Topic: Valedictorians & 'Unhealthy Competition' ?
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Thu 09/01/16 11:42 PM
Edited by SassyEuro2 on Thu 09/01/16 11:35 PM
‘Unhealthy competition’: Valedictorians so scary that schools may stop honoring
them.

A public school district near Louisville, Kentucky has come down with a bad case of what I call “Participation Trophy Syndrome” – or PTS.

The Greater Clark County School Board in Jeffersonville, Indiana, is considering a plan to eliminate the valedictorian system because it creates “unhealthy competition,” according to Supt. Andrew Melin.

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Unhealthy competition? Is he serious?

Did a kid suffer a concussion while trying to parse a participle?

“When students are competing for the Val and the Sal, they’re trying to find ways to maneuver through the system to try and get the best grades they can possibly get, as opposed to taking the course work that’s truly in their own best interest,” Supt. Melin told television station WHAS.

For you folks living in a commune in Berkeley, the “Val” is the valedictorian and the “Sal” is the salutatorian.

Now, the superintendent does have a valid point. If the kids are taking easy classes for an easy “A” – well, that’s not right.

But I’m curious about the kinds of courses he thinks the youngsters need to take. Are we talking about useful classes like shop or mechanics? Or is it more along the lines of “The Textual Appeal of Tupac Shakur” or “Interrogating Gender: Centuries of Dramatic Cross-Dressing”?

So instead of honoring the best and the second-best – the school is considering a plan to honor more kids.

“We’ve got all these great students that work very hard, and become very distinguished in their academic career and we want to be able to recognize more of those students at the end of a given year,” he told the television station.

My diagnosis has been verified, folks.

Clark County does in fact have an infestation of PTS. The school district will discuss the change on Sept. 6 – meaning the disease is only in the incubation stage.

Symptoms of Participation Trophy Syndrome may vary depending on the seriousness of the outbreak. However, most of the infected typically receive a trophy or a gold star.

Parents should also be wary of underage athletic programs. Teams that refuse to keep statistics or scores are more than likely infected.

Supt. Melin told WHAS there is “growing sentiment nationwide” to change the way schools honor academic success.

A school district in Whiteville, North Carolina recently made a similar change. Instead of recognizing two students, they will move to a three-tier Latin honor system.

Wake County, North Carolina opted for the Latin honor system, too, according to the News & Observer. And it also happened in Christian County, Kentucky where kids could earn either *** laude, manga *** laude or summa *** laude.

But even in the Latin honor system, someone still has to be number one, right? So isn’t that person being denied well-deserved honor and accolades?

Public schools are doing a disservice to kids when they try to cushion them from disappointment. In the real world, not everyone comes in first place.

In essence, they are minimizing achievement and teaching kids to aspire to mediocrity. What kind of message does that send to the kids who are trying to do their very best?

Just remember, folks. When everybody is a winner – we’re all losers.



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Fri 09/02/16 06:57 AM
[Quote/]

Participation Trophy Syndrome” – or PTS.

[Quote/]

Sad thing is.. how many fools will believe, this PC, is about ' Equality '

Then again, all slaves are egual to their masters. think

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Fri 09/02/16 03:21 PM
schools are doing a disservice to kids when they try to cushion them from disappointment.

I kinda disagree.

I think the disservice they may be doing, with "PTS," where everyone gets a trophy, is validating a false sense of accomplishment.

Kind of like parents standing around a 2 year old clapping and cheering when the kid poops in the potty, then continuing to do that until they're 18.

It's not cushioning them from disappointment so much as over inflating the value of the accomplishment.

In essence, they are minimizing achievement and teaching kids to aspire to mediocrity.

Not really.

I mean
students are competing for the Val and the Sal, they’re trying to find ways to maneuver through the system to try and get the best grades they can possibly get, as opposed to taking the course work that’s truly in their own best interest

But at least they are trying to find ways to maneuver through the system.
They are trying. Engaged. Working on something. They aren't disengaged saying "eh, screw school, I'm just going to show up and see what happens."
If the schools are offering "easy a" courses...that's on the schools for offering crap classes, not the students for taking best advantage of what they're forced to do.

It's like scientists trapping apes in a maze with 2 exits and only one has a banana at the end. One ape finds an unknown 6th, 7th, or 25th way out and people complaining "they're taking the easy exits! Giving them banana's is coddling them! There should only ever be one banana! The rest are losers for not competing for that one! You have to have winners or losers!"

What are they saying?
“We’ve got all these great students that work very hard, and become very distinguished in their academic career and we want to be able to recognize more of those students at the end of a given year,”

Most schools used to do this, at least informally.
Prom king and queen, class president, captain of the football team, head cheerleader, voted most likely to succeed, class clown, most popular.
Little rewards for different types of effort and achievement.
At best/worst they are attempting to centrally control the reward system.

At least they are offering reward for actual achievement, theoretically (the article doesn't mention how they'd expand the recognition, only a desire to recognize distinguished academic careers).