The Adventures of Huckleberry Finn
discussion
Librarian Proposes Ban of Child Super-Reader


That is a valid point Chris. And I agree that banning the child is probably not the best solution. I am wondering though, if the idea of "work harder and you could win too" isn't the very problem with our perspective in general, with this contest and with how our society operates. Working harder doesn't always = winning, or even succeeding, to the standard that many would consider success, but maybe that's okay. Maybe doing our best, or simply doing well should also be rewarded or recognized in some way, especially when we are growing and learning, as children. ?



At the end of the "contest," a list could be published of what percentage of the goal the child has read, or more fair (in my opinion), just list the children's names who reached their reasonable goals.
It would be up to someone who could give each child some wise counsel to suggest what number and kind of books that would be included in that individual's goals. A reward would be for a "job well done, " or that one followed up on a commitment made.
Isn't this more what summer reading should be: to encourage children to read without making someone a winner, and therefore all others, losers? Isn't this what life in a civilized country should be like, rather than always having to be first or to feel a failure?

The cheating parent/child demonstrate one reason why we need to take a look at why we place so much importance on not just competition but the idea that it is necessary to compete and only a success to win at all costs. I wonder what winning the contest meant to that mother that she would participate in a "scam" with her child.

Exactly what I am wondering myself. What is the price of this sort of competitive "win at all costs" and "the only valuable work is hard work and the only way to succeed is harder work, and the only goal is to be the best." There are way too many of us getting this message, working hard, working harder, and working harder still, and not making ends meet, and not only feeling that it is because we are doing something wrong or not working hard enough, but having the finger pointed at us as being slackers or lacking ambition because "all it takes it hard work and ambition to be a success" is the prevailing, and false, message we receive. And it is the message we give our children.




Why? Why are there winners and losers? That is a foregone conclusion that we are taught to believe, is it not? But is it a fact? And is it necessary. If it wasn't taught, then there would be nothing to shelter children from, isn't that true? I would ask what is the benefit of making competition, a winners and losers core belief, our societal norm/expectation/requirement. Do we believe that without keeping score we will all sit down and stop trying/learning/playing?


Not everyone gets to be president or the CEO. If you start a company you may fail the first 20 times but be wildly successful the 21st. If you have never failed or lost will you even try? I've failed more than succeeded but that just makes success sweeter no one ever told me I wouldn't fail nor did they shelter me from it.



That is a great example of a successful cultural model that doesn't brand one the "slacker" and another the "success," and doesn't teach children that they are bound by "fact of life" to the winner versus loser model, but that achieving an equal goal can result in success and satisfaction. I am not a fan of the obvious "not everyone can be the president" cop-out in these sorts of conversation. They don't really lead anywhere and only serve to shut down the consideration of other thoughts and possibilities to the current (and obviously not working) model we have created for our society. I am certainly not suggesting that everyone is equal, or should be equal, but I do think we place too much (and too early) emphasis on winner/loser models, and not enough emphasis on making sure everyone has a comfortable and basically satisfying shot at life.


This. Though I hate to bring it up, doesn't communism actually function in a similar manner? People aren't as hardworking as we'd like to believe, so if everyone is rewarded equally, nothing motivates people to accomplish extraordinary things. Kids wouldn't strive to get good grades if their chances of getting a better job than those who didn't succeed at the same task wouldn't increase. I know that I wouldn't have done so in school had I not gotten anything out of it. The truth of the matter is that most people aren't going to put in the extra work if they're not moved to do that.

I agree. There's nothing to stop other kids from coming after the kid's crown. He should be punished? For what? Being motivated? What kind of message does THAT send? It's that 'Everyone wins a trophy' attitude that's responsible for nobody thinking they need to work for the big prize. The librarian means well but she's wrong.

There is much truth to this. I used to read fast and it was almost like eye exercises. I read Wuthering Heights in junior high and upon re-reading the same paperback copy in college was shocked to find I remembered NOTHNG. Not details. Not the plot. Nothing. But hey, I was FAST!

The problem with communism isn't lack of motivation and incentive in the people, it's corruption and abuse in the government. The people who are receiving the least in this country are actually harder working than we give them credit for, and those coming from that situation are doing extraordinary things just to get through the day paycheck to paycheck, but since they are working 2 and 3 times as hard to do what many of us take for granted through our entitlement and privilege, it either goes unnoticed or they are not measuring up to what we consider "success." I wouldn't suggest that everyone be rewarded equally, but I would suggest that we could do better with changing our perspective to reflect reality.

As for the tangential remarks above about minimum wage workers/slackers, you should spend a day following a minimum-wage nurse's aid, or below-minimum-wage home health care worker. Our pay scales are not based on whether the work is mentally demanding, laborious, difficult, or requiring significant skill. Were that the case then the people doing the above jobs would be rich and a lot of well-connected suits would be on food stamps.

As for the tangential remarks above about minimum wage workers/slackers, you should spend a day following a minimum-wage nurse's aid, or below-minimum-wage home health care worker. Our pay scales are not based on whether the work is mentally demanding, laborious, difficult, or requiring significant skill. Were that the case then the people doing the above jobs would be rich and a lot of well-connected suits would be on food stamps." <--- yes! That's what I'm talking about. Great sharing/insight/perspective!


