Recent years have been marked by a rise of almost epic proportion in the number of incidents at youth sports events involving assaults and violence, including a now-famous case of two fathe
PLEASE READ CAREFULLY AND ANSWER ALL QUESTIONS
CITE SOURCES PROPERLY USING STRICT APA 7TH ADDITION FORMAT
REQUIRED READING WILL BE ATTACHED FOR THE ASSIGNMENT
ASSIGNMENT #2
This is not just some ordinary father, this is a well-respected person in the community who just lost his mind for a moment. And you talk to him the next day; he can’t even believe that that
was him. But this is something that happens, that people just lose it, literally lose it. —Claude Grubair, Athletic Director, Ransom Everglades School, Miami, FL (as cited in Mullane,
2015k)
Recent years have been marked by a rise of almost epic proportion in the number of incidents at youth sports events involving assaults and violence, including a now-famous case of two fathers of 12-year-old boys who got into a physical fight at a hockey practice that resulted in the death of one and a prison sentence for the other (Osnos, 2002). While this may seem like an extreme example, the term “sports rage” has become accepted in the arena of youth sports. Officials, parents, and coaches have been tied to verbal abuse, physical confrontations, assault and battery, and violence. This bad behavior is antithetical to the purposes of youth sport related to character development. Research has shown that children play sports at the youth level primarily to have fun, but with the increased pressure that parents and coaches are placing on these participants, the “winning at all costs” mentality has taken over, to the point where “sports rage” is a reality. What do you think makes parents so angry that they would engage in a physical fight in front of their children? What drives this rage? > Use the Weekly Learning Materials for your assignment. Instructions Research and view a video on youth sports rage, such as the Violence and Bad Parenting in Youth Sports piece in your Learning Materials. Submit by Sunday, 11:59 p.m. ET, a 4-page paper that includes the following:
• Considering both the media you viewed and the situation you described, incorporate factors you believe contributed to the rage (e.g., fear, ego, greed). Which of these or combination of these factors do you think were responsible, and why?
• Of these factors, which were the most relevant factors influencing the rage incident, and why?
• What were some of the ethical issues, and how you would rectify these issues? • What relevant ethical theories you explored in Week 1 apply to this situation? • Have you experienced any of the issues raised in this video? What happened? Discuss
the consequences. If not, consider an example from the media. Given the issues, how would you handle this if you were a coach or parent? What are some alternate ways this situation could have been handled so as to avoid these consequences?
PLEASE READ CAREFULLY AND ASNWER ALL QUESTIONS!
,
f. '
Putting the Youth Back Into Youth Sports SusanP.Mullane,Ph.D,AssociateProfessor,Univers#yof Miami-
Introduction It is generally.•acknowledged
a that sports participa
tion teaches character and leadership skills that can be·appUed later in life. Teamwork, communica tion, peaceful resolutionto conflic~ goal setting,
W motivation,·and development of a strong work ethic are seen as some of the positive aspects of sports
~ participatio~.In addition,certain values and princi- ples are associated with being engaged in athletic·
W activities,such as respect (for rules and people), – integrjty,competition,honesty,safety,fairness,trust,> responsibility,compassionand sportsmanship.
W.The extent to which ethical issues play an important N role in the climate of contemporary schoolscan be LL seenin the results of a number of recent studies. In
a 2004 survey of 4200 high school athletes by the rv CharacterCountsCoalition,12% of males and 3% ~ of feqi:tles admittedto using performance enhanc W ing di.'ugs in the past year. l.dditionaliy, 69% of
males ®,d 50% of the females in the study admitted W that tlie~ h~d bullie4, teased, or taunted someonein a.the p~frear, and 55% of males acknowledged
using rj!.cial slurs (New Survey Shows, 2004). A 200ti~tirveyof 5,275 high schools athletes revealed that1µgli. involved cheatschool students in athletics irisi:)lct9lat a higher rate than their non-athlete coupt~i:parts(JosephsonInstitute,2006).In yet an-
. qtlfei}tiidy, 27% of participants admittedacting like'~~~d sport, 14% said they believed cheatingis atlac~~ptablebehavior,32% consider arguingwith o~~~ to be a part of the game, and 13 % admitted tijilig'.t'r1111rt Bredemeier,;m opponent (Shields, i~Y?t:&;Power, .2005).
