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Inspire Your Grandchildren!

Taking a Cue From Pool, Kids Rack-up Success

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Think billiards is a game best reserved for your local senior center? Think again! You can teach powerful life lessons by incorporating a pool table into your home's design or accompanying your grandchildren to play the game.

Pool at School
A unique school program in Sacramento, Calif., takes high school students from the classroom to the poolroom to learn skills that will help them at school and throughout life. The program, part of Del Campo High School's physical education curriculum, just may set the standard for schools nationwide.

The course, "Billiards I: A Lifetime Sport," was started by a high school physical education teacher and a billiard instructor. According to Physical Education Instructor Marcie Davis, it came about one day when she was teaching a class outside, and it started to rain. One of the students suggested they shoot pool. She searched for a place to play as well as an instructor and found both at Hard Times Billiards. She teamed up with Barton Mahoney, a certified Billiard Congress of America (BCA) billiard instructor, who teaches the techniques established by the nonprofit World Billiard Instructor's Association. "I was looking for a place to teach pool, and he was looking for a medium to teach it," Davis says.

Pool Lessons
Besides going off campus to play pool and write about it, what else does the course teach these young people? Pool is a game that deals with the fundamentals of geometry and physics and requires hand-eye coordination. It also teaches socialization, and students don't have to be athletes to play. Mahoney couldn't agree more. "Young people appreciate the fact that the playing field is equal with no social, physical or gender barriers," he says. "Learning the physical geometry [of the body] through the application of visual geometry [of the game] is how the intricacies of pool are discovered."

Since starting the course in 1999, more than 700 students have taken the class. Marcie thinks that what sets it apart is the fact that the class has a reading and writing component. All classes at Del Campo require notebooks, and in this class, students must do peer analysis and self-analysis. The students also have assignments in which they read about a billiard personality and write an essay.

Davis sets high standards for her students in reading, writing and behavior. "If a student misbehaves, they are kicked out of the class," she says. This has happened only once since the program's inception three years ago.

BCA Hall of Fame member and author Robert Byrne loves to sing the praises of the positive attributes of cue sports and what young people can learn from the game. "It teaches advance planning, choosing the shot that gives you the chance to make additional shots before your opponent does, not the one that gives you immediate gratification," he says. "It also demonstrates the concept of risk versus reward and is an exercise in discipline, in which the player learns the value of emotional control."

Taking It Nationwide

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