https://journals.plos.org/plosone/article?id=10.1371/journal.pone.0151729
Sports have become an absolute staple in many American children’s childhood. Whether it’s playing soccer in preschool, little league baseball over the summer, or high school football on a crisp Friday night, sports are an extremely common activity for children of all ages to engage with. With youth sports being such a fixture in American culture, one may ponder the psychological effects that youth sports have on childhood development. Researchers Christina Felfe, Michael Lechner, and Andreas Steinmayr explore this very question in their article on this phenomenon titled “Sports and Child Development”.
The good news for parents whose children engage in youth sports is that the effects on development are primarily positive. While some obvious positive effects of engaging in youth sports such as in increase in physical health and motor skills may immediately come to mind, the effects of an increase in self esteem and better communication skills are also positive effects of youth sports participation. However, negative drawbacks to exist within the context of youth sports such as the often unnecessary pressure children face in these environments that are often the result of parental overstepping.
Fortunately, as a whole youth sports assists in children meeting developmental milestones and for the most part have a positive effect on children’s psychological development.