YqWig'athletesare increasingly the subjects of news s.ts~#jout negative incidentsin sports.' Recently,a 1~. ear, pld boy was. chargedwith murder for a fatal a • a baseb~ bat on another boy who
· t .•. about losing a basebali game ("Califor- n,µi..~-year-oldchargedin a baseball bat kllllng," i.QOz)J.,¥thica!,issues involving school settings are !J,Qf~ted to students,but also involve coachesand g./ll'e~~fln.arecentstudy of 803 athletes rangingin (lg~fr~ni9 to 15 years old, 189 parents, and 61 Y.?ii!iP poor behavior parentsOrtcoaches, among .a,n~c9~cheswas consistently repo1ied.Amongpar ~~;1_3.%acknowledgedangrily criticizing their lilld'
of parents and coaches steppingover the line at sportingeventsand engaging in aggressive and vio lent behavior. Heinzmann(2003), defines sports rage as "any physical attack upon another person (withina sport setting) such as striking, wounding, or otherwise touchingin an offensive manner, and/or malicious, verbal.abuseor sustained harass ment which threatens subsequentviolenceor bod ily harm" (p. 1). Examples can be found of a father shooting a football coach because of the coach'streatmentof his son, a father being beaten to death by another parent at a youth hockey game, 4 and 5 year olds watching parents brawling at a t-ball game, and parents poisoning the members of an opposing team (Heinzmann, 2003).
Sportsmanship '(.ersus Gamesmanship :Understandingthe difference betweensportsman ship and its counterpart, gamesmanship,is essen tial to a discussion regardingthe problell1s plaguingsports, and specifically, youth sports. Sportsmanshiprefers to the virtuous perspectiveor the way that sport participation ought to be. It in cludes winning the right way, being willing to lose gracefully,having appropriate respect for oppo nents and officials, understandingand abiding by the spirit of the rules, and putting competition into perspectiveGosephson,2005). Good sportsman ship occurs when teanimates, opponents,coaches and officials treat each other with respect. Itcan take the form of small gestures or heroic deeds;' or somethingas simple as shaking hands after a game and acknowledging good plays made by others and acceptingbad calls with grace. It includesaccept ing losing and losing gracefully. In addition, sports manshipincludesplayingfair,playinghard, and full commitmentto participation, followingrule{>,re i;pectingthe decisions of officials and coaches, and demonstratingrespect for on-eself, one's team mates, officials, opponents,and coaches on ·both sides. Good sportsmanship involvesself control, courage,and persistence, and avoiding displaysof bad temper. To be a good spo~ one does not have a "win at all costs" attitude, but rather a love and appreciationof'the sport and a genuine sense of enjoymentfrom participation.
<:. •. S,Performance(Shields,et al.) Gamesmanship, aton the other hand, is the winning all costs mentality, and is the way that sports "is" ?0~~~~ are increasingly reportedas being involved rather than how it should be. ItincludeslookingforJf.~~gttsmanllke b~haviors, behaviorsthat often exceptionsto the rules, fake fouls, illegal maneuvers, 3:v~ ~ethical overtones. For example, a 2005 sur- or strategies such as head starts, taunting to gain an vey reveaJed that 8% of coaches admitted to en advantage,intentionallyinjuringanother player, andc~ill:~g their players t~ hurt an opponent, 7% intimidationor espionage Gosephson,2005). While c91~dpnedcheating,and 33% admitted yellingat winningis commonly the goal in an athletic conies~pliiy~rsfor making mistakes Shields,et al.). it is the pervasive notion that it is the most impo1iant
A r.eiativ~ly ne.wphenomenon,sports rage, has de-, aspect of the contest that often causes unethicalbe velopedlnrecent years with an increasing number havior and even violencein sports.
'..28 Th1,: FAHPERDS Tournal
A popular Nike adve1ilsement in the 1996 Olympic Gamessent the message that "you don't win the sil ver, you lose the gold" and the famous NFL football coach, Vince Lombardi,is often quoted as saying "winningisn't everything, it's the only thing." These examplesperpetuatethe notion that winning is the ·mostimportantgoal in sports, and to be successful, one must attain that goal in whatever manneravail able.Itis also a perspective that is not necessarily consistentwith what ls considered appropriateethi cal behavior.
