In recent months, the
national media has focused on the negative, even violent, behavior of players,
coaches and parents involved in youth sports. In a proactive effort to counteract
this trend of violence, AYSO is initiating a program called Kids Zone.
As part of AYSO's education agenda, Kids Zone is a dynamic program targeted to eliminate negative sideline behavior. It is aimed toward producing a thoroughly positive impact on everyone involved in youth soccer. To execute this program, three basic elements are involved:
1. The Pledge. We will require AYSO parents to sign a pledge that holds them to the Kids Zone standards.
Download Pledge and return to your Team Coordinator
Juramento de los Padres en Kids Zone*Note: It is very important that the Team Coach signs his/her form
including printed name, phone number and the division (e.g., U10).When collected, Team Coordinator can send forms to:
Carole Nedeff
101 West Kenneth Road,
Glendale, CA 912022. The Badge. This is a pin-on button bearing the program's logo. This will be worn by program supporters at games, and will serve as a reminder of the importance of positive sideline behavior.
3. The Sign. A large sideline, which lists positive behavior standards, will be posted at the entrance of participating fields. Parents and spectators who will abide by these standards are welcome -- all others are not.
|
By
entering the kids zone,
you agree to the following: |
|
Kids are #1 Fun, not winning,is everything Fan only cheer and only coaches coach No yelling in anger Respect the Volunteer Referees No Swearing No Smoking Leave no trash behind Set a proper example for our children |
Go to AYSO National site to see the online Kids Zone video.
The following ideas may be helpful for being an AYSO supportive parent.
Conversations before the games
· Tell your child you love him/her regardless of the outcome.
· Tell him or her "Go for it, give it your best shot and have fun!"
During the game
· Understand that kids are over-stimulated during games. The coach is yelling instructions, opponents and teammates are talking, the crowd is cheering, and the referee is blowing the whistle. To a youth sports participant the atmosphere is much like that of a fighter pilot with enemy jets racing all around.
- Do not yell instructions to your child during the game, since it only adds to the confusion. Sometimes the best thing you can do as a parent is to be quiet.
· Cheer and acknowledge the play by BOTH teams.
After the game
· Thank the officials for doing a difficult job.
· Thank the coaches for their efforts. Understand that after a difficult loss is not a good time to question a coach.
· Thank your opponents for a good game.
· Congratulate your child and his or her teammates for their effort.
· Compliment individual players on the efforts they made in the game.
During the car ride home
· Point out a good play your child made during the game.
· Avoid criticizing or correcting mistakes.
· Ask open-ended questions about how the game was played rather than how many points were scored. Examples of open-ended questions that might apply: "Did you have fun?" "Did you give it your best effort?" "What did you learn from the game?" "What was the best play you made and how did it feel?" " Did you bounce back from your mistakes?"
· Remember each child's feelings are important, win or lose. Don't focus on winning only.