Stereotypes: The Role Of Sports In High School

Words: 837
Pages: 4

Americans generally have an obsession with sports. Schedules for stores and organizations change in autumn to accommodate for football season and many high schools allow sports players to come in late the following day of a game. My church, CityHope, temporarily changed the Saturday night church service to Sunday night for the fall season so the service would not interfere with college football. At some high schools in the south, students can miss school if they attend their school’s sports game if the game coincides with the day they miss. Living up to the stereotypes, American’s revolve around sports. Since so many American’s have developed a love for sports, parents sign their young children up for sports teams. Time goes on and those children become teens. Typecasts portray teen sports as a phenomenal way to develop character and sportsmanship, which the general public believes. In contrast to many stereotypes, teen sports inhibit the building of strong …show more content…
At the high school my sister attends, almost the entire baseball team, excluding a few people, chews tobacco. Legally, only someone over nineteen can chew tobacco but teenagers as young as fourteen dip at my sister’s school. Coaches and principals know the students chew tobacco but instead of suspending the players from the team, faculty turns the other cheek in order to win another state championship. Also at my sister’s school, a football player, over eighteen, had sex with a thirteen year old girl. When arrested and charged with statutory rape, administration and students defended the rapist. Teen sports players constantly have excuses made for them so they can continue to do the wrong thing. Teenage athletes escape the problems they create, giving them an unrealistic idea of how the real world works. Without facing the consequences of their actions, teenage sports players cannot learn valuable lessons and have