The Problem In our current society, youth sports are more or ganizedthan ever for a pl~thora of reasons, includ ing increasing neighborhoodcrime, !IlOre working parents, and fewer opportunities for informal par ticipation.These reasons, in addition to competi tion and pressure for limited spots on high school teams, have led parents to enroll their children in organizedsports, and sometiIJ?.es Inevitably,several. adult volunteers and coaches talce over. Depending on their values, philosophies, and perspectives on "winning,"a new set of pressures is introduced,
A i990 survey of 10,000 high school athletes con ducted by the Youth Sports Institute at·Michigan State University, revealedthat the number one rea son boys and girlsparticipatein sports is to have fun. Further, lack of having fun was identified as the leadtngreason for participants droppingout of sports. Though winning in itself is funand losing can be painful, winning is not essential to enjoy ment or even a major incentive to participate. In fac½winningwas ranked 12th by girlsand 8t1 by boys as a reason for sports participation. Approxi mately70-80% of youth athletes drop out of sports by age 12, and 50% of youth athletes drop out by age 10. It is estimated that 46 milllon American childrenparticipatein youth sports; thus 34.5 mil lion are expected to drop out by middle school (OrganizedYouthSports, 1999).
It appears that the focus on winning ls the central theme for the pressure youth participants feel from parents, coaches, and themselves. Though only .02% of high school athletes will makeit to the pro fessionalleaguesor even receive a college scholar ship (Knox, 2007), the pressure begins early. The Vice President of Youth Developmentfor the Al liance for Youth Sports, Fred Engh,·points out that competitionis so emphasized that the recreation has been taken out of recreational sports. He blames this phenomenon on putting too much pressureon the kids. He further notes that across the country, kids are dropping out of sports be cause the adults are draining all thefunout of it. He points to burnout, emphasis on competition, and lack of enjoyment. He reminds us that for everykid who quits, there is anotheiless talented
child wanting toplaybutnevergels a chance. Most importantly,the trend comes at a time when public schoolsare cutting back on sports programs, and obesityhas become a national epidemic(Engh, 1999).Indeed, according to Lustberg and Deitch (2005), the very clear message childrenreceive earlyistowin.
ParentalinvolvementJn youth sports has also made . childhoodgames less about having fun and more about training and competing for the topspo4
. landinga college ~cholarship or launching a lucra- five professional career.Whileoften living vicari-
•'" ously through their children, someparents steer . their children Into specializing Inonesport. Burnoutis one serious side effect of the pressure placed on youth participants. mds begin playlng organizedsports at a very young age, somelimes as youngas 3 years old. Bythe lime they are 6 or 7, half their lives have been spent in sports. Given the availabilityof travel teams, in many cases there ls no off-season. Safetyis another issue. Weiss (2006) citesDr.James an orthopedist Anderson, and a founder of the American SportsMedlclneInstitute,
• who points out that often the bestyoungathletes are at the greatest rlsk of injury,somelimesbecause the coach often leaves them in the game the longest,and during championship eventsmight [!Venplay them in back to back games.
~ additionto the issues outlined therep.rev.lously, another serious by-product of the pressures' ced on young athletes. Heinzmann(2003), Isoutthatalthoughseekingexcellenceisvalu- ; the winning-at-all-costs can und~ mentality
. e a child's physical and social development, ni an educational perspective,this, above all, implicationsfor teachers, who often take on
g responsibilities, and volunteer coachesln ~th sports.
j
,otential Solutions
ferms of solutions, shnPJrput, we should reduce . pi;essureon w.illning and emphasize teaching ·dren the positive aspects of sports participation. ox (2007) suggests that as adult fans we have to
e that every player on each team goes out and to do his/her best, and that the everyday emo-
tio.nalstress that teenagers experience can have a · -effecton their performance in a game, He calls . biinging back sportsmanship and civility tohigh
, _ool sports. Josephson advocatesa "T.H.A.M." trach, enforce, advocate, mod~) strategy for char- Jer building in -sports. His emphasis lies in the
ortance of the coach to exhibit good, ethical be- .: v.ior that youth athletes willhopefullyemulate. , . elds and Bredemeier (1995) offer specific sug- !!5tlonsfor coaches, Including concentratingon e integrated development of the child, tailoring !!irstylestothe appropriate agelevel of the pat'-
.., cipant, mlnlmizing external motivation for particl- J?.ation,givingparticipantsas much responsibility as
possibletopromotedecisionmaking skilis, and meetingwith parents to make them aware of their coachingphilosophy.For example, if a coach wants to focus on winning rather than equal particlpation, then that coach needs todeliverthat message to parents and part!clpants who might then be able to make an alternate choice.Itisimportantthat par- enls and coaches do not send outmixed messages.
