T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
---|
1546.1 | Wheels - yes...set age - no | GSFSWS::JSMITH | Support Bike Helmets for Kids | Wed May 16 1990 16:16 | 11 |
| Depends a lot on the child. My son started using training wheels
when he was 4. By age 5 he wanted me to take them of, which I
did. After running along behind him just a few times he was able
to balance by himself and of course he had alrady learned to stop
thanks to the training wheels. My daughter on the other hand is
5 now and still using the training whells. I plan to gradually
increase the height of the wheels over the next few months so
that she starts getting the feel of balancing only on the bike
wheels. It shouldn't be long now.
_Jerry
|
1546.2 | remove the pedals | ODIXIE::PENN | Joe's Bait & Sushi Shop | Wed May 16 1990 17:47 | 10 |
|
When my daughter was 5 1/2 I taught her to ride a bike in a day. She
had been riding some with tranining wheels and when she was ready to
learn w/o the wheels I took her to a sloping grass hill, took the
pedals OFF and let her coast down the hill with me running beside her.
After a few times down the hill she could balance the bike very well.
Then I replaced the pedals and she took off. A little wobbly at first,
but with out any crashes and all in one day.
Joe
|
1546.3 | NYET to training wheels | DEBUG::SCHULDT | I'm Occupant! | Wed May 16 1990 17:59 | 5 |
| Unlike the two previous noters, I've nver seen a kid learn to ride
a bike until the training wheels were taken off. My experience has
been that it's kind of like toilet training; when the kid is ready to
do it, it's easy. When the kid isn't ready, no way. I vote No to
training wheels, and start when your child wants to start.
|
1546.4 | | HPSTEK::RGOOD | | Wed May 16 1990 19:11 | 7 |
|
.2
Explain please the theory in pedals being taken off.
Roger
|
1546.5 | | TALLIS::JBELL | Zeno was almost here | Wed May 16 1990 20:30 | 9 |
| > Explain please the theory in pedals being taken off.
It lets the rider use their feet without banging their ankles
into the pedals, kind of like the draissenne (sp) (an early bicycle
before there were pedals).
The shallow hill takes care of the motive force.
-Jeff Bell
|
1546.6 | BE PATIENT | POWDML::SHAUGHNESSY | | Thu May 17 1990 09:12 | 28 |
| After helping two children learn to ride, I agree with .3. You
can't really teach children to ride; all you can do is help them when
they are ready (physically and mentally) to learn by themselves. You
can usually tell when children are ready by the interest they express
in riding.
A few tips:
1. Start your child out on the smallest bike you can find. Even
strong, athletic children have trouble learning when they can't control
the bike. I know of parents who have purchased large bikes for the
wrong reasons ("he will look silly on a small bike" and "I don't want
to buy him something he will outgrow in two years") and ended up with
frustrated children.
2. With the seat down all the way, try to get the child to coast
down a slight incline with his or her feet off the pedals. Doing that
successfully will boost his or her confidence and give him or her a
sense of what is required to balance the bike.
3. Don't allow your child to become discouraged if he or she
doesn't get it immediately. Be patient and calm.
4. Prepare to enjoy the very rewarding moment when your child
first rides successfully. When my older son first "got it" after
trying for a week or two, he rode up and down the street exclaiming
"its a dream come true, its a dream come true." That is a memory I
will always cherish.
|
1546.7 | It makes learning easy | ODIXIE::PENN | Joe's Bait & Sushi Shop | Thu May 17 1990 12:02 | 17 |
| .5
Has most of the reason I took the pedals off. It's easier for a
child (or maybe any new rider) to learn to balance with out having to
also pedal the bike. The hill does provide a good area to coast, a
gentle hill is best, it's also very hard to push the bike on a flat
surface with out upsetting the balance of the rider. So I found a
gentle sloping grassy hill for my daughter to coast down. Once she
could balance the bike with out any problems I replaced the pedals
and it was very easy for her to take off riding.
She rode the bike with training wheels not to learn but, because she
was too big for a tricycle and was not ready to learn to ride on two
wheels. I don't think training wheels train a child for any thing.
They are on the bike to keep the kid from falling off until the kid is
ready to learn to ride.
