50 Things to Help your
Child Achieve
By Wayne
Goldsmith and Helen Morris
- Love them unconditionally.
- Support their coaches.
- Accept that they cannot win every
time they compete.
- Allow them to be kids and have
fun.
- Help them to develop as people
with character and values.
- Turn off as a sporting parent:
don’t make sport the one and only topic of conversation
at the dinner table, in the car, etc.
- Don’t introduce your child as
“This is my son/daughter the swimmer.” Their sports are
something they do, not who they are.
- Don’t do everything for them:
teach responsibility and self-management.
- Reward frequently for success and
effort but make the rewards small, simple, practical and
personal. Kids don’t need a CD or $20 just for playing a
sport or getting a ribbon.
- Reward them with what they really
love: your time!
- Be calm, relaxed and dignified at
competitions.
- Accept that progress in any sport
takes a long time: at least 7 to 10 years after
maturation in most sports for the athlete to reach full
potential.A little manual work and helping out with
household chores are important lessons in developing
independence.
- Believe it or not, kids can learn
to pack and unpack their training bags and fill their
own water bottles: teach and encourage them to take
control of their own sporting careers.
- Don’t reward championship
performances with junk food.
- Skills and attitude are most
important. Don’t waste money on the latest and greatest
equipment or gimmicks, hoping to buy a short cut to
success.
- Encourage the same commitment and
passion for school and study as you do for sport.
- Avoid relying on or encouraging
“sports food” or “sports supplements”-focus on a
sensible, balanced diet which includes a variety of
wholesome foods.
- Allow kids to try many sports and
activities.
- Don’t specialize too early. There
is no such thing as a 10 year old Olympic swimmer.
- Junk food is OK occasionally.
Don’t worry about it, but see #14 above.
- Praise qualities such as effort,
attempting new skills and hard work rather than winning.
- Love them unconditionally (worth
repeating!!)
- Have your “guilt gland” removed:
this will help you avoid phrases like “I’ve got better
things to do with my time” or “do you realize how much
we give up so that you can swim?” Everyone loses when
you play the guilt game.
- Encourage activities which build
broad, general movement skills like running, catching,
throwing, agility, balance, co-ordination, speed and
rhythm. These general skills can have a positive impact
on all sports.
- Encourage occasional “down
time”-no school or sport-just time to be kids.
- Encourage relationships and
friendships away from training, competition and school
work-it’s all about balance.
- Help and support your children to
achieve the goals they set, then take time to relax,
celebrate and enjoy their achievements as a family.
- Never use training or sport as
punishment-i.e. more laps/more training.
- Do a family fitness class-yoga or
martial arts or another sport unrelated to the child’s
main sport. Everyone benefits.
- Car pool. Get to know the other
kids and families on the team and in turn you can allow
your child to be more independent by doing things with
other trusted adults.
- Attend practice regularly to show
that you are interested in the effort and process, not
just in the win/lose outcome.
- Help raise money for the team and
kids, even if your own child does not directly benefit
from the fundraising.
- Tell your children you are proud
of them for being involved in healthy activities.
- Volunteer your time for the team.
- Teach your child the importance
of “team”-where working together and supporting each
other are important attributes.
- Even if you were an athlete and
even if you are a trained coach, resist the temptation
to coach your own child, it rarely works.
- Be aware that your child’s
passion for a particular sport may change.
- Be aware that skills learned in
one sport can often transfer to another.
- Accept “flat spots” or
plateaus-times when your child does not improve. During
these times encourage participation for fun, focus on
learning skills and help develop perseverance and
patience.
- Believe it or not, American kids
are unlikely to die from drinking tap water!
- Cheer for your child
appropriately. Do not embarrass yourself or your child.
- Make sure that each week includes
some family time where you do family things and talk
about family issues-not about sport.
- Take a strong stand against
smoking and drug use (both recreational and performance
enhancing.)
- Set an example with sensible,
responsible alcohol use.
- Don’t look for short cuts like
“miracle sports drinks” or “super supplements”-success
comes from consistently practicing skills and developing
an attitude where the love of the sport and physical
fitness are the real “magic.”
- If one of your children is a
champion athlete and the others in the family are not so
gifted, ensure that you have just as much time, energy
and enthusiasm for their activities.
- Eliminate the phrase “what we did
when I was swimming.....”
- Encourage your children to find
strong role models but try not to let this decision be
based on sports only. Look for role models who
consistently demonstrate integrity, humility, honesty
and the ability to take responsibility for their own
actions.
- Encourage your children to learn
leadership and practice concepts like sharing,
selflessness, team work and generosity.
- Don’t compare your child’s
achievement to another other children-good or bad. This
creates barriers and resentment and we don’t need any
more of that!
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