Balancing Academics and Athletics – What Your Coach is Really Thinking

We hear it all day and all night. ‘Swimmers are the best students,’ ‘Swimmers perform academically,’ ‘Swimmers learn time management and life balancing skills.’

As a coach, though, I fear that swimmers have heard these things so often, that they’ve begun presume that it’s a right. Great time management skills just come along when an athlete pays their dues to be on the swim team; that academic success begins the moment a swimmer jumps into the water. There’s somewhat of a sense of entitlement that has begun to form around these ideas, and let me tell you the truth:

This is making your coach pull his or her hair out.

When you are a young, healthy, able-bodied athlete, in any sport, there are very few good justifications for missing a practice, meet, game, or match. A death in the family, iced-over roads, these are excuses that are acceptable.

The reason, however, that swimming has garnered a reputation for producing the best time managers and the best student-athletes is because we don’t accept a broader range of excuses that might fly elsewhere.

As we are in the midst of final exams in the United States, it is an important time to step back and consider how you got to where you are.

The fact is that academics are a convenient excuse to miss a swim practice. Every student-athlete and every student-athlete’s parents know that all they have to do is tell a coach that “Johnny can’t go to practice, because he needs to study for finals” or “Susie can’t swim today because she needs to be well-rested for her test,” and the coach’s hands are tied. There is little a coach can say in response to the justification of academics over athletics, because in our hearts, we all know that yes: getting an A on a math exam is in fact more important than swim practice, and that a swimmer’s parents, frankly, don’t care what their swim coach has to say on the subject in most cases.

Here’s where student-athletes have a chance to grow

Everyone in the pool is in agreement that academics always takes priority over athletics. However, if for a young person, these two things are truly the top priorities (this is a matter of philosophy – but there’s a reason why the American educational system has chosen to integrate athletics so heavily into the school system) there are very, very few situations in which an athlete must choose between the two.

The questions that student-athletes need to start asking themselves are how they are truly using their time. If you went on a week-long family vacation over your Thanksgiving holiday, when you knew that your student was struggling with school, you have chosen that family vacation over athletic and academic success.

If you know that you’re going to be out-of-town for much of the winter break, and that you will miss a lot of practices then, and have still chosen to skip practice during finals, then you have chosen your winter break over athletic and academic success.

If you have planned a holiday party prior to the end of the school year, and you have made your child’s attendance at that event mandatory, but their attendance at practice optional, you have chosen that holiday party over your child’s academic and athletic success.

Instead, we should be starting early, and teaching your athlete’s strategies for dual athletic and academic success

Very rarely does anybody want to learn about time management skills before academics become a problem, and before the big-red-panic button is smashed, meaning that practice attendance goes by the wayside.

Here’s the top strategies I can give to managing these things:

1. Learn what actually works – because it’s probably not what you think. No, all-nighters do not work. No, coming home from school and sitting in front of your text-book does not work. No, saving all of your studying until the night before, or the morning of, a test does not work. No matter how long you’ve been trying these strategies, no matter what anecdotal evidence says, no matter how badly you as a parent or you as a swimmer want to enforce them, study after study after study shows that these are not the best strategies for test performances.

2. Learn from those who know – perhaps the most valuable thing that any swim coach can do, in terms of helping their teams succeed and balance, is to take a practice at the beginning of a season, and bring in a tried-and-true expert to give a seminar on study skills. Strategies like going home and studying the day you first learned something, rather than trying to do it three weeks later before the test. Strategies like taking breaks from studying (practice is a great chance for a mental break from derivatives and gerunds, especially if the coach is trying to work harmoniously and is giving credit to the fact that finals can be a stressful time for swimmers) can be a big win, and too many people assume they know the best way to study and learn without taking the time to read the literature.

3. Talk to your coaches before deciding – you will be amazed on what coaches are willing to do to keep kids in the water. Late arrival, let the swimmer get out 30 minutes early, letting a teammate who is excelling in that class get out 30 minutes early to help tutor them or help them work through a problem, coaching them on time management, helping to keep them focused. The problem is that too often, the coach isn’t brought into the loop until a student is at the breaking point or in the danger zone. In the United States, athletic coaches, along with teachers, peers, and parents, are a part of a child’s support system, and the fact is that because of the nature of what we do, coaches will often have a very different connection with students than any of those other groups. Coaches are able to give students a ‘higher purpose’ for their studying, coaches are able to connect with students on a different level, students are used to receiving constructive criticism from their coaches, and students are used to their coaches holding them to high standards. Therefore, a coach reminding a student to study and how to study can sometimes have a bigger impact than any of the other groups.

4. Understand your circumstances – Every sport has a different circumstance, and it’s important to know those circumstances when planning your life. If your child’s taper meet is in mid-December, then maybe your family tradition becomes grandma travels to you for Thanksgiving, and you travel to grandma for Christmas. If your high school season runs through February, make your big family vacation over spring break rather than winter break. Even different sports have different challenges and opportunities. Football players don’t take Thanksgiving vacations, and so swimmers shouldn’t take big vacations in the middle of their primary season.