Joe
|
1546.8 | teaching children to ride | AKOV13::FLANAGAN | blue squares forever | Thu May 17 1990 14:58 | 10 |
| I live on a street with lots of kids and watched my two children each
learn to ride without training wheels at about 5. I believe it is good
to start them on training wheels and take them off when the child is
ready. Basic signs of readiness are when the child can ride with
training wheels pretty fast and steer. If the child does not have the
momentum they will not be able to learn to ride.
I had the training wheels off and on three times before my daughter
learned how to ride. You can tell after running up and down the street
with them 1 or 2 times whether they are ready.
|
1546.9 | | DECWET::BINGHAM | John | Thu May 17 1990 17:24 | 4 |
| How about starting them on something that teaches balance like a scooter
with brakes? Feet on the pedals are stabilizing and having legs hanging
could be more prone to injury on accident. Training wheels don't teach
balance through a corner.
|
1546.10 | my 20 mils | QUICKR::FISHER | Dictionary is not. | Fri May 18 1990 08:28 | 3 |
| How about starting them out with a helmet?
ed
|
1546.11 | My Thoughts | MILKWY::CRITCHLOW | | Fri May 18 1990 09:36 | 15 |
| There is another benefit to training wheels that was not mentioned.
The action of pedaling to get moving is easier to learn without
having to worry about pedaling. This was previously mentioned. But
the action of pedaling backwards to stop is not always easy to
learn. If the child can get these to things down before having to
worry about balance he/she will be that much more confidence. So I
guess I disagree with the previous statement that training wheels
don't train the children for anything.
As to -.1 and the comment about kids wearing helmets.
Amen!
JC
|
1546.12 | Trainig wheels are OK by my experience... | DENIS::DESHARNAIS | | Fri May 18 1990 15:14 | 33 |
| When my son turned two, we got him a small Schwinn two weeler bmx bike
with training wheels. I would take him down to the local school parking
lot on evenings and weekends and just let him ride around at his leisure
to get the feel of the bike. This also helps him strengten his leg
muscles and endurance. He rode the bike with training wheels for about
the first year.
When he turned three, I took off the training wheels. I taught him to
ride by letting him get on the bike and start pedaling while I would be
supporting the bike by holding back of the seat while running along
side. When doing this, my son couldn't tell if I was holding the bike
or not, so he wouldn't get too nervous if I let go. As he rode, I
would occasionally let go for a few seconds at a time, but would grab
hold of the bike when it started to lean. This taught him to balance
the bike as he felt it lean. After an exhausting few hours of running
along side giving occasional support, I would let go entirely. And
that's all there is to it! My son was riding a two wheel bike without
any help at the age of three.
Keep in mind, however, that you shouldn't try this until the child is
physically and emotionally ready. If they are really excited about
riding, and can pedal hard and fast enough, then chances are they are
ready to shed those training wheels. If they are still kind of timid
on the bike and don't want to pedal fast, they probably need more time
to practice with the training wheels.
As for helmets, my kids have been wearing them since day one. They
*NEVER* get on a bike or child carrier without a helmet.
Hope this helps.
Regards,
Denis
|
1546.13 | helmets? of course | ODIXIE::PENN | Joe's Bait & Sushi Shop | Fri May 18 1990 16:18 | 6 |
|
.11
Don't tricycles and big wheels (for recumbents of course) teach a
child how to pedal.
|
1546.14 | trikes? | AKOV13::FLANAGAN | blue squares forever | Fri May 18 1990 18:06 | 3 |
| With the little 12 inch bicycles I hardly ever see kids on trikes or
bigwheels anymore? When my kids had big wheels, they never peddled
them they just rolled them down the hills.
|
1546.15 | the voice of experience... | ALLVAX::JROTH | It's a bush recording... | Fri May 18 1990 18:56 | 20 |
| I rode around on training wheels before learning to ride without them.
I know this because I still remember the day we took them off, when
I was about 5... I was afraid of falling but embarassed about being
afraid; nonetheless, when the time came, my father helped me get
going, catching me a few times as I wobbled and found my balance
and suddenly there was this exhuberant feeling of the fear vanishing
as I got the hang of it and pedalled down the street!
