From:
Sent Wed 9/25/2013 7:57:54 PM
Subject Op-Ed Contributor Losing is good for you
OP.ED CONTRIBUTOR
Losing Is Good for You
Sy ASrHEY MERRYIvIAN
htto://www.rwtimes.com/2013/09/25/opinion/los s-qood-for-you.html? r=0
LOS ANGELES - AS children return to school this fall and sign up for a new year's
worth of extracurricular activities, parents should keep one question in mind. Whether
your kid loves Little League or gymnastics, ask the program organizers this: "Which kids
get awards?" If the answer is, "Everybody gets a trophy," find another program.
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Jennifer Heuer. Photographs courtesy of CSA Images:Getty Image?
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Trophies were once rare things — sterling silver loving cups bought from jewelry stores
for truly special occasions. But in the 1960s, they began to be mass-produced, marketed
in catalogs to teachers and coaches, and sold in sporting-goods stores.
Today, participation trophies and prizes are almost a given, as children are constantly
assured that they are winners. One Maryland summer program gives awards every day —
and the "day" is one hour long. In Southern California, a regional branch of the American
Youth Soccer Organization hands out roughly 3,5oo awards each season — each player
gets one, while around a third get two. Nationally, A.Y.S.O. local branches typically spend
as much as 12 percent of their yearly budgets on trophies.
It adds up: trophy and award sales are now an estimated $3 billion-a-year industry in the
United States and Canada.
Po Bronson and I have spent years reporting on the effects of praise and rewards on kids.
The science is clear. Awards can be powerful motivators, but nonstop recognition does
not inspire children to succeed. Instead, it can cause them to underachieve.
Carol Dweck, a psychology professor at Stanford University, found that kids respond
positively to praise; they enjoy hearing that they're talented, smart and so on. But after
such praise of their innate abilities, they collapse at the first experience of difficulty.
Demoralized by their failure, they say they'd rather cheat than risk failing again.
In recent eye-tracking experiments by the researchers Bradley Morris and Shannon
Zentall, kids were asked to draw pictures. Those who heard praise suggesting they had an
innate talent were then twice as fixated on mistakes they'd made in their pictures.
By age 4 or 5, children aren't fooled by all the trophies. They are surprisingly accurate in
identifying who excels and who struggles. Those who are outperformed know it and give
up, while those who do well feel cheated when they aren't recognized for their
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accomplishments. They, too, may give up.
It turns out that, once kids have some proficiency in a task, the excitement and
uncertainty of real competition may become the activity's very appeal.
If children know they will automatically get an award, what is the impetus for
improvement? Why bother learning problem-solving skills, when there are never
obstacles to begin with?
If I were a baseball coach, I would announce at the first meeting that there would be only
three awards: Best Overall, Most Improved and Best Sportsmanship. Then I'd hand the
kids a list of things they'd have to do to earn one of those trophies. They would know
from the get-go that excellence, improvement, character and persistence were valued.
It's accepted that, before punishing children, we must consider their individual levels of
cognitive and emotional development. Then we monitor them, changing our approach if
there's a negative outcome. However, when it comes to rewards, people argue that kids
must be treated identically: everyone must always win. That is misguided. And there are
negative outcomes. Not just for specific children, but for society as a whole.
In June, an Oklahoma Little League canceled participation trophies because of a budget
shortfall. A furious parent complained to a local reporter, "My children look forward to
their trophy as much as playing the game." That's exactly the problem, says Jean Twenge,
author of "Generation Me."
Having studied recent increases in narcissism and entitlement among college students,
she warns that when living rooms are filled with participation trophies, it's part of a
larger cultural message: to succeed, you just have to show up. In college, those who've
grown up receiving endless awards do the requisite work, but don't see the need to do it
well. In the office, they still believe that attendance is all it takes to get a promotion.
In life, "you're going to lose more often than you win, even if you're good at something,"
Ms. Twenge told me. "You've got to get used to that to keep going."
When children make mistakes, our job should not be to spin those losses into decorated
victories. Instead, our job is to help kids overcome setbacks, to help them see that
progress over time is more important than a particular win or loss, and to help them
graciously congratulate the child who succeeded when they failed. To do that, we need to
refuse all the meaningless plastic and tin destined for landfills. We have to stop letting
the Trophy-Industrial Complex run our children's lives.
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This school year, let's fight for a kid's right to lose.
Ashley Merryman is the author, with Po Bronson, of "NurtureShock: New Thinking
About Children" and "Top Dog: The Science of Winning and Losing
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