Why is school sport always about competition ?
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@afewbugs @Lilysea @sean
Yep.
School, back in the 70's 80s never taught any sports, except swimming. The assumption was that given a ball we could play rounders, football, basketball, cricket, and table tennis.School found I was the fastest runner, as when I ran away from school due to bullying, no one could catch me.
They entered me, and one of the bullies, into the interschool athletics competition, 100m, 200m, and long jump.
No training, no coaching, just run around a lot in the school playground in advance of the competition.
It was awful. We had gym shoes vs studded running shoes, and no one told me long jump wasn't the same as jumping a gap to get away from bullies.
What's with the hop, skip, swing your arms around a bit before jumping thing?@Maker_of_Things @afewbugs @Lilysea @sean "what do you mean you don't know how to play football? It's just like on the telly" that was in the 90s
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@Maker_of_Things @afewbugs @Lilysea @sean "what do you mean you don't know how to play football? It's just like on the telly" that was in the 90s
@emily_s @Maker_of_Things @afewbugs @Lilysea
... people who say they love sport - but mean they like watching other people do it on TV ...
.. TV watching is not a sport!
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Why is school sport always about competition ?
Adults do sport for their health, to be sociable, and just as a fun thing to do.
Very few adults compete in sport - and even then it's mostly just for fun.
I'm very lucky that my son is better at sport than I ever was - and actually enjoys PE at school.
I still think it odd that they are missing out on doing the kind of sports grown ups do voluntarily - for fun - on the weekend.
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@emily_s @Maker_of_Things @afewbugs @Lilysea
... people who say they love sport - but mean they like watching other people do it on TV ...
.. TV watching is not a sport!
@sean @emily_s @Maker_of_Things @Lilysea I mean I love watching Bake Off, doesn't mean I could bake a showstopper
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Why is school sport always about competition ?
Adults do sport for their health, to be sociable, and just as a fun thing to do.
Very few adults compete in sport - and even then it's mostly just for fun.
@sean I totally agree (and think the competitive nature of education in general is a deeply harmful abomination), but sport isn't *always*... Lots of schools are taking up Ultimate, which is less competitive.
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@Lilysea @afewbugs @sean oh boy, I remember this. I especially remember the ex-army PE teacher who felt that if you couldn't run 3 miles you weren't really trying, and that he could fix this by running alongside and shouting at you.
I started refusing to go to school on days with PE. And put me off gyms etc for life.
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So very much this about the already good at and shaming.
I'm very visibly physically disabled and despite my parents liaising directly with the PE teachers, they were still constantly stupid about forcing me to do painful stuff.
They also did stupid stuff like reward the fastest runner of 1 race with 100 merits (the max merits usually expected in a year) as if this would motivate us (I refused to collect or log merits which pissed school off).
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@afewbugs @Lilysea @sean yeah that was my experience too.
Cross-country running was just โrun around the park while we time youโ. Then repeat every week for one term a year. Zero advice on how to do better. (Even compared to football or rugby or something, where there were at least training exercises, even if I never got particularly better at those either.)
It was only as an adult that I found that there are ways to get better at it over time and that itโs quite enjoyable then.
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@sean I totally agree (and think the competitive nature of education in general is a deeply harmful abomination), but sport isn't *always*... Lots of schools are taking up Ultimate, which is less competitive.
@emilyvanartist @sean ^^ this. It's a pile of perverse incentives driving schools to "achieve" in sport as elsewhere... the rot of competition is everywhere

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@Tubemeister @afewbugs @Lilysea @sean Beatings is before my time, although PE teachers were very good at "not seeing" hockey sticks misused as such...
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@emilyvanartist @sean ^^ this. It's a pile of perverse incentives driving schools to "achieve" in sport as elsewhere... the rot of competition is everywhere

@phlash @emilyvanartist and just not enough collaboration
Like kids should routinely learn by helping younger kids learn - it's how it works in the real world of work
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@Lilysea @afewbugs @sean dunno if this happened elsewhere but I've heard the line "No, you're not unable, you are unwilling" many many times when I couldn't do an exercise. Sure it turned me off for many years.
Years later when I was really encouraged by an instructor I became good enough that people started calling me an athlete. My automatic response was "who, me?"
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@Lilysea @afewbugs @sean dunno if this happened elsewhere but I've heard the line "No, you're not unable, you are unwilling" many many times when I couldn't do an exercise. Sure it turned me off for many years.
Years later when I was really encouraged by an instructor I became good enough that people started calling me an athlete. My automatic response was "who, me?"
@qwazix @Lilysea @afewbugs I remember being told to try harder when I couldn't do pull ups
Now I realise it wasn't willpower that was missing - but time in the gym and aiming to beat my own personal best - because getting better is something we can all do and learning to work at something would be more useful character building