Cloe Axelson

8K posts

Cloe Axelson banner
Cloe Axelson

Cloe Axelson

@cloeax

Senior editor @cogwbur at @wbur. Writer, runner, Cubs fan, mom of three girls. “Let’s play two.”

Massachusetts, USA Katılım Kasım 2008
2.7K Takip Edilen1.1K Takipçiler
Cloe Axelson retweetledi
Brad Stulberg
Brad Stulberg@BStulberg·
Norway consistently wins the most medals at the Winter Olympic Games, with a population of just 5.6 million people. A big part of their success is how they treat youth sports—and it’s the opposite of what we do in the US. Here’s what we can learn from Norway: 1. Scorekeeping: In the US: Youth sports tend to be hyper competitive even at early ages. Leagues almost always keep score. In Norway: Scorekeeping isn’t even allowed until age 13. Removing winners and losers keeps the focus on the process not outcomes. It keeps kids engaged longer because it minimizes pressure (and tears) and maximizes fun, learning, and growth. The goal isn’t to win a third grade championship. It’s to love sport and keep playing. 2. Trophies: In the US: If you give everyone a trophy, you’re creating snowflakes who will never gain a competitive edge. In Norway: Whenever trophies are awarded, they are handed out to everyone. If getting a trophy makes young kids feel good, we should give them trophies. Maybe they’ll come back and play again next year!! As for the creation of snowflakes with no competitive edge—Norway’s athletes are tough as nails and all they do is win. 3. Prioritizing Fun: In the US: Far too often, the goal is to win. In Norway: The national philosophy is “joy of sport.” Youth sports in the US are driven by adults, ego, and money. Youth sports in Norway are driven by fun. Only half of kids in the US participate in sports. The number one reason they drop out: because they aren’t having fun anymore. In Norway, 93% of kids participate in youth sports. Fun is the foremost goal. 4. Playing Multiple Sports: In the US: There’s pressure to specialize early and play your best sport year round. In Norway: Try as many sports as you can before specializing as late as college. Norway encourages kids to try all types of sport. This reduces injury and burnout and increases all-around athleticism. It also helps promotes match quality, or finding the sport you are best suited for as your body develops, which is impossible if you commit to a single sport too early. 5. Affordability In the US: There is increasingly a pay-to-play model with high fees for leagues, equipment, and travel. This excludes many kids from playing. In Norway: It’s a national priority to keep youth sports affordable and therefore accessible for all. Kids aren’t priced out, which creates opportunities for everyone to participate (and develop into athletes), regardless of their parents’ income level. We could learn a lot from Norway: In the US, 70% of kids drop out of youth sports by age 13. This not only diminishes an elite-athlete pipeline, but it also destroys an opportunity for healthy habits and all the character lessons kids can learn from sport. In Norway, lifelong participation in sport is the norm. The goal isn’t to have the best 9U team. It’s to develop the best athletes. Those are two very different things. And Norway has the gold medals to prove it.
Brad Stulberg tweet media
English
630
1K
5.3K
2.1M
Cloe Axelson retweetledi
The New Yorker
The New Yorker@NewYorker·
“When you are dying, at least in my limited experience, you start remembering everything.” Tatiana Schlossberg, the daughter of Caroline Kennedy, writes about receiving a terminal diagnosis. newyorkermag.visitlink.me/4SkkDI
English
352
1.5K
7.5K
3.3M
Cloe Axelson retweetledi
Peter Baker
Peter Baker@peterbakernyt·
Having served as a Moscow correspondent in the early days of Putin's reign, this reminds me of how the Kremlin took over its own press pool and made sure that only compliant journalists were given access.
English
9.5K
7.2K
28.5K
6.4M
Cloe Axelson
Cloe Axelson@cloeax·
Are you subscribed to @cogwbur's weekly newsletter? It now includes an original essay from one of the editors EVERY WEEK. Plus it shares to all the great stuff we publish + what we're reading. Check out some of our recent stuff here: wbur.org/tag/cognoscent… and sign up!
English
0
0
0
93
Cloe Axelson
Cloe Axelson@cloeax·
I don't think @cogwbur has published a more powerful, heartbreaking essay this year than this one by @KellyGC411. She had her husband Miguel have have lost two children — one at age 3 to a neurodegenerative condition, one in utero, at 21 weeks. wbur.org/cognoscenti/20…
English
0
0
0
63
Cloe Axelson
Cloe Axelson@cloeax·
This essay by @wscharer (who's 'Age of Light' I LOVED) sent me spleunking through the Lee Miller archive. I can't wait to see the film. What fascinating, audacious human Lee was. wbur.org/cognoscenti/20…
English
0
0
0
67
Cloe Axelson retweetledi
Evan Osnos
Evan Osnos@eosnos·
Has there ever been a more quintessential Pelosi line than this? “You take a punch, but you have to be willing to throw a punch. For the children.” newyorker.com/news/daily-com…
English
86
517
4.8K
492.2K
Cloe Axelson retweetledi
The Olympic Games
The Olympic Games@Olympics·
This is everything.
The Olympic Games tweet media
English
4.6K
151.3K
742.4K
46.9M
Cloe Axelson
Cloe Axelson@cloeax·
When @cconaboy heard @wutrain's pregnancy announcement, she had questions about how the mayor would work, heal and manage life with a newborn. "These questions -- all of them -- were the wrong ones," she writes. wbur.org/cognoscenti/20…
English
0
0
0
103
Cloe Axelson
Cloe Axelson@cloeax·
Politics aside, this is just personally devastating. Seeing someone transform into a human you don't recognize ... and wondering if the person you know is still in there? Or if he's lost and gone forever. Worth a listen. nytimes.com/2024/08/05/pod…
English
0
0
0
70
Cloe Axelson
Cloe Axelson@cloeax·
"People had been sold a narrative about Appalachia and its people that did not resonate for me, and did not reflect the people and place I love." -- @AvashiaNeema Contrary to popular belief, JD Vance isn't the only person with ideas on Appalachia. wbur.org/cognoscenti/20…
English
0
6
25
1.2K
Cloe Axelson retweetledi
Magdi Jacobs
Magdi Jacobs@magi_jay·
I will put this plainly, w/o hyperbole: If the U.S. leaves NATO, we will be looking down the barrell at a level of European warfare we haven't seen since WWII. Putin will invade more countries. Europe, for the 1st time in 80 years, will go it alone, w/o the U.S.
Headquarters@HQNewsNow

Trump says he threatened to not support America’s NATO allies against Russia: That’s right, I will not protect you if Russia attacks

English
41
534
1.1K
125.4K