vendredi 24 avril 2015
Advice to Sports Parents: Stress Fun, Building Skills
Advice to Sports Parents: Stress Fun, Building Skills
With the increasing focus in youth sports on success, I tell parents
that to help their child be the best they can be in their sport, there
are three main points they should stress, all of which emphasize
positive reinforcement as their overriding theme:
1. Train-to-trust
It is important for kids to understand the importance of staying focused
during practice to learn the skills they will need to perform at their
best in competition. Even if the drills sometimes seem boring, kids
need to know that they serve a purpose; that repetitive drills during
practice enables them to execute those skills under game pressure.
Tip: Two excellent catch-phrases you can use to reinforce this
message are "practice-to-play" and "train-to-trust," so on game day,
you can say to your child, "You have done the hard work in practice, now
trust your feelings, reactions and body today. Believe in yourself."
2. Have fun, not expectations
Your child will perform at their best in competition if they don't fear failure or success, and instead just play for the sake of playing. Remind them that you won't be there to judge their performance,
and that they shouldn't be judging themselves either. Taking this
approach will free up their energy, so instead of experiencing stress in
the heat of competition, they will be having fun.
Tip: A great way to drive home this message in a concrete way is
to ask your child to write down their goals on an index card before you
leave for the game, then put the card in a box, close the lid, and leave
the box at home, not to be opened again until after you return home.
3. Internalize motivation
Ask your child to play for the pure joy of playing, not for external rewards like a trophy or blue-ribbon. Athletes who have a passion for their sport (e.g. are intrinsically motivated), who play sports because of the way it makes them feel, are the ones who achieve success in the long-run.
Tip: Be on the lookout for signs
that your child isn't having fun. Make sure your child knows that they
should only continue playing a sport if they are having fun. If it
isn't fun, tell them you will be happy to sit down with them after the
season to determine if another sport might be a better fit for them,
emotionally, mentally and/or physically.
Read more: http://www.momsteam.com/5-7/advice-sports-parents-stress-fun-building-skills#ixzz3YGCht1Ed
About: Unknown
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