“When we set children against one another in contests - from spelling bees to awards assemblies to science “fairs” (that are really contests), from dodge ball to honour rolls to prizes for the best painting or the most books read - we teach them to confuse excellence with winning, as if the only way to do something well is to outdo others. We encourage them to measure their own value in terms of how many people they’ve beaten, which is not exactly a path to mental health. We invite them to see their peers not as potential friends or collaborators but as obstacles to their own success… Finally, we lead children to regard whatever they’re doing as a means to an end: The point isn’t to paint or read or design a science experiment, but to win. The act of painting, reading, or designing is thereby devalued in the child’s mind.”— Alfie Kohn, The Myth Of The Spoiled Child
sirius-bsnss liked this
georgeamaezing liked this
princeoregon liked this When I was in Fourth Grade, I was entered into the County Spelling Bee. From then through Eighth Grade, that was my...
agsosweet reblogged this from agsosweet
ncitiny reblogged this from whatheflower
ncitiny liked this
whatheflower reblogged this from ikonist
whatheflower liked this
ikonist reblogged this from ratzpack
comfortplaceforyouall liked this
badeigin liked this
thegayallen reblogged this from regicide1997
solopsism reblogged this from mmaeveric
echo-again reblogged this from youwillbeokayy
lanxichenscupoftea reblogged this from paradoxspaceheater
lanxichenscupoftea liked this
loving-mars liked this
nobodghuj liked this
sixweeknosebleed reblogged this from catadromously
sweetsop reblogged this from neiyuu
thordis-red liked this
kloddolk reblogged this from elfwreck