5. Respect your coaches, and they’ll return the same – If you have enough respect to get your coach’s input on your child’s specific situation, then they will have the respect to be flexible and understanding about your child’s practice attendance. When your coach really gets angry is when you come to them with a final decision before said coach has had any chance to proactively impact the situation. Coaches like to be in control, and often times, they are quite good at it. Give them a chance. Make it a conversation. The coach shouldn’t dictate to the athlete or the parent, nor should vice versa happen, but there is usually a positive solution to a problem.

6. Hold yourself to a higher standard – as mentioned above, “school over sports” is an easy excuse to get sympathy for your decision to shirk responsibilities to athletics. Your parents will let you get away with it, your teachers will let you get away with it, and even your teammates might let you get away with it. To truly get everything out of the student-athlete experience, however, it is up to the students to hold themselves to a higher standard than that. It’s up to the students to hold themselves to both their academic and athletic commitments. And it’s up to the students to balance their lives.

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10 years ago

A miss is a miss…your swimming times and goals do not differentiate between what is an acceptable miss and what is not. If you are truly committed to swimming fast then a lot of choices have to be made. Going to the Olympics is not easy folks, there is no room for compromise (at least not a lot and often). Swimming fast is a series of good choices and some of them require some sacrifice. Far too often swimmers look at the now and not the later…swimming fast always happens in the latter and far too often this is realized way to late and any loss in performance is often blamed on the coach….choices my friends…choices….what choices are you willing… Read more »

love2swim
Reply to  Darren Ward
10 years ago

Correct about commitment for Olympic swimmers…but remember, 99.9% of them will not get there…and a balanced life is important too.

swimge
11 years ago

I swam YMCA 3rd grade through high school and college at a d3 school. Contrary to the article the more hours I swam the higher my grades were as I could never muster the motivation to concentrate on homework/studing when I had so much time to do it. Some kids are like that as I know I was far from the only one.

Peter
11 years ago

What a great article and something that a parent can read and understand when the swimmer says no to vacation and still they get yanked out of the water so swimmer can spend time with brother whom is not a athlete and family. Its a total commitment from the family and not the single swimmer. Our coach will be smiling ear to ear when her reads this and hopefully print it and stick it in the parents and swimmers faces. The final exam excuse is really so terrifying to the parents and at least here, so many swimmers get away with it. I can see the frustration on our coach. Great comments as well.

CCSprinter
11 years ago

Remember we practice a small portion of the day for swimming and swim-meets. It seems like a lot but 2 to 4 hours, is 1/12 to 1/6th of the day. Yet we practice daily, and at different intensity depending where we are.

Academics is the same. You don’t prepare finals in one great compact effort, you do this gradually throughout the semester. The same way we increase intensity in practice, you may do this is preparation and certain times. This way the same way we taper for our conference or final meet can be used for academics.

Coacherik
11 years ago

Flyin, like Coach Keith said, it’s the message you send in terms of priorities. When you get to the end of the season and don’t achieve your goals, the coach looks back and says, “see, right here where you took two weeks off…” The goal is to avoid that conversation either through smarter scheduling if swimming is truly a “priority” or a teams goals are important to you. You can’t have it both ways.

Sometimes, the only way to get through to some one, when they come up with excuses or backtrack, is a simple sentence I’ve adopted…

Lower the bar.

If you can’t commit to these things, that’s fine. Just lower your level of expectations, slow your goal times… Read more »

Flyin'
11 years ago

At the same time, I think family needs to be a very high priority too. So, depending on the prowess of the athlete, family vacations are acceptable, assuming they aren’t ridiculously long and that they don’t happen extremely often.

Well said
Reply to  Braden Keith
11 years ago

Amen!

love2swim
Reply to  Braden Keith
10 years ago

Agree…and when we teach the athlete (Swimmer) that his/her needs always come first, ahead of family events, family vacations, and visits to grandparents, we are furthering the entitlement/selfishness of the swimmer. We barely see grandparents, and they don’t understand about the “swim schedule” or “swimmer/kid has practice”. Plus, many of us have multiple kids in multiple sports/activities — should we never go on a vacation?

There’s also the burnout factor. Kids that never get a break find themselves in plateaus, while the kid coming back tanned from a Florida vacation with grandparents is well rested and ready to nail his swims (after the mini-taper, ha ha!).

Coaches with strict attendance policies need to remember that we don’t want to create… Read more »

Reply to  Flyin'
11 years ago

Flyin’ it’s totally possible to do both. This summer when we went to Tahoe for a week, my daughter’s coach gave her both a pool and dryland workout to keep up on during vacation. And the resort we stayed at was kind enough to make an exception & let her into the pool before the adults only morning lap swim time & to stay during the adults only lap swim time, so she could swim without worry of a kid cannon-balling on her head. So it just meant we started our daily touristy activities a little later than planned, and in the evening, she and I would hit the gym together.

iLikePsych
11 years ago

I’m seeing a trend of Cosmo-like article titles recently here on SwimSwam.

About Braden Keith

Braden Keith

Braden Keith is the Editor-in-Chief and a co-founder/co-owner of SwimSwam.com. He first got his feet wet by building The Swimmers' Circle beginning in January 2010, and now comes to SwimSwam to use that experience and help build a new leader in the sport of swimming. Aside from his life on the InterWet, …

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