Addltionalremedlesmight Include certification programs,ethics and sportsm3!1shlp andtraining, clinicsfor both coaches and parent9i and sportsmanshiprewards for athletes and coaches. Accordingto Lancaster (2002), there are 7 prlnclplesthat should apply to youth sports programs:(1) makeitfun, (2) limit standing around,·(3) everyone plays, (4) teach every positionto every participant,(5) emphasize fundamentals,(6) Incorporatea progresslon of skill development for every participant,and(J) yell encouragementand whisper constructivecriticism.
The Montana High Association withSchool joined US Bank in a partnership goodsupporting sportsmanship.It has a sportsmanship programin placethat includes the requirement of an on-site administratorwho has completed coursesand clinicsin sportsmanship,includingthe dl.fference betweensportsmanshipand gamesmanship, rules for coaches, players, students, and fans, and leadershiptraJnlng/workshops.It also has an elaboraterecognitionand sportsmanship reward programfor players, officials, parents, and fans ("MHSAIUSBankSportsmanshipPartnership," 2008). Additionally, the Josephson Instituteoffersa detailedsportsmanshipprogram entitled "Pursuing VictorywithHonor."Characterbuildinglnltiatives areembeddedJn many sportsmanship programs across the country.
Conclusion
In many cases, youth sports and its various con- st!tuencies,(parents, coaches, and athletes), are out of control. Basic principles of recreation, sports- manship,andfunhave been sacrlftced by the need towlnat all costs. Since there appears to be a natu- raIprogressionin sports from one level to the next, <;mecould argue that some of the ethical break- downsseenln collegeand profession sports had their genesis ln high school and youth sports. There- fore, perhaps ifyouthsports could be cleaned up, thiscould help toeliminateproblemsin the future. · The adults, parents and coaches, need to encourage young athletes to participate in• sports for the right reasonsand to put winning in its proper perspec- tive.A renewed empha:;is on sportsmanship and a de-emphasison gamesmanship at the earliest levels is necessary tolay a solid foundation for the future.
References
California13 year-old-chal'ged in a baseball bat killing,(2005, April). Retrieved February 12,
2008, from http://www.mo.msteam.com/alpha/ news/13Jeacold charged_in _basebaILbat_ killing.shtrnl..
Engh, R (1999), WhyJohnny hates sports. New York·"Avery.
Helnzniailn,G. (2003, November 25).Parentalvt- o!encein youth sports: Facts, myths, and video- tape.RetrievedFebruary5, 2008, from http:// 11 youthsports.rutgers.edu/pdf/parental.violence.pdf,f11 Josephsoninstituteof Ethics. (2004, September). New survey shows high school sportsfilled with f11 cheatingimpropergamesmanshipand confit· ;a slonaboutsports.RetrievedDecember12, 2007, from http://charactercounts.org/ spo~survey/ 20041. ;a JosephsonInstituteof Ethics (2006, October). f11 2OO6/osephson cardontheinstitut6tvJpor~ ethics of American youth: Part one. Retrieved < January 17, 2008, from http://www.josephson.org/ – pdf/ReportCardpress-release_20o6-1013.pdf. f11 Josephson,M. (2005).,ATrainingprogramfo1• coachesonethics, sportsmanship andcharacter building.Retrieved 18, 2005,.from January http:// charactercounts.org/sports/Olympir/Olympic- report-missionvalues.htm.
Knox,D. (2007), High school and middle school athletics:now ls the lime? Coach&AthleticDirec- tor,January,1-3.
Lancastei;S. B. (2002).FalrP!ay: organ-Making ized sports agreatexperienceforyourkids. New York:PrenticeHall.
Lustberg,R., &Deitch, C, (2005,January 24),The hypocrisy of youth sport. RetrievedFebruary 5, 2008, from http://buzzle.com.editorlals/10-l- 2004-59984.asp:
MHSAlllS pat'lnershipBank sportsmanship . (2008). Retrieved October28, 2008, from www.rnhsa.org/Sportsmanship/Sportsmanship Program2008.pdf.
