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TalkingDog

(9,001 posts)
Sat Sep 21, 2013, 04:39 PM Sep 2013

The Case Against High-School Sports [View all]

CYA disclaimer: Although this article is about sports, which seemingly goes against forum rules, it is more about the damage to education. For that reason, I think it should be allowed in GD.

http://www.theatlantic.com/magazine/archive/2013/10/the-case-against-high-school-sports/309447/

Every year, thousands of teenagers move to the United States from all over the world, for all kinds of reasons. They observe everything in their new country with fresh eyes, including basic features of American life that most of us never stop to consider.

One element of our education system consistently surprises them: “Sports are a big deal here,” says Jenny, who moved to America from South Korea with her family in 2011. Shawnee High, her public school in southern New Jersey, fields teams in 18 sports over the course of the school year, including golf and bowling. Its campus has lush grass fields, six tennis courts, and an athletic Hall of Fame. “They have days when teams dress up in Hawaiian clothes or pajamas just because—‘We’re the soccer team!,’ ” Jenny says. (To protect the privacy of Jenny and other students in this story, only their first names are used.)

By contrast, in South Korea, whose 15-year-olds rank fourth in the world (behind Shanghai, Singapore, and Hong Kong) on a test of critical thinking in math, Jenny’s classmates played pickup soccer on a dirt field at lunchtime. They brought badminton rackets from home and pretended there was a net. If they made it into the newspaper, it was usually for their academic accomplishments.

Sports are embedded in American schools in a way they are not almost anywhere else. Yet this difference hardly ever comes up in domestic debates about America’s international mediocrity in education. (The U.S. ranks 31st on the same international math test.) The challenges we do talk about are real ones, from undertrained teachers to entrenched poverty. But what to make of this other glaring reality, and the signal it sends to children, parents, and teachers about the very purpose of school?

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I have said this for years, murielm99 Sep 2013 #1
I have long thought that SheilaT Sep 2013 #2
I completely agree. ZombieHorde Sep 2013 #3
I agree gopiscrap Sep 2013 #4
I know too many kids who'd drop out if not for sports. Igel Sep 2013 #5
They are over emphasized and too much money is allocated for it, but some kids need liberal_at_heart Sep 2013 #6
i have no problems with sports unless it comes at the expense of education.. like TX high schools dionysus Sep 2013 #7
One of the weirdest things about the US is how colleges are farm teams for the NFL and NBA. Nye Bevan Sep 2013 #8
The New Plantation: Black Athletes, College Sports, and Predominantly White NCAA Institutions TalkingDog Sep 2013 #9
If I understand correctly, many foreign schools don't spend as much time on art or music either hughee99 Sep 2013 #10
Which foreign schools do you mean? thucythucy Sep 2013 #14
I was actually thinking about Japan and Korea. hughee99 Sep 2013 #15
High school sports changed both of my daughters' lives. enough Sep 2013 #11
Sports in high school are OK, except for varsity sports FarCenter Sep 2013 #12
Sports were instrumental in my opening up socially elias7 Sep 2013 #13
Sports have been a big part of my life since I was a teenager bhikkhu Sep 2013 #16
This message was self-deleted by its author radicalliberal Jul 2015 #19
Sports may be overemphasized. Physical education is important. DirkGently Sep 2013 #17
This message was self-deleted by its author radicalliberal Jul 2015 #20
"Free" PE gets cut and "Club" or traveling team sports are taking over. Arugula Latte Sep 2013 #18
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