When kids are ready they'll do things, like starting to talk, ride
a bike, or whatever.
It's not clear if training wheels are bad or not, or if I could have
been better off being forced to learn to ride without them sooner.
Probably they were useful for me though.
I wouldn't worry about "cornering" - once a kid gets his balance
the rest comes pretty naturally.
- Jim
|
1546.16 | | HPSTEK::RGOOD | | Sat May 19 1990 09:03 | 11 |
|
RE:12
I use the same technique but no training wheels. It speeds
up the process by a year.
Do people learn to walk with crutches? I guess some do i.e.
walkers etc. I never did. IMHO a person doesn't learn to balance with
training wheels. When my first bike showed up it had training wheels
and I refused to ride it until they came off.
Roger
|
1546.17 | Fischer Price | MILKWY::CRITCHLOW | | Mon May 21 1990 09:21 | 15 |
| BTW
Fischer Price has a great new bike out for this kind of thing.
There are two sizes 12" and 16".
The seat has a handle in back for mom and dad to hold. The chain
is completely enclosed to keep kids fingers out of the dirt and
for extra safety. It looks to be a pretty good product.
Do what seems to make the kid most comfortable,
JC
|
1546.18 | Trainers Do Train! | MSHRMS::BRIGHTMAN | PMC Alum, '88 '89 | Mon May 21 1990 09:36 | 35 |
| I'll add my $.02!
Some one asked "don't tricycles teach to pedal?" Not exactly. My son
and his friend each had/have one of those Fisher-Price blue and yellow
plastic trikes. The pedals are fixed, so that when the wheel gets
turning the pedals turn or visa versa.
My son would go with me to the bike shop and make a B-line to the
2-wheeler with training wheels. He would pedal slowly back and forth
in the shop. (Friendly shop owners.) He got a hand-me-down 2 wheeler
a couple of weeks ago and I have to tell him to slow down, he pedals
too fast. (I guess it's time for the training wheels to come off.)
Now, on the other hand, Andrew, the boy down the street, had never been
on a 2-wheeler. This Sat for his B-day he got one. Because he was use
to the wheel keeping the momentum of the pedals going, he would pedal
acouple of strokes then, before the pedal would come "over-the-top" he
would press down to soon and jam the brake on.
SO, with that long winded explanation, IMHO, trainings DO teach
something.
And as for people not learning to walk with "training wheels". My son
learned to walk using a small plastic chair, he would cruise around the
kitchen. And most kids I see, move from crawling to walking by holding
onto chairs, couches, tables etc... and moving around to get the
"walking motion" down before they learn to balance.
Maybe that was $.05 worth! ;-)
Tim B
"Helmets required!"
|
1546.19 | Take training wheels; Gag wife | SUBWAY::SCHULMAN | | Tue May 22 1990 16:07 | 29 |
| Let me sum it up and add some stuff.
It seems when the kid is ready you'll know. I think he's ready, he
wants to take a ride with me whenever I go out, but I say he can't go
until the training wheels come off.
He started on a tricycle at two. He out grew it at 3 1/2 and right
before he was four he got this bike. He did by the way have problems
adjusting to the different type of pedaling. It seems on a tricycle
the pedals are in front of the rider and on the new bike they're
underneath. Also you can coast on this bike, and he wasn't use to that
or the breaks. Now he really rips, I have a problem running next to
him. He has no problems turning or stopping.
In that respect I think he's ready. If I remember correctly, and help
me here, the hardest part when I was learning was to start by yourself.
What about that, any pointers. Also my wife says he's not ready, and
that puts negative thoughts in his head. Shes no expert though and she
really doesn't help him ride.
By the way the helmet goes with the bike, he doesn't even realize that
you can ride a bike without a helmet.
Need some suggestions for starting. I was thinking before I took the
training wheels off that I would teach him how to mount and get the
bike moving.
Comments please.
|
1546.20 | My experience... | TLE::TLE::SASAKI | Marty Sasaki ZK02-3N30 381-0151 | Tue May 22 1990 17:31 | 13 |
| My father tried to teach me to ride a bicycle and it was a horrible
experience. He tried to make me want to learn to ride without the
training wheels and it just didn't work. We spent many frustrating days
trying. One day, I just decided to try and learn and without my
father's help I was riding around in less than an hour of trying. I
remember making sure that he wasn't around before even trying.
