Should Video Gaming Be a School Sport? (2024)

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Home > > January 6, 2020 > Should Video Gaming Be a School Sport?

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Should Video Gaming Be a School Sport?

Video gaming has pro teams, star players, and millions of fans. But should it be considered a sport, like basketball or track?

By Anna Starecheski & Kathy Wilmore

Illustration by James Yamasaki

Excitement builds as a huge crowd waits for the tournament to begin. The bleachers are filled with friends and family wearing school colors and holding signs. When the teams enter and take their places, the crowd goes wild, stomping their feet and shouting out the names of their favorite players.

But this isn’t a varsity football or basketball game—and the players aren’t on a field or a court. They’re teams of students sitting in front of computer monitors, clicking mice and tapping away at keyboards.

At a growing number of schools around the country, video gaming has become a varsity team sport. From 2018 to 2019, the number of schools participating in the High School Esports League grew from about 200 to more than 1,200.

Video game competitions, known as esports (for electronic sports), are even bigger on the world stage. Nearly 100 million people around the globe watched the 2018 League of Legends World Championship finals. That’s about the same number of people as watched the 2018 Super Bowl.

As esports have become more popular, some people are pushing for gaming to be considered a school sport. After all, they say, games like Fortnite, Counter-Strike: Global Offensive, and NBA 2K20 require skills and focus and can be intensely competitive.

But other people point out that gaming requires very little physical activity—one of the main aspects of traditional sports.

Serious Skills

People in favor of treating esports like conventional athletics say that gaming often requires kids to work together as a team, focus and plan their strategy, and stay calm under pressure. Students also have to be dedicated enough to spend hours perfecting their skills.

That’s why some schools are already calling video gaming a sport. At Robert Morris University in Illinois, the esports team is part of the athletic department. College and high school gaming teams train hard at regular practice sessions and even wear team jerseys on game days.

Video game competitions require teamwork, strategy, and skills—like traditional sports.

Christopher Turner, who coaches esports at Southern Lab, a K-12 school in Baton Rouge, Louisiana, says gaming can provide a big payoff for students. “They can learn teamwork and strategy and . . . about computer codes and game development,” he explains.

Plus, top-level gamers can earn college scholarships worth tens of thousands of dollars,just like players of traditional sports.

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Sitting Isn’t a Sport

Still, many people say that one key factor is required to make something a sport: physical activity. And Fortnite just doesn’t get your heart pumping and your muscles working the same way soccer and track do.

Calling gaming a sport also might encourage kids to trade in their tennis rackets for computer keyboards—and that switch could have dangerous long-term effects, health experts say. Being active helps control weight and reduces anxiety, stress, and depression. Experts recommend that kids ages 6 to 17 do at least 60 minutes of moderate to vigorous physical activity daily—and playing video games just doesn’t cut it.

If video gaming counts as a sport, why not chess clubs and spelling bees?

“I want to see kids up and moving,” says Michael Cring, the athletic director at Arlington High School in LaGrangeville, New York. Cring doesn’t consider gaming a sport. But, he says, “that doesn’t mean it couldn’t be a good activity.”

After all, schools have all sorts of competitive activities we don’t call sports, from math tournaments to glee club championships to science fairs. If we’re going to consider video gaming a school sport, why not chess clubs and spelling bees?

Think It Over

Should video gaming be recognized as a school sport? Consider how it compares with traditional athletics, such as soccer, and with other kinds of after-school activities that don’t require physical activity, like chess clubs. Then ask yourself: Which category is the best fit for video gaming?

Write About It! Write an essay explaining whether you think video gaming should be considered a school sport. Include evidence from this article, along with your own reasons, to support your claim.

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Continue the Learning Journey

  • Listen to this radio piece from NPR about a High School eSports team. Using information from the article and the radio clip, write an opinion piece for your school newspaper arguing for or against establishing an eSports team at your school.
  • Watch this video and travel to Seoul, the capital of South Korea and unofficial capital of esports! You'll meet some of the biggest names in esports, explore Seoul's esports history, and learn where the future of esports is headed. After watching the video, pretend you are an esport competitor. Write a diary entry of a day living in Seoul and your schedule. Include any training sessions or competitions you may have and how you feel about video games being a sport.

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