EducationWorld

Benefits of children playing sports & games

Mutating pet for your child

There’s growing awareness within the parents community that physical fitness apart, sports and games enable children to build character and life skills, writes Mini P The recently concluded Tokyo Olympics 2020 and India’s unprecedented seven medals haul including a first-ever gold in athletics that attracted over-the-top media and public adulation and big-ticket cash prizes, have aroused public interest in professional sports. There’s growing awareness within the community of parents countrywide that there are rewarding careers in sports and games and that encouraging children to play from young age is necessary to discover their talents for early professional coaching and training. Moreover, there’s growing awareness that physical fitness apart, playing sports enables children to build character and life skills. “It is crucial to provide opportunities for children to participate in physical education and sports — because these activities give them the chance to play and learn by doing. Whether a child is a high-potential athlete or an average, awkward child, she should have every chance to participate in games and physical activities to develop sportsmanship and learn skills such as teamwork, trust, discipline, dependability, and hard work. Moreover, engaging in sport teaches children several life skills. Parents need to understand that by letting children face on-field and in-arena challenges, they prepare them to confront greater and lesser hardships of life,” writes Dr. George Selleck, a San Francisco-based sports psychologist and founder of Parents for Good Sports and Leading2Play (‘Play: essential pathway for growth — https://www.educationworld.in/play-essential-pathway-for-growth/). Parents are advised to encourage children to play team, solo, competitive and other types of sports based on their aptitudes and propensities. Their relative benefits: Team sports. Team sports such as football, hockey and cricket enable shy and only children to build social skills and learn to cooperate with others. It also provides them opportunities to make friends, collaborate with teammates, build camaraderie and motivate and support each other. Solo sports. Individual games such as tennis, badminton, rollerskating, cycling and skateboarding are suitable for children who may not always have the opportunity to play with peers. Solo sports push children to set personal goals, manage stress, build self-confidence, and develop focus. Recreational sports. Usually only children who excel choose to play competitively as it requires dedicated coaching programmes and sacrifice of academic learning. The great majority of children play sports for enjoyment and recreation. It builds strong bodies and generates well-being within children. Bouldering, rock climbing, rowing and surfing are enjoyable recreational sports. “For most people there has to be a defined objective, a definite goal. Without that goal, they think an activity is not worth pursuing. In sports, the opposite is true. Playing for the sake of playing and having fun has prompted the development of some of the world’s best players. No world-beating athlete started running and playing with the objective of becoming a world-beater. They played for fun,” writes Dr. Selleck. Competitive sports. Choosing to go professional requires parents to enroll children in a good sports coaching centre. Many child athletes train for

Already a subscriber
Click here to log in and continue reading by entering your registered email address or subscribe now
Join with us in our mission to build the pressure of public opinion to make education the #1 item on the national agenda
Exit mobile version