Educationally Speaking -- Gay Geiser-Sandoval
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Recently, the Pilot carried an article with a 5-year-old’s view of
competitive sports (“AYSO . . . the awesome beginning,” Nov. 8). In this
case, it was soccer, but I think the message would apply to any sport.
The essential message was: “We laugh and play at practice. We have cool
uniforms and shoes. We use magic words like please and thank you. If
someone falls down or gets an owie, we kick the ball out of bounds to
stop the game and make sure they are all right. We tell the other team
“good job” at the end of the game. Our coach tells us we are responsible
for good sportsmanship and should have respect for one another. We are
good sports.”
Compare this with a recent article that appeared in Water Polo
Scoreboard, a magazine for teen water polo players. “Intentional pinching
and twisting skin, fingers or muscles, pulling armpit hair, neck
chucking, biting, punching, kicking, kneeing and grabbing genitals are
all examples of dirty play that should not be tolerated or condoned under
any circumstances.” Gosh, when I read about these actions, I thought I
was reading about a barroom brawl, not organized teen sports.
Something is happening between the time our kids are 5 and play sports
to laugh, play and wear cool uniforms, and high school, when the intent
is to cause the opposing player injury without being caught by the
referee. Since most of water polo takes place under water, the need for
players to internalize good sportsmanship and play by the rules is
especially important. But the lack of respect for the rules is
detrimental to every sport.
The causes for this change in attitude are many, and the finger
pointingis always at the other cause. Common themes are: “It’s the
referee’s fault. If the referee isn’t going to call it when the rules are
broken, the team that plays by the rules is at a disadvantage. Thus, it
is only fair and right that each team break the rules as often as they
can.” Even those players that don’t start out to break the rules feel
justified when they retaliate.
If sports are the training ground for life, then it is essential that
playing by the rules, with or without a referee, should become the
underlying mantra for each game.
If cheating becomes acceptable and the emphasis turns to stealth in
cheating, how do we fault the kids that run the red lights when they
don’t see a police officer at the corner? How do we discipline the teen
who turns in someone else’s homework as their own or gets their test
answers by looking at a fellow student’s paper? If integrity isn’t the
goal of our sports programs and our society, can we expect the
transformation of today’s 5-year-old by our organized sports programs to
make him a better human being? Can we expect our youth to grow up willing
to follow our country’s laws even if a police officer isn’t watching?
***
A few weeks back, I wrote a column about whether students should incur
any costs when they participate in extracurricular activities at public
schools (“Put money in the students’ pockets,” Nov. 13). I thought the
cost might keep some kids from participating in these activities at all.
I said the response some parents gave to concerns over costs charged
in our district was that Edison High School charges $1,000 a student to
play football. However, this response contains incorrect information. I
have been informed it is only $600 a year to play football at Edison and
fund-raisers are provided. It was also pointed out that since public
funds for high school sports have been cut perennially, it is necessary
to charge kids for sports. I would like to apologize for the
misinformation as to the price. Forgive me, Edison fans.
GAY GEISER-SANDOVAL is a Costa Mesa resident. Her column runs
Tuesdays. She may be reached by e-mail at o7 [email protected] .
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