Coaches Should I allow my girls to listen to their own music during conditioning?

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This is an idea I've been tossing around ever since my oldest athlete asked me about it (13 years old). She is a very hard worker and is very respectful and responsible, thus I am strongly considering it. However, I know that if I say yes, the other girls will start asking me, too. Before I possibly open a can of worms, I want to know if anyone has any experience with this. Is it a good idea? Or will it just become a big distraction and cause more trouble than it's worth? I'm talking like an MP3 player or cell phone playing music into earbuds, while secured in an armband. I want to say yes, and I feel it could possibly improve the enjoyment and work ethic of some of the girls, but I don't want to have a big problem on my hands if it ends up being a bad idea.

Thoughts?
 
I think a better idea would be to let them choose the radio station or pandora station if they've been working hard. It could be a contest - whoever did X best today gets to pick the radio station. Or a team decision during conditioning. If the work ethic slumps, radio turns off or you put on oldies (pretty sure you're young though...)
 
No because
1 Isolating
2 safety if they can't hear you
3 Phones shouldn't be out at practice-don't start on that slippery slope, or before you know it they will be texting or snapchatting or whatever it is they do !
4 risk of phones getting damaged and ensuing grief from parents.
 
These are all good points. I've decided a big fat NO to listening to music via devices and in ear headphones. I like the suggestions about a group radio station, though. I have to find a way to get a radio station that the girls will like, that is completely random, and is clean (no profanity).
 
These are all good points. I've decided a big fat NO to listening to music via devices and in ear headphones. I like the suggestions about a group radio station, though. I have to find a way to get a radio station that the girls will like, that is completely random, and is clean (no profanity).

My team and coach put together a looonnngggg playlist (think like hours and hours worth of music) and we put that sucker on shuffle. Different genres and since everyone contributed there is something everyone likes; plus everything is clean. There is rarely a repeat during the entire practice. This has been our best method so far.
 

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