sce
Proud Parent
- Mar 11, 2014
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That is crazy!Oh- Our coaches said WOGA's homeschool kids do 40 hours of gym per week so they started our homeschool kids out at 30 hours....I think WOGA does 2 a day practices. Not sure though.
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That is crazy!Oh- Our coaches said WOGA's homeschool kids do 40 hours of gym per week so they started our homeschool kids out at 30 hours....I think WOGA does 2 a day practices. Not sure though.
So do you add the two together or is it either or....if it's just the 26 hours then our homeschool boys go more hours....that's a lot of hours.....either way, my son doesn't want more hours.World Champion Center homeschool program goes about 26 in the gym at they have the option of 20 at the in house homeschool.
That is insane. Unless you're a few months out from the Olympics, I cannot imagine doing that many hours.Oh- Our coaches said WOGA's homeschool kids do 40 hours of gym per week so they started our homeschool kids out at 30 hours....I think WOGA does 2 a day practices. Not sure though.
I'm not sure- that's just what our coach told me....That is insane. Unless you're a few months out from the Olympics, I cannot imagine doing that many hours.
Unless that is the total time at the gym, but it is spent on a combination of school, gymnastics and breaks?
I agree. My son is very muscular and it looked like he would dominate in gymnastics from a physical standpoint. Six years later at age 11 he is just starting to learn how to use those muscles and do correct body positions. He has had many fears and he fights them every day. He doesn't want to go to the Olympics and he gets frustrated when people ask him that question. He might want to do gymnastics in college but right now his goal is to make it to level 10. He doesn't want to homeschool and do gymnastics 30+ hours per week. He is happy with what he is doing although I know he misses practicing with the boys who are homeschooling. Middle school is going to be an adjustment with off campus PE and fighting with the public school about courses and we'll face it again in high school. Right now he is progressing and enjoying the sport...God willing it will stay that way.Hi CBer's
If you workout more than 25 hrs a week, you will do pretty well at what ever level you are at. However, it will have absolutely no bearing on your success at future levels. Gymnastics is not a 10,000 hrs to mastery kind of thing. Success at the upper levels is much more contingent on psychological factors rather than physical. Obviously an athlete need to be strong, flexible, resilient, etc.; but, success at the lower levels is NOT a predictor of upper level success. Upper level success is significantly correlated with work-ethic, fear control, self-discipline, deferred rewards; i.e. things that can't be coached no matter how many hours you have. On top of all that, puberty will throw everything for a loop when it knocks on the door to turn Lil' Jimmy into James.
If you homeschool for educational or social/religious reasons - go for it. But if you are homeschooling for gymnastics, you're making a mistake IMHO. Essentially, homeschool + gymnastics is the old Soviet system. The ones that survive are very, very good, but the majority will not complete the course, and what kind of legacy is that? The question is, how much of your childhood do you want to hand over to a dream? Now, don't get me wrong, I think that gymnastics is the best sport for any kid, (regardless of talent) and to be successful does take time. It is simply a costs/benefits decision. High hours=high costs (not money here but, missed experiences, bday parties, trips etc.) Will it be worth it if the dreams don't work out? Please realize, that no coach can look at a 10 yo and say - "he's an olympian." No one can promise that, or even guess. You'd have better luck playing actual Blackjack. (I won 12$ this year BTW!)
I'm a coach, but mainly I'm a facilitator of "growing up." No matter what happens in a competitive career, gymnastics will be over at approx 25 years old. In the end, will it have been a good experience or a bad one? That is the question I keep in the back of my mind as I teach each day.
In all sincerity,
KRC
But if you are homeschooling for gymnastics, you're making a mistake IMHO.
There is no way a parent would take that on only due to Olympics dreams, unless they are of the CGP variety