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26% of parents with high-school athletes think they're raising a pro. (NYT)

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I know it's easy to make fun of their blind hope, but think about it.

A lot of the parents dreaming for their kids are probably the ones who know they can't possibly afford college.
 

Frith

Member
sorry what?
is the question what percentage of parents hope for positive outcome for their kids endeavours?

i think that any kid of mine will fail and should not try.

people love to parade odds around like no one is factoring that in. this article doesn't go in to enough depth to say any of that. everyone knows its a long shot but if your asked on a survey if you want a random life win scenario to happen to your kid who the fuck would say no. Also the poorer you are the better those odds sound as your already living the lose condition anyway.

unless you can read the question wording this article could mean anything.
 

Frith

Member
Again, the unbalanced focus on these activities at the detriment of other longer term options.

It's all in the article linked.

There's even been a few anecdotes in the thread already.

your assuming that a significant part of that 26% do so in a negative way.

who knows not us we literally have no data
 

jayhawker

Member
Well, the question is: do you HOPE that your kid plays pro sports. Based on that wording I, like others, really thought the % would be higher.

From the NYT article, "As students and families sign up for sports this fall and winter, we should be asking: if you knew this was just for fun, would you still do it? Would you do this much of it? Would you do it differently?"

and based on the surverY: "Parents of middle school or high school aged
children report that most boys and girls (76% and 70%) currently play sports."

So, yea, my guess would be that most parents would still do it if it were just for fun.

Exactly. Hoping their kid turns pro and believing it is likely to happen are two wildly different things. That poll seems meaningless to me.
 

sans_pants

avec_pénis
My highschool was supposedly a football factory and only one kid made it to the pros from my time there, he never made an impact


Another was drafted with the 19th pick this year.


So like 2 guys in the last decade+
 
I don't understand. Shouldn't parents be encouraging their kids to give it their all? What's wrong with pumping your kids up? No, we should hit them with cautious optimism, and prepare them for the "real world"...

Go ahead and encourage your kid to follow their dreams.

Do not, however, spend so much money on that pursuit that the kid is eventually unequipped for the 'real world'. Be realistic. Find a balance between sport and academic pursuits, and don't buy into the dream yourself.
 
I don't understand. Shouldn't parents be encouraging their kids to give it their all? What's wrong with pumping your kids up? No, we should hit them with cautious optimism, and prepare them for the "real world"...
Why knowingly push them into a dead end for that long?
 

blackflag

Member
Hoping they will become a pro and thinking they definitely will are two different things OP.
I also hope to become a billionaire one day. Doesn't mean I don't know that's never gonna happen.

That's the part that stuck out to me. Of course they hope. Do they really think they will and are they betting their futures. It though? That would be the difference.
 

Miletius

Member
I also think that overemphasizing competition keeps a lot of kids out of sports clubs as well. The kid who wants to just play for fun and exercise gets pushed out of the club by the kids who are unrealistically chasing a dream of pro competition. Kids and teen sports should be foremost about fun, exercise, and teaching good habits.
 
I also think that overemphasizing competition keeps a lot of kids out of sports clubs as well. The kid who wants to just play for fun and exercise gets pushed out of the club by the kids who are unrealistically chasing a dream of pro competition. Kids and teen sports should be foremost about fun, exercise, and teaching good habits.

High school sports such as baseball and basketball have try outs for a good reason.
They have limited roster space and coaching/equipment resources.
High school sports are competitive and that's a good thing.

Less serious rec-leagues do exist.

But no, most people who play sports that have a try out do not actually believe they are chasing a professional career.
 

aeolist

Banned
Since most pro sports require college, the down side is what? Disappointment?

i've heard of plenty of instances of kids in college on an athletic scholarship graduating from essentially made-up softball academic programs that don't give them any real value on the job market. NCAA is interested in making as much money as they can from the (unpaid "amateur") players and don't have any compelling reason to make sure they're educated well.
 

JC Lately

Member
26% percent doesn’t sound that bad really. It means 74% of parents with kids in sports have their heads screwed on straight. That’s encouraging. I would have expected the opposite.

Glass is 3/4 full, GAF.
 

Miletius

Member
High school sports such as baseball and basketball have try outs for a good reason.
They have limited roster space and coaching/equipment resources.
High school sports are competitive and that's a good thing.

Less serious rec-leagues do exist.

But no, most people who play sports that have a try out do not actually believe they are chasing a professional career.

I agree that with limited space in certain programs competition is inevitable. But I don't really see that as a good thing at a certain level. Most high school programs are lucky to produce even one kid with a scholarship. What does being a competitive program accomplish other than distribute resources in one, fair, way?
 

woolley

Member
i've heard of plenty of instances of kids in college on an athletic scholarship graduating from essentially made-up softball academic programs that don't give them any real value on the job market. NCAA is interested in making as much money as they can from the (unpaid "amateur") players and don't have any compelling reason to make sure they're educated well.

