Good Sport


Book Description

Good Sport argues that the values and meanings embedded within sport provide the guidance we need to make difficult decisions about fairness and performance-enhancing technologies. By examining how sport's history, rules and practices identify and celebrate natural talent and dedication, the book illuminates not just what we champion in the athletic arena but more broadly what we value in human achievement.




I Want to Win!


Book Description

Bella always needs to win—no matter what. At summer Fun Club, she gets mad whenever someone beats her in a game. When she struggles during a tent-making competition, Bella would rather give up than keep trying. Can she learn to do her best and feel good about it, even if she’s not the winner? With the help of the club leader, Bella discovers that she can make a tent, even if it’s not the best tent—and that being a good sport feels much better than being a sore loser.




Be a Good Sport, Charlie Brown!


Book Description

Charlie Brown and the rest of the Peanuts gang learn that winning isn’t everything in this 8x8 storybook based on classic Peanuts comic strips! It’s the beginning of the baseball season, and Charlie Brown’s team is losing sixty-three to zero. Good grief! Linus reminds Charlie Brown that he can’t always win, but that doesn’t make Charlie Brown feel any better. Is there really something better in baseball than winning? Based on original comic strips, this classic Peanuts theme is sure to resonate with young readers. The book has a special section at the back that includes information on the rules of baseball, Charles M. Schulz’s words of wisdom about losing, and more! © 2019 Peanuts Worldwide LLC




Aaron is a Good Sport


Book Description

P. D. Eastman’s classic character Aaron the Alligator makes his early-reader debut! Aaron can get into trouble doing just about anything—playing ball, planting seeds . . . even walking! Kids will giggle along as they tackle the simple words and sentences all on their own. Aaron is a star of The Cat in the Hat Beginner Book Dictionary and a long-out-of-print series called Everything Happens to Aaron. Step 1 Readers feature big type and easy words for children who know the alphabet and are eager to begin reading. Rhyme and rhythmic text paired with picture clues help children decode the story.




Be A Good Sport, Diggory Doo!


Book Description

A Story About Good Sportsmanship and How To Handle Winning and Losing (My Dragon Books - Volume 47). Having a pet dragon is very fun! He can sit, rollover, and play... He can candle a birthday cake, lit a campfire, or so many other cool things... But what if he HAS TO WIN at everything? What if he has to be the best? What if winning is the only thing that matters to him? What if every time he wins, he'd go sticking out his chest around the playground, making sure everyone knows? What if he laughs at his friends, and even calls them names for losing to him? And what if he loses? What if he'd make sure you hear his awful roar loud and clear whenever he loses? What if he yells at you, his teammates, his coach, and even the referee and blames everyone else for his team's loss? What if he plays dirty and smacks other players with his tail whenever they're better than him at a game? And more? What should you do? You teach him to be a good sport! You show him how to handle winning and losing the proper way! You help him understand why winning isn't everything, why not brag or boast when winning, why no tantrum when losing, and how to win and lose with grace! And so much more! But how do you do that? Get this book now and help your kids learn with the dragon Diggory Doo how to be a good sport! Fun, cute, and entertaining with beautiful illustrations, this is a must-have book for children, parents, and educators to teach kids about Good Sportsmanship, and how to Handle Winning and Losing. GET THIS BOOK NOW!




Be a Good Sport!


Book Description

Introduces the concept of sportsmanship, providing examples of proper behavior while playing team sports.




Good Sport


Book Description

Are you a parent who wants to be a part of their child’s sport journey, no matter how far they go? Do you sometimes feel just as frustrated as your young athlete with the debrief during the journey home after the game? Perhaps you struggle to find the right words to say — or sometimes not to say — to your child, so have resorted to saying nothing at all. Dr Jay-Lee Nair has the answers. This book will help you learn how best to support and talk to your child not just before before, but during and after the game. Recent events surrounding sport icons, such as Adam Goodes, Naomi Osaka and Simone Biles, have shown us that athletes are taking greater ownership of their performance and ‘calling the shots’ in the most difficult of circumstances. This is possible when an athlete has a collaborative support team. The same applies for young athletes at all stages of their career and at all levels of their sport. They benefit from having a support team of their parents, coaches and teachers, who understand the importance of helping them to be independent and adaptable. This generation can be highly resistant to advice and direction from their supporters. Young athletes want to be empowered to think for themselves during the game and adapt quickly on their own. This book is for parents, coaches and teachers who want to help their young athletes thrive in competitive environments – whether they are just starting out or competing at an elite level. It is for those who believe in the power sport has to positively shape children into exceptional adults — and athletes — while preventing anxiety and pressure in the sport journey.




Good Sport


Book Description

Why are fiberglass vaulting poles and hinged skates accepted in sport - while performance-enhancing drugs are forbidden? Are the rules that forbid them arbitrary? Should we level the playing field by allowing all competitors to use drugs that allow them to run faster or longer, leap higher, or lift more? In this provocative exploration of what draws us to sport as participants and spectators, Thomas Murray argues that the values and meanings embedded within our games provide the guidance we need to make difficult decisions about fairness and performance-enhancing technologies. Good Sport reveals what we really care about in sport and how the reckless use of biomedical enhancements undermines those values. Implicit in sports history, rules, and practices are values that provide a sturdy foundation for an ethics of sport that celebrates natural talents and dedication. You see these values when the Paralympics creates multiple level playing fields among athletes with different kinds of impairments. They appear again in sports struggles to be fair to all when an extraordinary woman athlete emerges who appears to possess a mans hormone profile and muscles. They are threatened when the effort to assure athletes a fair chance to win without doping is subverted by cheating or by corruption, as in the case of Russias state-supported doping operation. Performance-enhancing drugs distort the connection between natural talents, the dedication to perfect those talents, and success in sport. Explaining the fundamental role of values and meanings, Good Sport reveals not just what we champion in the athletic arena but also, more broadly, what we value in human achievement.




Are You a Good Sport?


Book Description

"Are you a good sport?" provides kids with key aspects of sportsmanship and character by using illustrations and rhymes.




Aaron is a Good Sport


Book Description

P. D. Eastman’s classic character Aaron the Alligator makes his early-reader debut! Aaron can get into trouble doing just about anything—playing ball, planting seeds . . . even walking! Kids will giggle along as they tackle the simple words and sentences all on their own. Aaron is a star of The Cat in the Hat Beginner Book Dictionary and a long-out-of-print series called Everything Happens to Aaron. Step 1 Readers feature big type and easy words for children who know the alphabet and are eager to begin reading. Rhyme and rhythmic text paired with picture clues help children decode the story.