Obviously my relationship with my father is different than your
relationship with your son. I just want to point out that my father's
well meaning enthusiasm did exactly the opposite and turned me away
from riding my bike for several years.
Marty Sasaki
|
1546.21 | Listen to Your Kids | MILKWY::CRITCHLOW | | Wed May 23 1990 09:17 | 18 |
| Marty's experience reinforces my belief that when dealing
with small children, or anyone for that matter, you can't
force them to learn anything before they are good and
ready.
I have seen evidence of this over and over with my son who
will be four this summer. The best example I can think of
was learning to pump a swing by himself. We spent all last
year in vain trying to get him to pump so Mom and Dad could
have a break. It wasn't until this year and two hours of
*motivated* practice that he learned. Point being he just
was not convinced that he was ready. I have read in several
places that it is much better to take things at the child's
pace if you want the learning to be a positive experience.
Timing is extremely important and most often governed by
the child, not the well-meaning parent.
JC
|
1546.22 | | JUPTR::CRITZ | Who'll win the TdF in 1990? | Wed May 23 1990 11:02 | 14 |
| I have to agree about letting the child decide when
the right time is.
My youngest daughter (now 14) used to be this way when younger.
Learning to ride a bike, swim, do this, that, or the other.
She wasn't scared, she just wanted to do it herself, by
herself. In fact, she used to say, "I'll do it my own self."
When she said this, we knew she wanted us to butt out.
So, we did.
Let the kid learn at his/her own speed. If they ask for help,
give it. Otherwise, leave them alone.
Scott
|
1546.23 | LET IT BE... | USCTR1::PJOHNSON | | Wed May 23 1990 12:37 | 10 |
| Ditto with regards to forcing children to learn to ride without
training wheels. I think every parent would like his/her son/daughter
to become the next _______ (fill in the blank). But you have to
make a conscious effort not to force them into what you happen to
find fun or interesting. For all I know, my boys might join the NRA
and become avid hunters, or become addicted to synchro swimming!
They'll learn what they want, when they want.
Phil
|
1546.24 | The parents really can make a difference... | BCSE::DESHARNAIS | | Wed May 23 1990 13:02 | 16 |
| I agree with the previous replies that the child will not learn to ride
without training wheels until good and ready. However, I also feel the
parent can play a constructive role in teaching the child how to ride.
I found the key is to make it *FUN*, and to encourage the child all along
the way.
Only parents who are too serious about it and put unnecessary pressure
on the child need butt out. Otherwise, it can really be a great child/
parent experience.
I used the technique mentioned in .12 to teach my son, and also taught
three sisters and a brother. As long as it was done in a fun way, they
learned quickly.
Regards,
Denis
|
1546.25 | this started out as a five line note.... | CECV03::LERRA | | Fri May 25 1990 17:32 | 45 |
|
One more opinion....
In answer to the previous question regarding how to get the kids
started, my two boys (and about 30 other kids on our street) all
started off like this :
1. get real close to the curb
2. line up the pedals so the one closest to the street is 'up'
3. get on the bike from the sidewalk side
4. push down like crazy on the street side pedal!!!
Hopefully, enough momentum is generated to keep the bike going until
both feet can find the pedals and get into a rythym.
As to merits, or lack thereof, of training wheels. I believe that they
very definitely help a young child learn to pedal, steer, balance, and
brake. I disagree with the concept of raising the training wheels to
help the child learn to balance the bike. The only thing I've ever seen
occur when the wheels were raised is that the child leans to one side,
therefore rides on 'three' wheels. I also think it is downright
dangerous for the wheels to be raised because when the child does begin
to lose his/her balance there is a natural tendancy to overcompensate
to regain balance. This can easily result in the bike being 'thrown'
well beyond the balance point in the opposite direction. ( I hope that
was clear) With the training wheels both down , the bike is very solid.
This provides the child with a level of confidence and security.
When did we remove the training wheels from our kids' bikes? When they
began riding fast enough that the bike was turning with the front wheel
and ONE of the training wheels on the ground! Yes, we did wait a little
too long in both cases....BUT, it was the childrens wish to keep the
training wheels on up to that point.
