Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:You said this about your DD:
personally think her approach to academics is a good one -- she puts in the work, including on things that are not her favorite, but then really digs in when she cares about the subject matter. I am hoping she learns that this is actually a pretty great approach to life generally! You don't need to be great at everything and there are diminishing returns to trying when you could just focus on the stuff that actually matters to you.
Do you tell her this, explicitly, about once a month, in very different ways?
Also, you can point out that SHE could be the way they are, too, if she studied ALL THE TIME (which is what they do) but that means she would have to give up writing in her journal, doing X, Y and Z that she also loves to do.
Those other kids give what she has up: they don't do after school drama, girl scouts, boy scouts, have a job, skateboard after school, go on bike rides, take walks on the weekend in the woods, etc. They only STUDY, STUDY, STUDY and go to AFTER SCHOOL PREP classes. They probably do one prep class on a weekend.
She can do this, too, but I think she doesn't want to. So there are things we give up (winning all the awards) because we want to be happy in our life, to do well in school but ALSO to have other things in our life.
Help her see this - explain, explain, point out, and talk about it. She can be dissappointed she doesn't get all those awards, but she can also understand what she would have to give up to do that - and help her see THEY are giving up, they weren't just born smart, they ALSO put in so much extra work.
This post reeks of racism
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Op, the reality is - and you’re not going to like this - some of those kids are just smarter. They don’t have to work as hard. Particularly the ones also excelling at sports. They aren’t “winning” because they’re doing so much more. This isn’t all of those kids, but a chunk. The lesson is that there is always going to be someone smarter than you, better than you, richer than you, someone less smart, less gifted, less affluent. Comparison is silly. Success is not pie, someone having some doesn’t mean you can’t have any. Sure it may for these honors right now, but not in any big picture sense. Let her make peace with being average. Average is okay.
This is weird DCUM word salad.
First, you are literally comparing students and saying some are smarter and then saying "comparison is silly." That's meaningless. If some kids are being recognized as better for certain skill sets, you can say "comparison is silly" until you are blue in the face and your kid will know you are lying because they live in a world where comparison is prevalent and meaningful. Yes, their world is narrow right now. It still exists. And comparison is forced upon these kids.
Second, we're talking about a kid who gets great grades, makes honor roll, and receives awards for excellence in a couple areas where they really excel. That kid is not academically average. They are only average if you are only looking at the subset of kids who actually care about and work at academics, which is not the majority of kids. That kid is above average academically. They may not be a superstar, but hey aren't "average." An average kid is getting some Bs and Cs, doesn't always do their homework, but gets by and is going to graduate. They aren't winning writing awards and studying earth sciences in their free time in 10th grade.
And yes, average is okay. But when you tell a kid who is clearly academically inclined and hard working (if not some kind of genius or superstar, but clearly smart and disciplined) they are just average, what does that make the actually average kids? Some of you have no sense of perspective about all of this. You really and truly believe that if a kid isn't getting a 1600 on the SAT and getting admitted to the tippy top schools, they are just average and need to just suck it up and deal. No wonder the college boards are constantly in full meltdown mode -- your standards are psychotic.
It’s not word salad and you seem to be incapable of realizing that comparison is silly entirely squares with the concept that some people are better and some worse than you - this will always be true and so worrying about it, being surprised at the fact, and engaging in comparing is silly. It’s safe to assume some people are smarter and some less than. That’s the point. I can’t help you anymore with this concept.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:You said this about your DD:
personally think her approach to academics is a good one -- she puts in the work, including on things that are not her favorite, but then really digs in when she cares about the subject matter. I am hoping she learns that this is actually a pretty great approach to life generally! You don't need to be great at everything and there are diminishing returns to trying when you could just focus on the stuff that actually matters to you.
Do you tell her this, explicitly, about once a month, in very different ways?
Also, you can point out that SHE could be the way they are, too, if she studied ALL THE TIME (which is what they do) but that means she would have to give up writing in her journal, doing X, Y and Z that she also loves to do.
Those other kids give what she has up: they don't do after school drama, girl scouts, boy scouts, have a job, skateboard after school, go on bike rides, take walks on the weekend in the woods, etc. They only STUDY, STUDY, STUDY and go to AFTER SCHOOL PREP classes. They probably do one prep class on a weekend.
She can do this, too, but I think she doesn't want to. So there are things we give up (winning all the awards) because we want to be happy in our life, to do well in school but ALSO to have other things in our life.
Help her see this - explain, explain, point out, and talk about it. She can be dissappointed she doesn't get all those awards, but she can also understand what she would have to give up to do that - and help her see THEY are giving up, they weren't just born smart, they ALSO put in so much extra work.
OP here. I totally agree and like how you've framed it. Life is about choices. She really love the non-academic stuff she does, and doesn't want to give them up.
It will all shake out in the end. She's just in the middle of it. I'm realizing this is probably also just the start of some of the angst we will be experiencing with college admissions, since she'll be a junior next year and that's when that process really starts. So some of her sadness might be some second guessing her approach and worrying she'll be left behind. I'm confident she won't be -- she might not be applying to the same colleges as these classmates or pursuing the same careers, but that doesn't mean she's behind. Just on a different path.
Anonymous wrote:You said this about your DD:
personally think her approach to academics is a good one -- she puts in the work, including on things that are not her favorite, but then really digs in when she cares about the subject matter. I am hoping she learns that this is actually a pretty great approach to life generally! You don't need to be great at everything and there are diminishing returns to trying when you could just focus on the stuff that actually matters to you.
Do you tell her this, explicitly, about once a month, in very different ways?
Also, you can point out that SHE could be the way they are, too, if she studied ALL THE TIME (which is what they do) but that means she would have to give up writing in her journal, doing X, Y and Z that she also loves to do.