Do you think that winning a prize is an effective way to motivate children to learn and play? It has been said that "not every kid needs to be a winner" but is it also possible that not every accomplishment/challenge needs to be rewarded? What lesson do children learn when there is a payment attached to every task? Some even think that the use of a grading system in school could be revised to take the emphasis away from "reward." But some believe that without reward we will end up with a bunch of lazy kids. I haven't really spent much time studying it, but I didn't receive an allowance when I was a kid and I managed to keep my space tidy and my school work done. Some children need some encouragement/motivation, for sure, but from the sounds of the article, the child who keeps winning is already pretty motivated to read, and this probably wouldn't change without the contest.

As for the prizes, I definitely think that they can motivate children to learn, to display talents that they might not have displayed otherwise. Sure, most kids aren't going to win, but even a loss can teach a child something. I didn't win everything as a child, and I just had to take from the losses what I could. The lessons in realism were not detrimental to my state of mind in the long run.




I find it deplorable that anyone should suggest that this boy be penalized for operating the best under the prescribed rules. Yes, he's the best. So what? So the other kids are not the best. That's how superlatives work. If there's a best, then everything else is not.
As to the suggestion that we are teaching kids about winning and losing and that this is not a desired lesson for them, bah! This is intrinsic to human nature. It's demonstrated in every civilization to some degree, even primitive peoples. Even if the librarian decides to adopt an "everyone's a winner" approach, it's ridiculous to assume that the children won't learn the winning/losing lesson elsewhere. Why not let them learn in it in a safe environment?
I think it's naive to assume that letting kids learn the lesson that they can't always win will somehow produce a generation of slackers. The lesson of life is this: there will ALWAYS be someone better than you (even if you're the best at the moment), and there will ALWAYS be someone worse than you (even if you're the loser at the moment). THIS is what we should be teaching kids: that being okay is, well okay. You can strive to be better than you are, and set goals and attain them. That's great! You will also have failures in life. It's what you do with those failures that defines you. THAT needs to be taught to kids, and the earlier the better. Failure at one thing, or even at repeated attempts at one thing does not necessarily breed apathy. Though kids can learn this lesson early if we let them; let's all agree to help engender perseverance over apathy.

Do you think that..."
I completely agree with the your last thought. Though, the focus is not on the that child. The contest, through a reward system, does not aim to be a cog in the materialistic education system, if you see it that way.
In real world, in general, rewards are the only way most of the people get motivated, and then tend to stay that way. Of course, there are others, who will continue to strive for excellence even in their absence. But those are the people who are wanting to do that, aren't they. For instance, you were a good kid, who kept her rooms tidy, and finished all your chores on time. But I for one, was always lazy. Procastination was a virtue newfound in me. :D No amount of scolding or threat moved me, until my parents grounded me. So, you can say that I cleaned my room, and got my freedom as a reward.
I'd say, this barter system of do some, get some does really seem to work. Granted, we'd like the kids to be educated and more aware of the literature as they grow up. But the impetus is just not there for the majority of them.




They obviously haven't read "The Outliers" by Malcolm Gladwell. :)

Love it!!!
Harrison Bergeron has been much on my mind lately.....what with all the talk about "gene pool winners".......I keep waiting for the lobotomy squad to show up at my door to provide with with some "equalization services."

in which there was major sport competition. (with TV translation, wages,etc).
It was held several times.
Starting from 2nd time, everyone were almost sure who will get 1st place (and that person have a lot of influence, abilities,etc but get 1st place without any cheating (if we don't consider innate abilites and a lot of combat training 'cheating').
Everyone just were interested who will get 2nd place instead. Issue solved.



That was probably what the librarian was aiming for, but really missed the mark. Banning a kid should not be the answer. If that was what they felt they needed to do, then they need to figure out why that problem came up in the first place. This issue should have never gotten this far.
Our local library (Multnomah county, Oregon) does a game board and it is more about that you read, based more on time read, not how much. They also count stupid things like watching movies based on books and going to library activities. I wish they would hold some of the prizes for those that get the game boards late, slower readers, or out of town and read while on trips. Their program is not perfect either, and it could improve- Love the quizzing part! Also helps with comprehension. But that also means man power, and I doubt that they can, or are willing to try that.
Reading is something that we all need to practice and fine tune. If we can't read well, jobs are very few and very far between. These programs should be working on that practice and fine tuning, not who can do it best.

1. Reading plenty of books is a good thing. Libraries SHOULD be encouraging kids to read.
2. Having the same winner year after year would be discouraging to some, so perhaps there can be awards by age group and/or gender in order to spread the encouragement around a bit.

I don't think there's anything wrong with the librarian taking the boy and his mother aside and saying that he's so much better at this than all the other children that it's discouraging them from participating. I like Timothy's idea of having him help plan the next contest, even be in charge of handing out prizes. And maybe have him declared Grand Champion Reader of the library and retire from the competition.
The last thing you want is for kids to feel like losers in reading. That makes them losers in life.

Yes and it's exactly like with sports where you want everyone to participate and enjoy it, whether they're brilliant or mediocre. That's why I'm really swayed by all the people who say the whole format of a contest is wrong in the first place. There are better ways. What about the challenges on Goodreads? People test themselves against goals they choose, not against each other.

I remember our library having a summer reading contest every year and I always lost interest in it by mid July. I don't even remember who won.
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Is this a case of unfair advantage? Do we place too much importance on winning? Was the librarian out of line? How could this contest (or club, as the librarian would now, after the fact, like to designate it) be more fairly managed?
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