• No travel teams or national championships • No published scores or athlete rankings online • Parents usually spend less than $1,000 per kid per year

The result? A 93% youth sports participation rate, 40 points above the U.S., and more Winter Olympic medals than any country in history, from a nation the size of metro Philadelphia.

Norwegian kids can play organized sports for years before anyone writes down a single score. Official guidelines discourage results tables, rankings, and standings for children up to age 12, and there are no travel teams, no national championships, and no online lists of who beat whom.

Everyone gets a participation trophy. Recognition is built around showing up and improving, not winning, so fewer kids quit early.

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It’s also cheap. Grassroots clubs run mostly on volunteers and lottery funding, and most parents spend under $1,000 per child a year, a fraction of what a single travel sport can cost in the U.S.

The payoff shows up in the numbers. About 93% of Norwegian teens are or have been members of a sports club, roughly 40 points ahead of the U.S. rate for organized youth sports. And a country of about 5.6 million people, smaller than metro Philadelphia, sits atop the all-time Winter Olympics medal table with more than 400 medals and 140-plus golds.

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Source: Thoughtcatalog.com