I think the "life lessons" everybody's claiming they learned from high school sports is a bit exaggerated. You've already learned the teamwork, sportsmanship, and other lessons from participating in youth sports and 9-10 years of schooling.I played sports in high school and I learned that I liked playing sports and it was fun.
10/12/2013 10:23:46 AM
When you're that age however "everyone is a winner."High School is valuable as a reality check.
10/12/2013 10:54:39 AM
The intensity of high school sports makes it more of a learning experience. I'm sure its hard for people who have never been a part of sports on a big stage to understand this but when the entire town is counting on you, everything becomes magnified under a microscope and this magnifies the learning value.Youth sports is kind of a joke as far as the levels of organization and intensity.
10/12/2013 11:33:38 AM
10/12/2013 8:49:33 PM
10/12/2013 10:06:18 PM
this thread is like bizzaroworld.
10/13/2013 10:06:02 PM
10/14/2013 8:58:40 AM
^
10/14/2013 9:00:34 AM
suggested compromise: fund athletics at the same level as band
10/14/2013 9:09:19 AM
I like how everything is black and white to you.You do realize that would be a huge boost to many schools' athletic programs?The only reason it sounds like a good idea to you is because you were a band kid.This thread is stupid.
10/14/2013 9:45:13 AM
false
10/14/2013 9:55:47 AM
Did some mean jocks jam you into your sousaphone?
10/14/2013 9:59:09 AM
see:
10/14/2013 10:00:11 AM
I would say mine but I dont like to leave personal clues on this site that would allow the super sleuths to figure out my location Of course sports and band both had boosters clubs and were expected to raise probably 90% of their total yearly funding because the school district was dirt poor.[Edited on October 14, 2013 at 10:59 AM. Reason : -]
10/14/2013 10:57:18 AM
where
10/14/2013 10:58:12 AM
Sports teams at my particular school were all very small anyway. They always barely squeaked by with enough people to field a full team and even if they did substitutions were then rare.On the other hand the marching band was absolutely massive and had new flags, uniforms, props every year.Their booster clubs were simply larger and more efficient at raising money.Meanwhile the football team has to use pads and uniforms until they fall apart, and thats probably because they sucked dick and never won anything.
10/14/2013 11:02:58 AM
marching band raises a ton of money through fundraisers, for example when I was in high school our marching band season cost over $100k. We raised all of that money privately. We also raised our own money to buy instruments and uniforms. Where is band getting more public money than sports are?(also, as I already mentioned, NC isn't one of the particularly bad states in regards to athletics spending. we have on occasion (at least in Wake Co) even discussed defending it entirely)[Edited on October 14, 2013 at 11:18 AM. Reason : defending = defunding]
10/14/2013 11:11:26 AM
10/14/2013 8:19:19 PM
schools recoup some cost by charging admission to sporting events as well
10/14/2013 10:04:07 PM
10/15/2013 2:13:04 AM
and in the absence of athletics at high schools, the neighborhood club team would fill that role
10/15/2013 8:32:35 AM
10/15/2013 9:56:22 AM
Obviously has never been to a millbrook/sanderson game.[Edited on October 15, 2013 at 11:11 AM. Reason : or any game in dallas atlanta miami los angeles and every other southern city]
10/15/2013 11:10:22 AM
Actually I have been to a Millbrook/Sanderson game. More than one. I went to school in Wake County and I attended every single home football game in HS across all 4 years and many away games. I'm not exaggerating. Every home game. I have a pretty good idea who showed up while I was in school, and in this county it's definitely not more than 50% of the student body, and that includes the team on the field, the cheerleaders, the band, the support crew, etc. And all of Raleigh sure as shit isn't turning out to Millbrook/Sanderson, most of the town doesn't even know it's going on. Whereas in East Bumfuck, most of the school turns out for each game, as well as the rest of the area. I'm referencing North Carolina, and our state's football culture. Is it different in Texas, Oklahoma, Arkansas, Florida, etc? Yes. Those places take the activity more seriously (I assume).
10/15/2013 12:53:36 PM
10/15/2013 9:16:32 PM
so the high school has one person too? no? they uses magic motor vehicles that only work for school and can't be used for other activities? oh. makes sense.
10/15/2013 10:25:41 PM
High schools aren't usually made up of only one neighborhood. Your claim is that they can use the "neighborhood" for recreation, but the fact is that in rural areas, there's no such thing as a "neighborhood," so the "club team" doesn't exist, at least not in a manner more convenient than the local high school.
10/15/2013 10:39:22 PM
remember how everyone makes fun of you for using semantics arguments as a crutch? this is what they were talking about. it was clear from the context what the point was.
10/15/2013 11:08:29 PM
remember how TWW couldnt decide if you, shoot, jcgolden, or face was the biggest troll here?fine company to be in, especially considering youre the only one in that group that takes themselves seriously.everyone should just start using your generic response against you."nope, youre wrong"
10/15/2013 11:33:53 PM
athletics bring a hell of a lot more to the table for a high school person than the "arts"
10/15/2013 11:40:41 PM
^is that, like, per dollar spent or overall?? Care to substantiate your opinion? Or did you just blurt that out? Also, not need to put "arts" in quotation marks in your sentence. Unless they taught you otherwise in your "English" class.
10/16/2013 2:47:34 AM
I believe he's trolling
10/16/2013 8:04:37 AM
hes right but thats not the arts fault. arts are beat out of kids in early grade school so by the time they reach high school they have much less appreciation for it.
10/17/2013 12:39:52 AM