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Published byJune Marsh Modified over 9 years ago
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A Safety Guide for the New Millennium
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Middle school teacher – 3 years High school teacher – 11 years English, SS, ESL, Administration National Board Certified Teacher - English
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Coached for 15 years. ◦ Head girls Broomfield, Legacy HS, BVC, Flatirons 18, 17 ◦ Assistant girls Monarch, Nederland
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◦ Head boys Nederland, Broomfield, Legacy ◦ Assistant boys Monarch, Johnson and Wales University Coaching coordinator – Flatirons VBC Parent Liaison – Flatirons VBC
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Not a personal decision Little time for deep contemplation by coach Seeking best chance for team to win ◦ Breaking their momentum ◦ Player mentally not there ◦ Player not at same skill level
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Players rarely sense they are making mistakes. Divide between players’ and coaches’ thoughts about “bad” mistakes. When to “let them play through” and when….to not. Kids’ and parents’ reaction to “being” subbed.
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Do you trust your child’s coach to these decisions or do you not?
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All parents love their children. All parents want the best life for their children. All parents want their children to be successful.
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Parents and coaches have different roles in the “raising” of children. Each child is different. Each parent is different. Each family is different. For each sport experience, it is important to set goals to measure success.
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Items for YOU directly, as parents Items for you to help your daughters
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Finish this sentence with as many indicators as you feel you need. At the end of the season, I (as a parent) will see it as a success if……
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Outcome based? ◦ Will win x amount of games / trophies / scholarships? ◦ Pay for college with this? Process based? ◦ Learn life skills? ◦ Base athletic skills? ◦ Have fun?
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How might your student-athlete complete the same sentence? At the end of the season, I (as a student-athlete) will see it as a success if……
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1. To have fun 2. To make friends 3. To improve my skills and learn to play softball the right way 4. For the excitement and challenge of competition 5. To be part of a team and learn teamwork To win was #9
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1. To have fun 2. To make friends 3. To improve my skills and learn to play baseball the right way 4. To stay in shape and get exercise 5. To be part of a team and learn teamwork. To win was #8. To earn a college scholarship was #10.
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Are there discrepancies? How you manage those gaps will define how you parent an athlete.
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Take a moment to take the Parental Pressure Gauge Survey
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To what level of your sport did you achieve? ◦ Never played? ◦ High School? ◦ College (club or varsity)? ◦ Semi-pro? ◦ Professional?
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We cannot be objective about our own kids.
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Club’s working philosophy 1) Winning…. 2) Teach life skills
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Hard work can lead to something Commitment is important Communication is essential Lessons come from failure Honoring the game
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1) Recreational, social, fitness 2) Educational 3) An honorable competitor 4) Fit for life philosophy
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Opportunity Unconditional support Motivation? ◦ Must come from athlete NOT a coach
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Surveyed group – more than 10 years coaching experience 84% - less parental interaction than in past 71% - “helpfulness” crosses into intrusiveness ◦ Favor seeking ◦ Overly protective Kids are tougher than we think. Just because they are upset does not mean we must swoop in ◦ Adversarial parents
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Your views and your athlete’s views on the balance of ◦ Winning and losing ◦ Personal growth ◦ Achieving goals ◦ Taking risks ◦ Correcting mistakes
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Female brain in adolescence ◦ Drama, drama, drama! Loss of self-control Increase in impulsive behavior Known to become unreasonable, uncommunicative, inconsolable, enraged
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Assume rather than ask / confront ◦ Assume the worst Try to read body language Friends – she should KNOW how I feel Get friends on her “side” to pump her up Escalates a non-existent issue
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“No offense but”….. ….. ”Just kidding” …. “Sorry” Rather than be honest about feelings, they try to keep up the Good Girl image.
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“You’re playing poorly” Males: look around and assume you are talking about SOMEONE else Females: Assume the coach is talking about THEM in specific
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Apply friendship rules to coaches and teachers See constructive criticism as negative criticism Coach: Feedback isn’t direct, immediate Not as helpful Less honest picture of self / skills When do we become honest – “real job”?
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Coaches – first priority is to teach Athletes – first priority is to learn A “nice” relationship with someone is not a precondition for working with or listening to him or her.
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When we were in school, if something was wrong, it was you. You were wrong. Now, the parents come back at us. When we started teaching, that just didn’t happen. You were considered professional, and if my opinion about your paper was this, that was accepted because I’m the teacher and I’m the professional. And now everything is second- guessed
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Many teachers, especially those in more affluent communities, believe they are treated no better than a customer-service representative at a store. They are selling a product, and the parents are paying customers. When the parents aren’t happy, they complain. Their children watch and learn (Simmons 86).
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Short-term success Long-term failure
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Affirm our daughters’ emotions. Consider how we teach our daughters to solve problems in our houses. Talk through the emotions she’s having. Give permission to have those emotions.
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Push her toward speaking for herself to those that can affect change – coach. Conflicts are opportunities for gain, not loss
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Identifying the distorted thoughts Checking the evidence Redirecting
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Accept consequences of actions But..steer conversation toward an accurate explanation and a solution
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Help them work through their denial. Help nurture resilience Help to tell the difference between a critique of work and a critique of self.
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Danger or abuse: Talk immediately OTHERWISE……. Is there a life lesson the athlete can learn on HER OWN? Let HER talk Be there to support the athlete, if needed (age)
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Wait 24 hours after tournaments Have athlete make an appointment ◦ Away from practice / games Pinpoint what is bothering the athlete Listen objectively Implement improvement plan
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100% support for athlete Let them talk about their issues ◦ What are THEIR issues? What are YOURS? Encourage them to talk directly to that coach Wanting to protect our children from anything uncomfortable!
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All should be working toward same goals FOR and WITH athlete
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“Siding” with athlete over the coach ◦ Saying coach is “wrong” ◦ Feel free to think that on own. ◦ Keep it to self, though! Team dynamics? ◦ Mental Skills Incident
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This is just a game Kids should be having fun – even up to that 18s age level! Cheer and love them like mad!!!
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