And most schools have programs where the student athletes get the same education as all the other students. Most of these stories come from big Div 1 schools which a very small number of schools are actually a part of.
 
I agree that with limited space in certain programs competition is inevitable. But I don't really see that as a good thing at a certain level. Most high school programs are lucky to produce even one kid with a scholarship. What does being a competitive program accomplish other than distribute resources in one, fair, way?

Because the people that play high school sports WANT to win.
 

bro1

Banned
A debilitating injury. Happens quite a lot.
Not nearly as much as you think.

And to those who say it's a worthless degree, it's a paid for degree with scholarships. There is nothing wrong with competitive sports, a competitive nature, and a paid for college degree. Sure, your parents dreams of the majors may be crushed but you still come out on top
 

woolley

Member
Eh, I don't really buy it. I'm not really one of those participation ribbon guys, but who really gives a fuck? Almost nobody, 30 minutes after the game, and nobody 6 months later.

It really depends on where your from. My highschool has a lot of history and tradition where football is a big deal. We get 15k people every year for the annual Thanksgiving day game and it was televised twice on ESPN.
 

dankir

Member
100% if you're Asian.

My parents got mad at me because I got rejected from med. ARGH.

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udiie

Member
The high school I went to produced Joe Sakic and Ryan Nugent-Hopkins so pretty much every kid in the hockey program there thinks they're the hottest shit ever
Parents attitude is not far off that either
 

Abounder

Banned
Sounds kinda low.

And @ sports "obsession", I wish that were true...just look at how out of shape both kids and adults are nowadays. Borderline fit-shaming lol
 

aeolist

Banned
Not nearly as much as you think.

And to those who say it's a worthless degree, it's a paid for degree with scholarships. There is nothing wrong with competitive sports, a competitive nature, and a paid for college degree. Sure, your parents dreams of the majors may be crushed but you still come out on top

it's still years spent making money for other people and not investing in your future
 
I mean if the kid has a passion for sports you never know where it could lead. Could lead to pro play but it could also lead to coaching or just helping ref little league type events.

Problem w/ parents thinking they're raising the next big thing is there's no "Plan B". What happens when this shit don't work out and you have to fall back on other skills?
 

Dice

Pokémon Parentage Conspiracy Theorist
Shit, that's almost as bad as expectations of financial stability.
 

woolley

Member
it's still years spent making money for other people and not investing in your future

That could be said about most things people do. They are making people money but that doesn't mean what they are doing is worthless to their futures. I've learned a lot and got to experience things that I never would have if it wasn't for sports.
 

Brakke

Banned
The title and the article have different language. "An astonishing 26 percent of parents with high-school-age children who play sports hope their child will become a professional athlete one day" vs "high-school athletes think they're raising a pro. (NYT)". That's very different. What is the actual metric here?
 

aeolist

Banned
That could be said about most things people do. They are making people money but that doesn't mean what they are doing is worthless to their futures. I've learned a lot and got to experience things that I never would have if it wasn't for sports.

and that's fine if it's entirely your choice

parents who think they can win the lottery on their kids are a real thing though, and it's terrible
 

entremet

Member
Sounds kinda low.

And @ sports "obsession", I wish that were true...just look at how out of shape both kids and adults are nowadays. Borderline fit-shaming lol
That's the thing. Competitive High school sports is limited in terms of roster spots. So your regular joes and janes don't participate.
 

woolley

Member
and that's fine if it's entirely your choice

parents who think they can win the lottery on their kids are a real thing though, and it's terrible

And that sucks but parents do it all the time for other things also and isn't exclusively associated with sports. And just because a parent thinks that their kid can go pro doesn't mean that is all that they care about or stress to their children.
 

aeolist

Banned
The title and the article have different language. "An astonishing 26 percent of parents with high-school-age children who play sports hope their child will become a professional athlete one day" vs "high-school athletes think they're raising a pro. (NYT)". That's very different. What is the actual metric here?

http://media.npr.org/documents/2015/june/sportsandhealthpoll.pdf

this particular poll is on page 17, the wording is "hope"
 

Kin5290

Member
Since most pro sports require college, the down side is what? Disappointment?
In many cases, the resulting degree isn't worth the paper it's printed on. Students are railroaded through easy "paper classes" and so on that ultimately leave them completely unprepared for the job market.
 

entremet

Member
In many cases, the resulting degree isn't worth the paper it's printed on. Students are railroaded through easy "paper classes" and so on that ultimately leave them completely unprepared for the job market.
Hello UNC chapel hill.
 
This is why paying college players is not a good idea. You incentivize spending more time on an activity which will dead end in 4 years instead of getting an actual degree which is much more likely to sustain you.
 
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