Friday, December 16, 2011

Seven Techniques Soccer Team Sports Make Make Children

By Teresa Opara


We have dreams for our children. While our dreams may alter, they sometimes share 1 or 2 common characteristics. We'd like our kids to be productive and ecstatic, and to feel OK about themselves. Parenting books, websites, and blogs all have their ideas for how it's possible for you to help your youngsters reach these goals. The difficulty is the advice is all over the map, and frankly kind of fuzzy. Praise, but do not overpraise. Watch, but don't hover. Ask, but do not push. Thankfully , there's one parenting tip that is clear, short, and so far as I am able to tell, undisputed.



Get your kid involved in team sports. There are so many positive reasons, and unless the club or program is seriously defective, no flaws that I've seen or heard about. My children have all been concerned in team sports since their early school days. I have personally seen every one of the following benefits in action:



1. Exercise

The existing recommendation is an hour a day for healthy kids. Playing sports helps meet that goal, and not only during practices and games. Youngsters who play sports often practice their abilities at home too.



2. Friendships

Playing on a team offers a chance to forge relations in an environment outside of school. Children on a team share a standard interest in their sport. This is a great basis for a long-lasting closeness.



3. Self-esteem

Kids who play sports are encouraged to work on improving their talents. Ideally, when they do improve, they're praised and congratulated. They learn the significant lessons that tough work yields results, and that their contribution matters to the successfulness of the entire team.



4. Interpersonal Relationships

When children have to work as a team, they learn to consider the requirements of the group as well as their own. They learn to work through differences of opinion in an environment where everybody shares the same goal. They find out how to take and give positive feedback. And they learn to respectfully take instruction from coaches and officers.



5. Time Management

Children with lots of extra time don't worry much about wasting it. But if they must fit practices and games into their schedule together with college and homework, they learn how to make the optimum use of their time.



6. Family Inclusion

Sports provide a great way for the family to spend time together. Watching games and practices gives parents an ideal opportunity to take part in their kids ' interests and friendships. Talking about the game afterward also makes for some great dinner conversation.



7. Academic Accomplishment

Kids who take part at college sports have been shown to perform better at college. The talents they learn and practice in sports carry over into their educational life. Targeting and achieving their goals becomes a method of life, and that can't help but have a constructive effect on everything they do.



John F. Kennedy claimed, "physical fitness is not just one of the most significant keys to a healthy body, it is the basis of dynamic and creative intellectual activity." Inspire your children to be physically fit. Any sport will do. Let your children choose the one or several that interest them.



While my youngsters have played many sports, football is the one they basically target. Personally, I believe that's a very good thing. Soccer is great for kids of all ages. When they are young, it's extremely simple to play and take part. They just about run around with the ball learning basic footskills. As they get older, they learn more advanced skills and strategies while they grow as members of a competitive team. Best of all, each step of the way, they get to proudly wear their custom football team uniform , complete along with their personally hand-picked number prominently displayed on the back. Now that is what I call living the dream.




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