- Nov 16, 2012
- 914
- 1,792
I didn't know how to headline this thread so please read further to find out what I'm talking about.
Well, I'm a preateam coach. The kids are all 7 or 8 years old. I have a lovely assistant coach with me. She's a mother of one of the girls and a former gymnast.
As a mother my assistant coach has brought up some good ideas about how to motivate children do better at practices and enjoy it even more. She always remembers to use funny words, high fives, mental images etc and I have adopted her methods as well. She doesn't know that much about technical stuff and theory of gymnastics but she's absolutely fantastic with kids and makes them smile.
I would love to know how others make practices fun and effective for the younger children? We have used a goal table with small stickers when a skill is perfected. We have also made them a safe home conditioning and stretching plan and they have own "gym notebooks". They write it down when they practice at home and get stickers for it at practices.
One little thing the kids love is counting unison in different languages like in English, Swedish or French when holding a split or something like that.
I heard that one of the teams we have in my club has an own mascot monkey and every week the coaches give it for some of the girls depending who has worked hardest and been a good friend. I love the idea and I think we could use that one too.
Which are your best ideas
?
Well, I'm a preateam coach. The kids are all 7 or 8 years old. I have a lovely assistant coach with me. She's a mother of one of the girls and a former gymnast.
As a mother my assistant coach has brought up some good ideas about how to motivate children do better at practices and enjoy it even more. She always remembers to use funny words, high fives, mental images etc and I have adopted her methods as well. She doesn't know that much about technical stuff and theory of gymnastics but she's absolutely fantastic with kids and makes them smile.
I would love to know how others make practices fun and effective for the younger children? We have used a goal table with small stickers when a skill is perfected. We have also made them a safe home conditioning and stretching plan and they have own "gym notebooks". They write it down when they practice at home and get stickers for it at practices.
One little thing the kids love is counting unison in different languages like in English, Swedish or French when holding a split or something like that.
I heard that one of the teams we have in my club has an own mascot monkey and every week the coaches give it for some of the girls depending who has worked hardest and been a good friend. I love the idea and I think we could use that one too.
Which are your best ideas