For those of you still reading this, I apologize for its length. I'd
like to leave you all with one more thought. For the most part, you
seem to be dealing with very young children (under 10 years of age). I
suggest that taking some time to attend a coaching clinic would
be beneficial. Pick your favorite sport, and go to listen to some
'experts' in the field of teaching/coaching our kids. You will learn an
awful lot about the motivation and needs/wants of our young folks as
they relate to sport. I mention this because a lot of the comments I
read in this note have come from personal experience and the coaching
clinics I am referring to would facilitate this learning and may help
you (as I have been helped) in relating to your children.
regards,
dennis
|
1546.26 | Give the kid a wrench, too... | SMURF::PARADIS | Worshipper of Bacchus | Fri Jun 01 1990 13:37 | 37 |
| I'll toss in my 20 millibucks with my own story:
I got my first bike (with training wheels) when I was 7 for a B-day
present. I went along with my parents to pick it out... while I
was there my dad mentioned something to the salesman about "well,
we'll need training wheels for a few weeks, but they'll come off".
Well, about 3-4 weeks after getting the bike, and I was nowhere
NEAR ready to ride on 2 wheels, I started to get panicky that the
nice man from the store was going to come by and take the training
wheels back! (What can I say? In some ways I was too smart for
my own good, and in other ways I was really dense...)
Anyhow, with reference to .19, my mother NEVER believed that I
was ready for ANYTHING! She also firmly ingrained in me the
habit of asking permission before doing anything. So when I
started getting comfortable on the bike, I started pestering her
to let me take the training wheels off and start teaching me how
to ride... but she kept insisting that I wasn't ready yet (well,
I WAS a rather klutzy kid...). Finally, one day, without telling
her, I decided to compromise; I grabbed a wrench, took off the
left training wheel completely, and raised the right one a bit.
I found that when I got up to speed, the right wheel would leave
the ground and I'd actually be on two wheels, but the wheel was
there as a psychological security blanket. After a few weeks of
this I took the right wheel off too. She didn't know what I was
doing until one day she saw me riding on two wheels. When she
asked me what had happened, I lied and said that my big brother
had been teaching me how to ride (Ron never helped me worth a damn
unless he could get a favor from me out of the deal 8-) 8-) ).
That seemed to satisfy her...
The moral of the story, of course, is the same thing everyone else
has been saying; when the kid is ready to ride for real, s/he will
start doing it whether you want the kid to or not 8-) 8-) 8-)
--jim
|
1546.27 | another child rides on 2 wheels ... | COOKIE::MUNNS | dave | Wed Sep 06 1995 15:14 | 20 |
| My son has ridden a 2 wheeler + training wheels since age 3. For
almost 2 years he did this and went through 3 sets of training wheels.
When he turned 4, Dad decided to take the training wheels off and see
what would happen. My son was not ready yet, so we put them back on.
A week before his 5th birthday we took the training wheels off (he
had been asking me to do this for a few weeks after seeing kids about
his size riding that way). With 1 push he was riding, stopping,
turning with no problem. He instantly discovered how much the training
wheels had been slowing him down.
Those 2 years with training wheels taught him a lot - balance, safety
on streets and sidewalks, avoiding obstacles. He now rides with me on
low traffic streets and is learning more safety skills - avoiding
encounters with cars, watching his speed on downhills, not locking the
brakes, learning how to crash, starting by himself... He always wears a
helmet and gloves.
The freedom and pride of riding on 2 wheels is one that is never
forgotten.
|
1546.28 | | MKOTS3::WTHOMAS | | Wed Sep 06 1995 17:33 | 41 |
| Re: -1
Dave, thanks for renewing activity on this subject. Reminds me of a
story with 2 lessons for parents - (1) get a well-fitted brain bucket for
them, even if it takes significant effort to find one & (2) watch them
after they go into 2 wheel mode, to assure that they don't try to sneak
an unauthorized/unsupervised adventure.
1987 I relocated to a sales assignment in MI, ahead of the
family in NH. While back in NH for one of my weekend visits, it became
evident that daughter #1 was ready to go "sans training wheels". Both
that Sat & Sun, dad & daughter were doing fine. Then I flew back to MI,
Sunday PM.
