The answers are
from Parent Coach, Annie Desantis (that's me!).
To download our free Empowering Parents Behavior Charts with instructions
from our Parent Coaching Team included, click here.
Give us a call today to set up an appointment — our Intake Therapist can help you decide if you would benefit
from parent coaching, teen counseling, or family counseling, and match you will a qualified and caring therapist.
She founded her coaching business, The Progressive Parent, LLC in 2005 and acquired her Parent Coach Certification ™
from The Parent Coaching Institute of Bellevue, Washington, the nation's only Parent Coach Certification ® affiliation with Seattle Pacific University's, graduate - level Continuing Education Program.
Not exact matches
From talking to numerous sports
parents and
coaches and asking them what they ultimately want for their kid through sports, they overwhelmingly say they just want them to be happy.
If
coaches don't take the time to educate themselves so they can ask the right questions, get referrals
from parents of current or past athletes» success, or
from other
coaches.
After watching Maura play at Miami Christian High School that weekend, Alvarez convinced his
parents to stay longer for a tournament the following week in Las Vegas, where K.J. would be seen by at least 100 college basketball
coaches from around the country.
Based on the below video (watch the reaction
from his dad and high school
coach) and reports that had surfaced over the last few days, Peoples - Jones kept his
coaches, teammates and even his
parents in the dark of his final selection.
«We want to build on what Jameis has done in high school, in college with Jimbo Fisher and Florida State and all of his
coaches and
from how his
parents have raised him.
Hopefully more referees in the future are willing to eject
parents and
coaches who are misbehaving in order to keep incidents like this
from occurring as much.
Additional stress may come
from parents,
coaches and expectations (I must get a scholarship!).
Moreover, at a time when kids feel pressure
from coaches and
parents to specialize in one sport, lacrosse has long encouraged the renaissance approach.
«Our Boosters logged over 550 volunteer hours preparing for this event,» said Langner,» I am very proud of our club,
from the award winning athletes, to the
coaches who work tirelessly training the girls, to the
parents who always come through in a big way!
The NCAA tries hard to prevent people
from using recruits to get jobs — and to keep schools
from making hiring decisions based on which
parent, uncle, or high school
coach might give them the best shot to land some particular recruit.
Chelsea will also be inviting managers,
coaches and scouts
from clubs at all levels of the game to identify talented youngsters and we will work closely with the Football Association and London FA on the day, with workshops and useful information available to
parents.
«Medical professionals,
coaches, strength
coaches, players and
parents should be educated and aware of the settings that pose risk along with warning signs and symptoms
from complications of exertion with sickle cell trait.»
ABC uses home visits
from coaches like Margarita to encourage
parents and foster
parents to connect more, and more sensitively, with the young children in their care.
I update the team website, take pictures at his games, collect pictures of the team
from other
parents, and make photo books for the
coaches and the team
parents.
What I learned
from working with the Newcastle team, and with youth football programs across the country over the years is that traditional concussion education in which athletes,
coaches, and
parents are taught the signs and symptoms of concussion, and the health risks of concussion and repetitive head trauma, isn't working to change the concussion reporting behavior of athletes.
I was at Stephanie's house to observe a visit
from Margarita Prensa, a
parent coach with a home - visiting program called Attachment and Biobehavioral Catch - up, or ABC.
My position has consistently been and continues to be that it is up to
parents to make decisions about their own kids» safety, and that the best thing I, MomsTEAM, the CDC, concussion experts,
coaches, athletic trainers, and national governing bodies for football,
from Pop Warner to USA Football to the NFL, can do is to (a) continue to do what we can and are doing doing to make the game safer (and that there remains a great deal of work to be done in this area is undeniable); and (b) provide accurate, objective information about the risks so that such decision is an informed one, not one driven by fear.
If you are a
parent of an asthmatic athlete who is suffering or has suffered
from a respiratory condition, or you are a health care professional with expertise in this area, we hope you will share your knowledge and expertise with the entire MomsTeam community of
parents,
coaches, administrators, athletic trainers, physicians and other health care professionals.
Available free of charge on MomsTEAM's new SmartTeams concussion website, the #TeamUp4ConcussionSafetyTM program, developed by MomsTEAM Institute as part of its SmartTeams Play SafeTM initiative with a Mind Matters Educational Challenge Grant
from the National Collegiate Athletic Association and Department of Defense, is designed to do just that: to increase reporting by athletes of concussion symptoms by engaging
coaches, athletes,
parents, and health care providers in a season - long, indeed career - long program which emphasizes that immediate reporting of concussion symptoms - not just by athletes themselves but by their teammate «buddies» - not only reduces the risk the athlete will suffer a more serious brain injury - or, in rare cases, even death - but is actually helps the team's chances of winning, not just in that game, but, by giving athletes the best chance to return as quickly as possible
from concussion, the rest of the season, and by teaching that honest reporting is a valued team behavior and a hallmark of a good teammate.
players who did not continue playing with concussion symptoms cited concern for making symptoms worse (39.0 %) and advice
from a health care professional (25.8 %),
parent (35.6 %), or
coach (28.8 %).
«Given that concussions are difficult to diagnose and often require either athlete reports or parental concerns to come to the attention of the
coach,» they said, «educating athletes and their
parents about the risks of a concussion and safe management is an essential part of preventing athletes
from playing with concussive symptoms.»
