground
As a primary
school teacher for the last 10 plus years, I have always loved taking my
classes out onto the playground. You get
to know your students in a whole different way as you watch them "free
play". Children spend a large part of
their days being told what and when they are going to do things and ways to
think about things. Teachers place them
into homogeneous groups and heterogeneous groups to work on problems. Many primary teachers also assign seats so
students are told where to sit and whom to sit next to. (There are many sound educational reasons
that these decisions happen.)
Enter...the
playground. Recess, it's most kids
favorite part of the school day. I have
students who cannot tell time, but they know when recess happens. If we ever miss recess, half the class lets
me know it.
As we burst
out of the school onto the playground, choices happen and groups form almost
instantly. You have the group who loves
to swing on the swings and see whose feet can touch the sky first. Then there is another group who imagines they
are the "good" guys and the other group who are the "bad"
guys (they have to take turns on this one), and they run full speed ahead
trying to catch each other. Then you
have the group who are competing to see who can get across the overhead ladder
the fastest. And then the group who just
likes to hang out under the slide chatting.
Leaders of
those groups form and it is interesting to see how that leadership takes
shape. If leaders don't think about the
group as a whole, they are quickly ignored, and possibly avoided, and the group
quickly follows another who values the group's wishes. All of these decisions happen without an
adult orchestrating the process.
Students who might not get the opportunity to lead, because maybe
physical prowess is not valued in the classroom, get the chance to shine. Their self esteem soars!
Monday, February 9, 2015
Winning, Development, and Fun are not mutually exclusive
3 in 1
I recently
interviewed a high school varsity coach who also coached an n “elite club” team.
The sport does not matter for this discussion. Hopefully by now you know my
mantra that if it is really true, than it applies to all sports, and life. I
did not tape record this interview because quite frankly, I did not think it
was going to be anything special. I was interested in getting some more
background information on the “elite” club team mentality. Specifically, how it
applied to the younger children.
The
beginning of the interview went very well. The coach was quite open about what
he thought an “elite” player was and how his club tried to get all the younger
players pretty much equal time during the games and to stress fun.
I explained to him that was very commendable
because only 1% of the kids going to college play at the DI level and only half
of them play for free. I also told him that human beings don’t physically
develop until their early twenties so it was good to get kids as much playing
time and fun as possible. We believe in inclusion not exclusion.
What he
didn’t understand or see is that I was trying to plant an idea with him about
how he could adapt this fun philosophy to his high school team.
I was struck
by his belief in winning over development and that how he understood very few
of them would ever get a D I scholarship, but it didn’t matter to him. He had
to win to keep his job, he said. But the rub is, he had only won one sectional
championship, and then his team was loaded. Why wasn’t he open to change?
I went and watched his team practice and play
in two different games. Stunned doesn’t even begin to reveal how different his
approach was with his high school team versus the club team he coached, or the
way he said he coached. He rarely substituted. Even far ahead or behind he did
not use a lot of extra players unless it was a complete blowout. I went back to
see him for another interview.
I started by
asking him about his substitution policy as it pertained to his high school
team. He said that the reason he rarely substituted was that his starting
players needed to continue to play together so that they could form a more
cohesive unit. When I explained to him that his starters rarely completed more
than four passes in a row, he just shook his head and said the subs would
complete even less passes. These players were all mostly “elite” club players
and I wondered how they could be so weak in this department if they played on
the same “elite” club team all year.
Again, I was
stunned at the answer. He said that kids have to play on “elite” club teams if
they want to get the exposure by major colleges to get a DI scholarship. When I
asked how many kids he has sent to a DI college on a full athletic scholarship
he could not answer. When I checked around, I found the answer to be ZERO.
I then asked
him why his substitute players, (a term I dislike immensely) should practice
hard for him if they knew they would not be afforded a chance to play in a
game. He stated evenly that they were role players and knew their position on
the team was to help the starters (I dislike that term also) get better and to
push the starters in practice so that they could play better.
When I told
him I went to two of his games and saw the disgruntled players sitting on the
bench ignoring what was going on during the game he did not believe me. He said
that the substitute players weren’t good enough to play very much and that they
had not developed during the year to even suggest to him that they deserved
playing time.
When I asked
him maybe the reason they had not developed was because they felt helpless and
knew no matter what they did they would not get to play. He got upset and asked
me what the purpose of the interview really was? He suggested that I did not
know enough about his team to question him about playing time. He had won a
championship coaching in high school and played at a very high level and knew
what he was doing.
Now I could
have let it go right there but I figured since I had gone this far I might as
well ask one more question. Did he think playing more players and creating
inter team competition would help his team, keep his better players rested and
fresh, and foster a greater team chemistry? Which, of course would lead to a
higher level of play, and more victories, I believe. No he said. The weaker
players would not get better and would just bring his good layers “down” when they
were playing instead of the starters or with mixed in with them that would
wreck any team chemistry. The he added the kicker. Besides, his players wanted
him to play to win and they were content to sit on the bench.
If you think
this is an isolated incident or interview, it is not. You want to know why?
This is actually a combination of three different interviews I did with three
different coaches in three different sports. I melded their answers into one.
You can
follow VJ on Twitter @VJJStanley, face book frozenshorts, website
frozenshorts.com, email vj@frozenshorts.com, and at his office 585-743-1020
Monday, February 2, 2015
No college with my sport
No college
with my sport
For those of
you following along with my program I first want to thank you for your support.
Trying to change a culture is very difficult. Your support is truly
appreciated.
There has
been a new recent development in high school and club sports. Children are
purposely choosing colleges to attend that do not have their sport.
That is right;
a purposeful decision is being made to “Stop the Tsunami.” There can be no
parental disappointment in the child if they are attending a college that does
not have their “chosen” sport and they are not playing if the college offers
the academics the child is interested in. They go to a college a good distance
away so that the parents cant “pop in.”
I am talking
about the 99% here, not the true DI athlete with multiple offers.
Very few parents will push their children to
pick a college that they don’t want to attend. When it does happen, we see the
child go to that college for one year, still not play or play sparingly, and
then transfer to a college that does not have their sport.
We have
interviewed many of these parents and children and the disconnect between the
child’s desires and the parents’ wishes offer a stark contrast. On one hand the
child is so sick of having to play their sport year round that they see college
as an opportunity to break the chain that binds them to their parents’ wishes.
Some of the children say things to me like: “I don’t want to play anymore.” “The college that I wanted didn’t have my
sport.” “It wasn’t fun anymore.” And my favorite, “It never really was a
priority of mine.”
Others went
to a college that had their sport and
were so turned off at the prospect of doing this for another 4 years that they talked
about the coach and the commitment being overwhelming and didn’t visit another
college that had their sport.
On the other
hand the majority of parents that I talked to were genuinely surprised by their
children’s decision. Not that they were disappointed, they just didn’t see it
coming. When I explained to them what their child was probably thinking, almost
all of them, okay all of them said “now that you explain it to me, when we were
visiting colleges our child was way more interested in the non athletic parts
of the college.” Or something to that affect.
When I ran
into the child or the parent a year later the stories were almost always the
same. The child was relieved and the parent was now looking back with 20/20
vision and had the light go on!
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