Organizedyouth sports today-Troubling signals from youth sports. (1999). Retrieved February 12, 2008, from www.thecenterforkidsfirst.org/pdf/ The_Facts_about_Youtb,_Sports.pdf.
Shields,D,L.& Bredemeier, B,L. (1995).Charac- ter development and physical activity. Cham- pafgn, IL: Human mnettcs.
Shields,D,L., Bredemeier, B.L.,La.Vol,N.M., & Power,R C, (2005). The Sport J:iehavior of youth, parents, and coaches: The Good, the bad, and the u'l).y.Journalof Research In Character ,:j Education 3 (1), 43-59,
Weiss,M.J. (2006, April). The Agony of defeat. RetrievedAugust,2007, from http://www.rd.com/
~ Pl 0
family/parenting/kids/safety/young-athletes-and- the-danger-of-victory/PVarticle.ht.
The FAHPERDS Journal 29
,
''Hey, data data — sWing!''
The hidden demographics of youth sports
Originally Published: July 11, 2013 By Bruce Kelley and Carl Carchia IESPN The Magazine
• Rec01n111end391. • Tweet121 • Co1111nents1 • E1nail II
· http://espn.go.com/ espn/story/ ___jid/9469252/hidden-demographics-youth-sports-espn-magazine 3/20/2014
Hidden demographics of youth sports – ESPN The Magazine – ESPN Page 2 of 21
COMPETITIVE YOUTH SPORTS may be as American as apple pie, but we know a lot less about youth sports than we do about apple pie.
The problem is that while the FDA takes responsibility for knowing everything about our food (as the EPA does with the environment and a group called ARDA does with religious life), no one agency or organization monitors youth sports either as a central part of American childhood or as an industry. (And it is an industry. The Columbus Dispatch .:….:::::….~~=-==c..::….:..==in 2009 and found that nonprofit sports groups alone, from the AAU to the thousands of cash-strapped parent-run community leagues, have $5 billion a year pass through their coffers.) So we are left with a Wild West of local and regional organizations in dozens of sports and no better odds of getting pinpoint data than of counting all the tumbleweeds blowing across the land.
Yet research has been done; there are smart academics and organizations in search of answers. As part of ESPN's summer 2013 Kids in Sports focus, we mined the often hidden-away data to paint as comprehensible a portrait of the nation's cmnpetitive youth sports landscape as we could.
1. Youth sports is so big that no one knows quite how big it is.
How many American kids play competitively on teams or clubs? No one has ever conducted a census. Still, it's worth looking at the various counts, even if they all are flawed.
For starters, the Sports and Fitness Industry Association (SFIA), which employs tens of thousands of online interviews, tallies how many kids between 6 and 17 are regular/frequent ( or what it calls "core") players of different sports. These "core" numbers make a decent stand-in for kids who play on organized teams, even though that's not the question asked; what's asked is whether a kid played that sport a minimum of 13 times a year in a sport like ice hockey or 26 times a year in a sport like soccer. SFIA gave ESPN The Mag custom data totaling up its 2011 participation.
http://espn.go.com/espn/story/_/id/9469252/hidden-demographics-youth-sports-espn-magazine 3/20/2014
Hidden demographics of youth sports – ESPN The Magazine – ESPN Page 3 of 21
1.0
That adds up to 21.4 7 million kids between 6 and 1 7, or more than the population of Texas in 2000. That's big.
Competitive sports look bigger in a survey of students done by Don Sabo, a longtime youth-sports researcher and a professor at D'Y ouville College in Buffalo. He queried a research sample of 2,185 students in 2007 for the Women's Sports Foundation and found that 75 percent of boys and 69 percent of girls from 8 to 17 took part in organized sports during the previous year — playing on at least one team or in one club. Do the math on the 39.82 million U.S. students ages 8 to 17 in 2011 and that would be 28. 7 million of them playing organized sports, more than the population of Texas today plus most of Oklahoma. This chart shows the participation rate of Sabo's sample.
