Contrary to what many would think, having an “everyone’s a winner” mentality in my daughter’s youth softball league did not come as good news to me. In order to level the playing field, rules were altered to prevent children from striking out, getting tagged out, etc. When I heard about these changes, I insisted that my daughter not be held to such standards because I believed it would deprive her of valuable lessons.
On one particular occasion, my daughter was running from second to third base and was thrown out. Typically, the girls are allowed to stay on the base. I refused and insisted that my daughter follow more competitive rules. I explained to her why she was out. I viewed this as confronting a small but important failure. I understand that this might sound harsh to some parents, but I grasped the psychological significance that failure can play in sports and wanted my daughter to perceive this lesson as well. The next time she had to run the bases, she ran like her hair was on fire. She did not want to get thrown out again. Children need to be taught what the rules are and why they are thrown out.
I see this event as a valuable example of the importance of the learning process that every child should experience. A child’s mind is complex, and it is best to approach it from all angles, similar to how STEM vs. STEAM education (link is external) is forcing educators to examine all cognitive aspects. I was forced to ask the tough question: Are we actually providing a disservice to children by not letting them experience failure or disappointment in sports? Is the “everyone’s a winner” attitude detrimental in the long run?
It is becoming commonplace to give every child a trophy for just showing up or to change the rules of the game to avoid any sort of failure, but this mindset goes against the fundamentals on which sports were built. Beyond the scope of sports, however, these changes are disadvantageous to children in the long term. It deprives children of valuable learning lessons and coping skills that will extend into other facets of their lives. If they are not taught how to work harder in order to accomplish their goals, and instead expect that success will be handed to them, then what is the point of hard work and dedication? Children will not be able to apply those same valuable principles to other aspects of their lives, such as achieving good grades, securing a scholarship, or working toward a better job.
Source: Derek Jensen/WikiCommons
Children are being increasingly coddled in a culture of false confidence and reinforcement. If they do not learn how to deal with disappointment and failure early on, children will be exponentially more distraught when they inevitably face them later in life. In fact, Ashley Merryman (link is external), the co-author of books such as “Losing is Good For You,” referenced a Stanford psychology study (link is external) that found “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.”
This evidence supports the claim that we are doing a true injustice to children psychologically by not allowing them to experience failure. It is in a child’s best interest to learn how to adjust and alter their approach if what they’re doing is not working, and we’re not providing them with the proper tools for success. Failure is a necessary part of learning and growth, and sports are an ideal place to implement these important lessons.
When I was younger, I learned the value of failure as a teaching tool. I remember wanting to join the basketball team so badly, but I knew that my skills weren’t up to par, so I practiced shooting in the freezing cold and hot summers all alone, because I knew that is what it would take to develop my skill set. I did not take the easy route or settle for my shortcomings because I knew that hard work was the only way to reach my goals.
The same Stanford psychology study referenced earlier also found that children who receive praise for effort rather than for achievement are more likely to see skills as something that can be improved, rather than an innate trait. This idea cements the notion that encouraging effort is more beneficial in positively shaping a child’s character than guaranteeing success. Otherwise, they will never know what it takes to get better, because we did not allow them to fail and explain why they failed.
Although I believe that advocates for the “everyone’s a winner” approach have good intentions, I do not agree with the way that they are trying to accomplish it. We need to empower children and instill confidence while allowing them to experience a valuable lesson in life: failure. The world is full of competition. By diluting the competitive nature of sports, we risk stifling a child’s future and development in more ways than one.
It is not the critic who counts; not the man who points out how the strong man stumbles, or where the doer of deeds could have done them better. The credit belongs to the man who is actually in the arena, whose face is marred by dust and sweat and blood; who strives valiantly; who errs, who comes short again and again, because there is no effort without error and shortcoming; but who does actually strive to do the deeds; who knows great enthusiasms, the great devotions; who spends himself in a worthy cause; who at the best knows in the end the triumph of high achievement, and who at the worst, if he fails, at least fails while daring greatly, so that his place shall never be with those cold and timid souls who neither know victory nor defeat.