Add in the possibility that sideline personnel responsible for monitoring athletes for signs of concussion, such as team doctors and athletic trainers, or
coaches and
parent volunteers, may be away
from the sideline attending to other injured athletes when a player sustains a high force blow, or, even if they are watching the field / court / rink, may miss significant impacts because they occur away
from the play, and one can see why better concussion detection methods are needed.
The head
coach had been under great pressure
from the
parents of the players for many years, but it had intensified the past year.
Late bloomers receive markedly less social support and reinforcement
from parents,
coaches, and peers.
Parents and
coaches will benefit
from reduced reliance on honest self - reporting of concussion symptoms by athletes and of the less - than - perfect observational skills of sideline management in spotting signs of concussion;
Many sports injuries are preventable, but continue to occur because of misconceptions about sports safety, uninformed behaviors by
parents,
coaches, and youth athletes, and a lack of training, says a new survey
from Safe Kids Worldwide.1
According to a number of recent studies [1,2,5,13,18], while the culture of sport (including influences
from professional and other athletes), as well as the media and other outside sources play a role in the decision of student - athletes to report experiencing concussion symptoms, it is
coaches and teammates, along with
parents, who have the strongest influence on the decision to report a concussion during sport participation, with
coaches being one of the primary barriers to increased self - reporting by athletes of concussive symptoms.
My experience with the Newcastle football team in Oklahoma leads me to believe that, as long as impact sensors are strictly used for the limited purpose of providing real - time impact data to qualified sideline personnel, not to diagnose concussions, not as the sole determining factor in making remove -
from - play decisions, and not to replace the necessity for observers on the sports sideline trained in recognizing the signs of concussion and in conducting a sideline screening for concussion using one or more sideline assessment tests for concussion (e.g. SCAT3, balance, King - Devick, Maddocks questions, SAC)(preferably by a certified athletic trainer and / or team physician), and long as data on the number, force, and direction of impacts is only made available for use by
coaches and athletic trainers in a position to use such information to adjust an athlete's blocking or tackling tec hnique (and not for indiscriminate use by those, such as
parents, who are not in a position to make intelligent use of the data), they represent a valuable addition to a program's concussion toolbox and as a tool to minimize repetitive head impacts.
Parenting Tips Volume 4
from Sharon Ballantine,
Parenting Coach and Life
Coach If you're a
parent with one or more children, then you know first - hand that raising kids is not for the faint of heart!
Parenting Tips Volume 2
from Sharon Ballantine,
Parenting Coach and Life
Coach Positive
Parenting is an important part of being the best guides we can be for our kids.
What I needed to hear more than anything
from my
parents and teachers and
coaches was what I was doing well.
After reflecting on the shift in
parents over the last twenty - five years
from more or less confident they were doing okay to isolated and anxious, former teacher Elisabeth Stitt founded Joyful
Parenting Coaching (www.elisabethstitt.com) in 2014.
On the
Parent Coaching line, we hear
from people all the time after they've had arguments with their kids.
In addition to the work you do at home, there is
Parent Coaching available to you
from our
parenting experts.
Parenting Tips Volume 5
from Sharon Ballantine,
Parenting Coach and Life
Coach #PositiveParenting starts with self love and self care for ourselves.
Many new
parents intuit their babies» needs — and / or learn to identify needs through observation — but others can benefit
from some explicit
coaching.
A team
parent may remove his or her own child
from play, along with a
coach or licensed health care provider.
Erika Stroh of
Parent From the Heart, Inc. is a
Parent Coach, Educational Consultant, Relationship Counselor.
Once an athlete is removed
from play, the
coach must notify the athlete's
parent or guardian and the student may not return to play or participate in supervised team activities (games, competition or practices), until they are evaluated and given written clearance to return to play.
Concussion or Sports - Related Head Injury: Code 20 -2-324.1 (2013) requires each local board of education, administration of a nonpublic school and governing body of a charter school to adopt and implement a concussion management and return to play policy that includes the following components: 1) an information sheet to all youth athletes»
parents or legal guardians informing them of the nature and risk of concussion and head injury, 2) requirement for removal
from play and examination by a health care provider for those exhibiting symptoms of a concussion during a game, competition, tryout or practice and 3) for those youth that have sustained a concussion (as determined by a health care provider), the
coach or other designated personnel shall not permit the youth athlete to return to play until they receive clearance
from a health care provider for a full or graduated return to play.
The policies must (1) Require the student athlete and their
parent or guardian to annually review and sign information on concussions, (2) Require that a student athlete suspected by their
coach, athletic trainer or team physician of sustaining a concussion or brain injury in a practice or game be removed
from the activity at that time.
Children and adolescents develop many relationships,
from parents and siblings to peers, teachers,
coaches, and others in the community.
I learned this and a whole lot more
from my favorite
parenting coach, Carrie Contey, co-founder of Slow Family Living.
With the new statistics of
parents (primarily mothers) working
from home, why not get your
coaching license and run the practice in the afternoon right after school is over?
I consider him to be one of the best athletic directors in the nation, in part because of the respect he has earned
from the entire sports community at his schools, not just athletes, but
coaches, and
parents.
By far the most important step a
parent can take to protect her child
from a sexual predator is to make sure the
coach is never alone with a child.