Whichever estimate you have faith in, it's far below the actual total, because it doesn't count the millions of kids who start before age 6 or 8.
http://espn.go.com/ espn/story/ _/id/9469252/hidden-demographics-youth-sports-espn-magazine 3/20/2014
Hidden demographics of youth sports – ESPN The Magazine – ESPN Page 4 of21
STUDENTSWHOAREINVOLVED IN AT LEAST ONE SPORTORGANIZED
59% 80%
78% 76%
59% 68%
81% 89%
70% 81%
69% 71%
73% 69%
69% 71%
65% 66%
AREALREADYON TEAMS BY AGE B.
2. Kids start by kindergarten, unless …
No research tries to count the 2-year-olds everywhere being taught by their dads to shoot like Trick Shot Titus of Jimmy Kimmel fame or the 4-year-olds playing in Itty -Bitty and Munchkins leagues that let parents stand by their kids during the games. But Don Saba's research for the Women's Sports Foundation does try to catch early starters, and it confirms what you already sense, either because you're a parent or you drive by fields filled with them: Lots of kids start playing on teams before they start attending school.
But which kids? Saba's analysis distinguishing the early starters from the students who don't begin until third or fourth grade speaks to several unsurprising truths about youth sports. Girls start an average of half a year later than boys, and kids who don't exercise start later than those who do. But we also see starkly what drives the very earliest action: money. The biggest indicator of whether kids start young, Sabo found, is whether their parents have a household income of $100,000 or more.
And you know where most of those families live, right?
http://espn.go.com/espn/story/_/id/9469252/hidden-demographics-youth-sports-espn-magazine 3/20/2014
Hidden demographics of youth sports – ESPN The Magazine – ESPN Page 5 of21
llitUi:[email protected]@•dl%iitn-lilti
GHl □ ER 0
BOYS6.8 0 0
GIRLS7.4 0
RACE/ ETHNICITV
CAUCASIAN6.6 AFRICAN- HISPANIC8.2 AMERICAN7.7
MARITALSTAJUS MARRIED6.8 SINGLE/NEVERMARRIED8.8
CHILDEXERCISE FREQUENCY
DAILY6.8 <ONCEAWEEH8.9
HOUSEHOLD <35H8.1 INCOME
3. The suburban soccer mom (and dad) is based in fact.
Indeed, Saba's WSF data paints a distinct picture of suburbs where swaths of kids in elementary and middle school, especially boys, play on three, four or five teams, and the culture revolves around their practices, tourneys and getting to their games. In contrast, childhood in cities and rural areas isn't as intensely sports-focused.
http://espn.go.com/ espn/story/ _/id/9469252/hidden-demographics-youth-sports-espn-magazine 3/20/2014
Hidden demographics of youth sports – ESPN The Magazine – ESPN Page 6 of 21
IIMi'Wl•IHth•lf•hllMillU:IH MOST LIKELY GROUPS
SUBURBANSUBURBAN URBAN SUBURBANAFFLUENT ~IFIDTO 5TH GHlrn8TH rmt rn om :3BDTO 5'111 GRACIEDOV:; fiRAOl·.BOYS GRMlEBOYS GRM)Emm..r:
LEAST LIKELY GROUPS
;JBIJTO8TH GF!AOEfilfllf::
[c:H5KHH INCIJMEl
URBAN LOW-INCOMERURAL RURAL LOW-INCOME 3ROTri8111 3BDlU 5TH HlHTOfiTfl 31mmsrn3RDTOfiTH
GRADEBOYS:rrnAnErnnrn GRADEmnu; GRADEnmts1mrmEGIFlUl [,.; :)FiK HHlf4COMF) f"~fiH HH lt!Cfl~WJ
The suburbs clearly aren't alone in their obsession: Kids all over America play sports, which means a large portion of families fo
Collepals.com Plagiarism Free Papers
Are you looking for custom essay writing service or even dissertation writing services? Just request for our write my paper service, and we'll match you with the best essay writer in your subject! With an exceptional team of professional academic experts in a wide range of subjects, we can guarantee you an unrivaled quality of custom-written papers.
Get ZERO PLAGIARISM, HUMAN WRITTEN ESSAYS
Why Hire Collepals.com writers to do your paper?
Quality- We are experienced and have access to ample research materials.
We write plagiarism Free Content
Confidential- We never share or sell your personal information to third parties.
Support-Chat with us today! We are always waiting to answer all your questions.