--Teddy Roosevelt
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" the only thing necessary for the triumph of evil is for good men to do nothing. "--edmund burke
I agree with the need to lose. My problem is, #1 still throw mad tantrums when he loses. I often wonder if he is being the taught "everyone wins" at school, because he just can't handle it when he doesn't win.
How old is he? So what if he throws a tantrum? Just laugh and walk away and say "Let me know when you are done with your tantrum so we can get back to doing other things".
There have been several studies done that show kids who are allowed to fail eventually have higher self esteem. They learn that they can fail at something, and the world goes on, they survive to fight another day. They learn to try different solutions next time, they learn to go outside their comfort zone in order to seek a solution and they end up woth more self esteem. Trying to build self esteem by never letting someone fail is counter productive. Failing is where the learning happens.
Also when you praise your child, you should never praise the outcome, but praise the effort. Don't say "you got an A, you are so smart" but say instead "you got an A! You worked so hard!" If you say how smart they are, they think if they get a B, that they are stupid and incapable of an A. If you praise the effort instead, they learn that the effort is what has value and they end up working harder and getting better grades.
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Out of all the lies I have told, "just kidding" is my favorite !
The problem is that we are raising a entire generation who are totally externally motivated. Unless they praised, paid, patted on the back , awarded, then they don't want to exert the effort. You will never be a success in life until you do things out of your own sense of effort, pride, accomplishment, morality, etc. If you are always a donkey waiting for the carrot, you will always be a donkey and nothing more. A race horse runs because it NEEDS to run and it wants to run, not because someone taunts them with a carrot.
The problem is that we are raising a entire generation who are totally externally motivated. Unless they praised, paid, patted on the back , awarded, then they don't want to exert the effort. You will never be a success in life until you do things out of your own sense of effort, pride, accomplishment, morality, etc. If you are always a donkey waiting for the carrot, you will always be a donkey and nothing more. A race horse runs because it NEEDS to run and it wants to run, not because someone taunts them with a carrot.
I wouldn't say the entire generation...but there are certainly people out there screwing it up. We are lucky, we are surrounded by kids who are very highly motivated. I think it's partially socio-economic. Certain communities really have a "not MY child, he would never!" mentality. And other communities are much different. For us, we noticed that public school parents were a lot more likely to fight teachers, and say their kid did no wrong. Private school parents were much more likely to support the teachers and tell their kids "if you get in trouble at school, when you get home there will be MORE trouble". That's not to say every public school parent is like that...it has just been our experience in the communities we lived in. And the public school we went to was one of the richest in the state, so I just don't get it. There isn't a direct link.
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Out of all the lies I have told, "just kidding" is my favorite !
Yeah. And a LOT of entitled parents too. DH has one on his team whose dad said "I don't care if she ever gets to play in a game, I just want her to get the training you can offer ". Fine by DH. Well guess who is the only parent to complain about playing time?
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Out of all the lies I have told, "just kidding" is my favorite !
DH hates second place trophies. HATES them. Trophies are for winners. He won't display second place trophies in his office.
Oh, I so agree! Ugh.
Mt niece won an Irish step dance contest. She goes up and gets her #1 place medal. Then gets directed to get a medal for competing. I was like, huh? She wanted the gold and got it.
Yeah. And a LOT of entitled parents too. DH has one on his team whose dad said "I don't care if she ever gets to play in a game, I just want her to get the training you can offer ". Fine by DH. Well guess who is the only parent to complain about playing time?
Not only are many children wholly unprepared for failure, they also don't get to learn about the rules of the game, or sportsmanship.
Being a good loser and/or a gracious winner are important lessons, as well.
Sure, it's nice if everyone at the younger ages can participate--but leagues could cover that by saying that everyone has to play at least one inning in the field and bat at least once per game.
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I'm not arguing, I'm just explaining why I'm right.
Well, I could agree with you--but then we'd both be wrong.