Advertisement
AB Newswire

Home Account Search
ABC: 'Let's Talk Sports' Aims to Reach Youngest Athletes
Youth sports aren’t what they were 30 years ago, when kids organized their own games and played wherever space allowed. Today, youth sports is highly organized and structured, and children often are under immense pressure to perform their best. Those who don’t spend their time on the benches, where they’re missing out not just on the opportunity to hone their physical skills, but the essential life skills that naturally develop. On Thursday at the Athletic Business Conference, after a session on how to set up successful relationships and field management arrangements with the volunteer sports organizations overseeing a greater percentage of youth sports, the National Alliance for Youth Sports unveiled its newest online program, Let’s Talk Sports.

Developed and presented by Dr. Michael Gray, an exercise physiologist from Northern Kentucky University, the program is a way to reach out to early-elementary-school-aged athletes and help develop life skills gained from sports participation, such as leadership, self-discipline, sportsmanship, and teamwork. The online program features a lesson related to each skill, asking children to identify which of a set of sports-related examples represents a certain skill. Parents are asked to discuss the possibilities with their children, and a narrator explains why each example is correct or incorrect, ultimately aiming to provide a better understanding of what a certain skill is and how to demonstrate that skill.

The new program was tested among 200 participants, and the response from both parents and children was excellent. This is only the beginning, Gray said, as NAYS looks at other ways to expand the program, bringing it into schools or reformatting it for older age groups.
Posted At 6:48 AM • Comments (4)

I believe this program could be done at the Elementary School level with parents and students based on a desire of the parents.

Most of the time students are pushed by
parents to get out there and do something.
This is good, but the students need to want
to do it. Usually it goes with peer pressure.

The more peer pressure to participate in
and activity the more the student will want
to do it to be part of a group, it doesn't matter
what the activity is Arts, Music or Sport. You
have the same situations.

Communications in the early elementary years
is good. Educating the parents to listen to their
children and their needs is important.

Looking forward to see have this program comes into play.
Comment By Paul Campbell At 12/1/2012 6:57 AM
The program was piloted at the Ocean City Recreation & Parks Department in Ocean City, Maryland.

Parents and children were both excited to see what the program was all about, especially after seeing the promotional video.

After completing the program, parents and children were asked to complete a survey.
Comment By Al Hondo Handy At 12/10/2012 9:22 PM
'Lets Talk Sports Video' updated. If you have not check out the video online, log on to letstalksports.nays.org it will be a great addition to your youth programs. The program can also be introduced to your area schools. It's Free!
Comment By Al Hondo Handy At 1/27/2013 10:14 PM
The Lets Talk Sports program has been implemented in Worcester County Schools, in Maryland. The first School system in the nation to adopt the program. The program was a partnership with the Board of Education, Ocean City Recreation & Parks Department and the National Alliance For Youth Sports.
Comment By Al Hondo Handy At 4/11/2013 10:25 PM
Comments :
 
Name :
Email :
       
 
Comments :





Facebook   Twitter   LinkedIn   YouTube   YouTube   AB Forum   ABC & Expo

Advertisement



Advertisement



Advertisement