Recently, I listened to an interview
with Ashley Merryman, co-author of Nurture
Shock: New Thinking About Children. She
argues that we’ve raised a generation of trophy kids. They are rewarded not for excellence so much
as mere existence. One example: more money is spent on trophies by youth
soccer organizations nationwide than on coach training or equipment. Indeed, parents faced with little league
budget cuts more often choose to save money by playing fewer games than by
giving fewer trophies.
Some other highlights from Merryman’s interview:
- Kids know the difference between receiving a trophy and earning one… but they’re not sure adults do. Because adults praise them no matter their level of success, their authenticity is suspect over time.
- Students who are praised for their intelligence are often paralyzed by the threat of failure. If they fail, are they no longer intelligent? It’s in the best interest of such children to repeat successes (often beneath their ability level) and avoid challenges (often slightly outside their comfort zone).
- By contrast, students who are praised for hard work (a character trait over which they seem to have more control than intelligence or beauty) are often emboldened to attempt more. Hard work (and not success) becomes their defining characteristic – even though the first frequently leads to the second.
- Consider a parent confronting a child: “Did you break the vase, Mary?” Mary wants to please her mother. But answering “yes” admits failure. Answering “no” is lying. The question presents Mary no opportunity to make her parents happy. As an alternative, suggests Merryman, try: “It would please me to hear the truth about the broken vase.”
- Parents of young children offer incessant praise, expecting the cold reality of criticism to kick in at a later time. They defer criticism to some future authority in the lives of their children. But grade inflation – and even workplace perks – suggest that an honest appraisal is simply not forthcoming.
I haven’t read the book, so I’m not necessarily coming out as
an advocate. The author did present her
case with well-reasoned research. And I’ve
taught (and parented) long enough to have encountered anecdotal support of my own.
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