Bringing Back
Competition for Kids is a Winner
by Sue
Pascoe
“These
are the times that try men’s souls...What we obtain too cheap, we esteem too lightly; it is dearness only that gives every
thing its value.” So starts one of the pamphlets in Thomas Paine’s “The American Crisis.” Although he was speaking
of the Revolutionary War, his words ring true in our modern times in a
surprising area: raising children.
My children’s first trophies came from YMCA Iddy-Biddy basketball at the age of 4. With the most
recent addition of AYSO soccer trophies for my three children, our household
now has close to 100. Trophies may mean something to parents—many of whom
were raised when they still had value—but for my children they aren’t
associated with winning, excellence, attendance or even hard work.
You’d be hard-pressed—in sports or school—to know
that children have issues with winning and losing. In an effort to make
sure no child feels bad, all competitiveness is erased. Just because
competition is ignored doesn’t mean it’s not there—it’s instinctive.
Last year, six high school swimmers, who had been
with the local YMCA program since they were 7 years old, worked hard enough to
qualify for Y Nationals. You’d think the Y would be ecstatic.
Instead, the director said that too much emphasis was placed on these “elite”
swimmers. In August he did away with the competitive swim program because
someone might feel bad. Excellence was the undoing of a program.
After parents complained that all levels of swimmers were participating, and
that younger ones needed someone to look up to, he agreed to reinstate a
competitive program for the younger children, but no coach was provided for the
high school kids. This emphasis on keeping competition to a minimum
infects every sport.
Unfortunately, the well-intentioned drive to put
all children on the same level also extends into the classroom, thereby
requiring the same programs for all children. Second-graders who can
multiply and figure out logic problems are still required to do the simple
addition problems as the rest of the class. All students are required to
take algebra to graduate, even if their brains aren’t wired that way. A
special-education kid who isn’t toilet trained and is blind and partially deaf
is in a regular classroom, “mainstreamed” because “we’re all the same”.
It’s the reign of mediocrity and the death of
common sense. I laughed at the movie “The Incredibles”
because the parents wouldn’t let their son enter sports because he could run
too fast. At the end of the movie, they let him enter a race, but he
still “dumbed” it down, winning, but only
barely. “Diversity” is the catchword for all that’s right, but it’s also
the catchword that “dumbs” everything down. In
other words, diversity means skin color or religion; it doesn’t actually mean
we want people with diverse skills and talents.
When I was in third grade, a spelling contest took
the top two winners from each classroom to represent the school in a countywide
contest. I didn’t make it and went home crying to my mother. Today,
she’d sue the school district and the contest would be banned. Instead,
she talked to me about my strengths. We talked about how my best friend
had won it and how she was particularly good in that area, how it would be nice
if I could cheer her on. My mother took a devastating time for me and
made it into a life lesson about an individual’s uniqueness.
Kids can take it. They know who’s smart in
class. They also know the smart kid in class may not be the best
athlete. The most popular kid may not be the most creative. It’s
time to celebrate real differences or at least let them exist. Bring back
spelling bees and math contests in elementary school and celebrate the
winners. Choose royalty in a school based on a popular vote. Have
art contests with real winners. Do away with participation medals,
trophies and ribbons.
In life, we lose far more contests than we win,
and learning to lose is as valuable as learning to
win.
(Sue Pascoe is a writer in
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For one reason or another we all fall short from time to time. The
important thing about failure is to learn from it,
and use it to grow into a better person, swimmer, etc.
You may recognize some of these “failures”.
·
Einstein was 4 years old before he could speak.
·
Isaac Newton did poorly in grade school and was
considered “unpromising.”
·
Beethoven’s music teacher once said of him, “As a
composer, he is hopeless.”
·
When Thomas Edison was a youngster, his teacher told him
he was too stupid to learn anything. He was
counseled to go into a field
where he might succeed by virtue of his pleasant personality.
·
F. W. Woolworth got a job in a dry goods store when he
was 21, but his employer would not permit him to
wait on customers because he “didn’t
have enough sense to close a sale.”
·
Michael Jordan was cut from his high school basketball
team. Boston Celtics Hall of Famer Bob Cousy
suffered the same fate.
·
A newspaper editor fired Walt Disney because he “lacked
imagination and had no good ideas.”
·
Winston Churchill failed the sixth grade and had to
repeat it because he did not complete the tests required
for promotion.
·
Babe Ruth struck out 1,300 times-a major league record.
A person may make mistakes but isn’t a failure until he starts blaming
someone else. We must believe in
ourselves, and somewhere along the road of life, we must
meet someone who sees greatness in us, expects
it from us and lets us know it. It is the golden key
to success. (Thanks again to Ann Landers!)