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Fiona Taylor's avatar

My kid simply doesn't have the time or the physical energy. She's a great athlete but sports teams at her school meet every day for at least a couple of hours and she has hours of homework every night. If she wanted to play sports, she would be getting about or under 6 hours of sleep, which is not enough for her.

The kids I know who do things like rowing team and swimming have devoted their whole lives to it and basically do nothing else other than school. They also look at it as another way to add to their college resume, not as something they do for fun.

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Marcus Luther's avatar

I think collapse of youth sports opportunities is the primary cause, for several reasons: a) earlier/increased shift to club sports or traveling teams that are not nearly as accessible and equitable; b) broader collapse of institutions and public space norms; and c) a loss of social pressure on families to have their kids participate, often as a result of A and B.

I don’t think all these are bad and quite often as a high school teacher I see the burnout consequences of many student athletes. But the shift in what youth sports look like in the current moment feels like the biggest culprit, in my eyes.

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