Those other kids give what she has up: they don't do after school drama, girl scouts, boy scouts, have a job, skateboard after school, go on bike rides, take walks on the weekend in the woods, etc. They only STUDY, STUDY, STUDY and go to AFTER SCHOOL PREP classes. They probably do one prep class on a weekend.
She can do this, too, but I think she doesn't want to. So there are things we give up (winning all the awards) because we want to be happy in our life, to do well in school but ALSO to have other things in our life.
Help her see this - explain, explain, point out, and talk about it. She can be dissappointed she doesn't get all those awards, but she can also understand what she would have to give up to do that - and help her see THEY are giving up, they weren't just born smart, they ALSO put in so much extra work.
Anonymous wrote:You said this about your DD:
personally think her approach to academics is a good one -- she puts in the work, including on things that are not her favorite, but then really digs in when she cares about the subject matter. I am hoping she learns that this is actually a pretty great approach to life generally! You don't need to be great at everything and there are diminishing returns to trying when you could just focus on the stuff that actually matters to you.
Do you tell her this, explicitly, about once a month, in very different ways?
Also, you can point out that SHE could be the way they are, too, if she studied ALL THE TIME (which is what they do) but that means she would have to give up writing in her journal, doing X, Y and Z that she also loves to do.
Those other kids give what she has up: they don't do after school drama, girl scouts, boy scouts, have a job, skateboard after school, go on bike rides, take walks on the weekend in the woods, etc. They only STUDY, STUDY, STUDY and go to AFTER SCHOOL PREP classes. They probably do one prep class on a weekend.
She can do this, too, but I think she doesn't want to. So there are things we give up (winning all the awards) because we want to be happy in our life, to do well in school but ALSO to have other things in our life.
Help her see this - explain, explain, point out, and talk about it. She can be dissappointed she doesn't get all those awards, but she can also understand what she would have to give up to do that - and help her see THEY are giving up, they weren't just born smart, they ALSO put in so much extra work.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Op, the reality is - and you’re not going to like this - some of those kids are just smarter. They don’t have to work as hard. Particularly the ones also excelling at sports. They aren’t “winning” because they’re doing so much more. This isn’t all of those kids, but a chunk. The lesson is that there is always going to be someone smarter than you, better than you, richer than you, someone less smart, less gifted, less affluent. Comparison is silly. Success is not pie, someone having some doesn’t mean you can’t have any. Sure it may for these honors right now, but not in any big picture sense. Let her make peace with being average. Average is okay.
This is weird DCUM word salad.
First, you are literally comparing students and saying some are smarter and then saying "comparison is silly." That's meaningless. If some kids are being recognized as better for certain skill sets, you can say "comparison is silly" until you are blue in the face and your kid will know you are lying because they live in a world where comparison is prevalent and meaningful. Yes, their world is narrow right now. It still exists. And comparison is forced upon these kids.
Second, we're talking about a kid who gets great grades, makes honor roll, and receives awards for excellence in a couple areas where they really excel. That kid is not academically average. They are only average if you are only looking at the subset of kids who actually care about and work at academics, which is not the majority of kids. That kid is above average academically. They may not be a superstar, but hey aren't "average." An average kid is getting some Bs and Cs, doesn't always do their homework, but gets by and is going to graduate. They aren't winning writing awards and studying earth sciences in their free time in 10th grade.
And yes, average is okay. But when you tell a kid who is clearly academically inclined and hard working (if not some kind of genius or superstar, but clearly smart and disciplined) they are just average, what does that make the actually average kids? Some of you have no sense of perspective about all of this. You really and truly believe that if a kid isn't getting a 1600 on the SAT and getting admitted to the tippy top schools, they are just average and need to just suck it up and deal. No wonder the college boards are constantly in full meltdown mode -- your standards are psychotic.
Anonymous wrote:There's a disconnect for me here. Your DD is not actively gunning to be at the tippy top, yet she is upset that she's not at the tippy top?
Ummmmmmmm....
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Op, the reality is - and you’re not going to like this - some of those kids are just smarter. They don’t have to work as hard. Particularly the ones also excelling at sports. They aren’t “winning” because they’re doing so much more. This isn’t all of those kids, but a chunk. The lesson is that there is always going to be someone smarter than you, better than you, richer than you, someone less smart, less gifted, less affluent. Comparison is silly. Success is not pie, someone having some doesn’t mean you can’t have any. Sure it may for these honors right now, but not in any big picture sense. Let her make peace with being average. Average is okay.
+1. OP, it sounds like you’re doing a great job telling your kid this. But the assumption that all of these kids are “winning” only because they work harder does make it sound like you are not fully at peace with this either. Though I do think most of us here do struggle with this too…
Anonymous wrote:Op, the reality is - and you’re not going to like this - some of those kids are just smarter. They don’t have to work as hard. Particularly the ones also excelling at sports. They aren’t “winning” because they’re doing so much more. This isn’t all of those kids, but a chunk. The lesson is that there is always going to be someone smarter than you, better than you, richer than you, someone less smart, less gifted, less affluent. Comparison is silly. Success is not pie, someone having some doesn’t mean you can’t have any. Sure it may for these honors right now, but not in any big picture sense. Let her make peace with being average. Average is okay.
Anonymous wrote:Op, the reality is - and you’re not going to like this - some of those kids are just smarter. They don’t have to work as hard. Particularly the ones also excelling at sports. They aren’t “winning” because they’re doing so much more. This isn’t all of those kids, but a chunk. The lesson is that there is always going to be someone smarter than you, better than you, richer than you, someone less smart, less gifted, less affluent. Comparison is silly. Success is not pie, someone having some doesn’t mean you can’t have any. Sure it may for these honors right now, but not in any big picture sense. Let her make peace with being average. Average is okay.