1.5 weeks later, the family was scheduled to fly to MI for a
househunting trip. The day of the scheduled trip I called the NH house
to verify that everything was ok. The first clue that there was a
problem was that a strange voice, not my wife, answered. The second
clue was when the babysitter (the voice) said that my wife & #1
daughter were at the emergency room. Next call - emergency room. Both
parents rattled, kid in a real hurt.
Seems that, while my wife packing the family for the trip, #1 daughter
took it upon herself to exercise her new bicycling skills down the
driveway, collided with a large rock, which made her airborne until she
did a face-plant into a tree.
FACE=0, TREE=1. Did I indicate that our driveway/neighborhood is
rather hilly?? Multiple face fractures, teeth problems, and no
househunting. Medical care was great and subsequent years of
orthodontia show no evidence of this event. Great looking teeth, no
scars.
The househunting trip occured several weeks later, after the swelling
had gone down enough to handle pressurized aircraft travel.
Years later, when the time came time for #2 daughter's turn with this
rite of passage, her bike helmet was a well-known fixture and we hung the
bike up after each use.
Bill
|
1546.29 | bicycle airbags ? | COOKIE::MUNNS | dave | Wed Sep 06 1995 18:56 | 19 |
| Re: -1
Youch ! Kids sure love to experiment and many times learn the hard
way. Glad to hear your daughter survived her accident. I'm sure that
memory is still quite vivid.
Sometimes I want to provide body armor to prevent all those hurts. But
somehow we have all lived through it with scars to show everyone. I
see the greatest danger for novice 2 wheelers is encounters with
vehicles. I am taking my son to city parks where he can ride laps on
the sidewalks, bump across grass, and discover the magic of soft sand.
We live in a hilly neighborhood where he can reach dangerous speeds
and just a few blocks away is a road where cars habitually speed so
dangers lurk nearby.
Good suggestion around supervision. Now that my son can start off by
himself it's only a matter of time before he opens the garage door
and pedals away without asking permission. The only unknown is at what
age will this happen, 5..21 ?
|
1546.30 | Kids are great! | BUSY::CLEMENT | Smells like Nirvana | Thu Sep 07 1995 11:45 | 16 |
| I remember when my kids first solo'd.
My daughter, within the first couple of minutes of riding on her own,
decides to immediately show off and ride with no hands (crash and
burn). After the wimpering and lecture she was up and riding again in
a minute.
My son, took him to the high school track. Loaded him up with helmet,
gloves, winter coat, boots, knee pads, etc. He was all set within a
few minutes.
Its a lot of fun teaching and watching your kids to ride. Just as you
are getting tired from running with them and holding their bike up,
they seem to just get the hang of it.
Mark
|
1546.31 | My Kid's stories....... | SUBSYS::BRIGHTMAN | PMC - Sitting on a cure for cancer, Join me? | Thu Sep 07 1995 15:46 | 24 |
|
With my son I did the run-alomg-holding-the-seat-routine. Even with
all the riding I was doing there is nothing like trying to run stooped
over holding the bike up. I was exhausted in no time! "Come on Dad, I
want to keep riding!"
My daughter REFUSED help. She didn't want to "roll" down the slight
decline in the side yard! She wanted to ride on the street (quiet
cul-de-sac, so that wasn't the concern.) were her brother was riding.
I took the training wheels off the "old, little" bike (12" wheels) she
had a new 16" wheel, but wanted the old. To her credit, she took 2-3
days to conquer the bike. first pushing off on 1 pedal then putting
both feet on the ground. Then it was 2 strokes and 5 feet. Pretty soon
she was chasing her brother up and down the street.
AND after the other kids her age (5) saw her riding without training
wheels they all followed suit. We now have 4 or 5 5yr olds buzzing
up and down the cul-de-sac.
Proud Pop!
- Tim
|
1546.32 | CS airport | BSS::BROPHY | | Thu Sep 07 1995 17:22 | 6 |
| For those in Colorado Springs I found a good place to teach my
daughter. Try the old airport. There is no traffic or people for them
to run over. When they (I) got tired we sat down and watched the
planes takeoff and land.
Gary
|