Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:What accolades are they winning?
The school selects two students from each grade based on GPA with teachers voting for tie breaks, so they'll win that. Mathletes plus there's a math competition in the spring (DD did well but did not win). Each subject teacher will select 1-2 students to win an award for that subject for the year -- DD may get one or maybe two of these, but there will be kids who get it for every single subject. That kind of thing. There is an awards dinner for all the kids who receive an academic award, plus everyone who has a GPA in the top ten percent of the class will get an award for that. This will be DD's second year attending (sophomore) and she sounds unenthusiastic about going because, in her words, "[XYZ students] will win everything again." Not exactly true but I get why this is her perception based on last year's experience.
Wow, this is wonderful. Compare this to schools and school districts where achievement is not honored at all and swept under the rug.
In our school district, for instance, there's zero recognition for academic achievement. The only recognition our child received was an "all A honor roll" certificate that they had put in their report card envelope. When we asked how many students made the all-A honor roll, the school claimed "privacy" and we had to file an FOIA just to get this information.
But what our school does have is a slide show that's run during lunch hours where each week 9 kids are recognized not for academic achievements, but for such traits as "follows instructions" and "meets expectations" (this is not snark, it's literally what it says on the slide show). When asked how these kids are chosen and based on which criteria, no answer from the school. The chosen kids really don't seem all that competitive and their caption of "meets expectations" seem rather on target (I wonder if the teachers that are forced to write these captions take joy in these underhanded insults or if they don't notice them.)
Overall, it is extremely demotivating for kids who do try to excel academically. These kids will need to get their recognition in outside of school events: state and national competitions which still recognize achievement unlike their home school. Kudos to your child's school for recognizing academic achievement - it's become really rare these days.
I don't think "meeting expectations" is the underhanded insult you perceive it to be (and certainly not "follows instructions").
Anonymous wrote:You've basically said it yourself, OP. The kids getting the most awards are working their @sses off. That is a choice. Your DD prefers not to work that intensely. She's doing extremely well in light of that. If she wants to make different choices, she's free to. Some of this is under her control.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:What accolades are they winning?
The school selects two students from each grade based on GPA with teachers voting for tie breaks, so they'll win that. Mathletes plus there's a math competition in the spring (DD did well but did not win). Each subject teacher will select 1-2 students to win an award for that subject for the year -- DD may get one or maybe two of these, but there will be kids who get it for every single subject. That kind of thing. There is an awards dinner for all the kids who receive an academic award, plus everyone who has a GPA in the top ten percent of the class will get an award for that. This will be DD's second year attending (sophomore) and she sounds unenthusiastic about going because, in her words, "[XYZ students] will win everything again." Not exactly true but I get why this is her perception based on last year's experience.
Wow, this is wonderful. Compare this to schools and school districts where achievement is not honored at all and swept under the rug.
In our school district, for instance, there's zero recognition for academic achievement. The only recognition our child received was an "all A honor roll" certificate that they had put in their report card envelope. When we asked how many students made the all-A honor roll, the school claimed "privacy" and we had to file an FOIA just to get this information.
But what our school does have is a slide show that's run during lunch hours where each week 9 kids are recognized not for academic achievements, but for such traits as "follows instructions" and "meets expectations" (this is not snark, it's literally what it says on the slide show). When asked how these kids are chosen and based on which criteria, no answer from the school. The chosen kids really don't seem all that competitive and their caption of "meets expectations" seem rather on target (I wonder if the teachers that are forced to write these captions take joy in these underhanded insults or if they don't notice them.)
Overall, it is extremely demotivating for kids who do try to excel academically. These kids will need to get their recognition in outside of school events: state and national competitions which still recognize achievement unlike their home school. Kudos to your child's school for recognizing academic achievement - it's become really rare these days.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:What accolades are they winning?
The school selects two students from each grade based on GPA with teachers voting for tie breaks, so they'll win that. Mathletes plus there's a math competition in the spring (DD did well but did not win). Each subject teacher will select 1-2 students to win an award for that subject for the year -- DD may get one or maybe two of these, but there will be kids who get it for every single subject. That kind of thing. There is an awards dinner for all the kids who receive an academic award, plus everyone who has a GPA in the top ten percent of the class will get an award for that. This will be DD's second year attending (sophomore) and she sounds unenthusiastic about going because, in her words, "[XYZ students] will win everything again." Not exactly true but I get why this is her perception based on last year's experience.
Wow, this is wonderful. Compare this to schools and school districts where achievement is not honored at all and swept under the rug.
In our school district, for instance, there's zero recognition for academic achievement. The only recognition our child received was an "all A honor roll" certificate that they had put in their report card envelope. When we asked how many students made the all-A honor roll, the school claimed "privacy" and we had to file an FOIA just to get this information.
But what our school does have is a slide show that's run during lunch hours where each week 9 kids are recognized not for academic achievements, but for such traits as "follows instructions" and "meets expectations" (this is not snark, it's literally what it says on the slide show). When asked how these kids are chosen and based on which criteria, no answer from the school. The chosen kids really don't seem all that competitive and their caption of "meets expectations" seem rather on target (I wonder if the teachers that are forced to write these captions take joy in these underhanded insults or if they don't notice them.)
Overall, it is extremely demotivating for kids who do try to excel academically. These kids will need to get their recognition in outside of school events: state and national competitions which still recognize achievement unlike their home school. Kudos to your child's school for recognizing academic achievement - it's become really rare these days.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:What accolades are they winning?
The school selects two students from each grade based on GPA with teachers voting for tie breaks, so they'll win that. Mathletes plus there's a math competition in the spring (DD did well but did not win). Each subject teacher will select 1-2 students to win an award for that subject for the year -- DD may get one or maybe two of these, but there will be kids who get it for every single subject. That kind of thing. There is an awards dinner for all the kids who receive an academic award, plus everyone who has a GPA in the top ten percent of the class will get an award for that. This will be DD's second year attending (sophomore) and she sounds unenthusiastic about going because, in her words, "[XYZ students] will win everything again." Not exactly true but I get why this is her perception based on last year's experience.
Anonymous wrote:She needs a reality check. These kids are putting in way more time and work than she is, and the awards sound well deserved. If she doesn’t want to out in the extra academic work, then she can’t be disappointed when other who are are ahead of her.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote: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....
OP here. She isn't mad she's not at the tippy top. She has made a choice to approach school in a different way and is happy with her choice. She just gets down because sometimes it's hard to see classmates honored and awarded for their choices, and not get that same validation.
There is no award for "most well rounded student" or "student synthesizing some themes from Moby Dick into a pretty cool art project" or "read and understood the most unassigned science books." Individual teachers might recognize that stuff (sometimes, sometimes they don't), but there are no trophies for those kinds of things. My kid is on a different path than the more competitive kids who are gunning for Ivy admission and other very visible rewards (though she does have straight As). I think a lot of the time, she just does her thing and it's fine. She's just struggling with the end of the year awards where a kid like her doesn't get much attention, even though she's worked very hard over the course of the year, just in ways that don't result in academic awards. That's it. She's not mad she's not at the tippy top, she's just sad that in not being at the tippy top, she feels kind of invisible at the moment.
1. Green is ugly color on her.
2. People who are obsessed with awards collapse hard when the awards stop coming after age 18 or 22. The awards only exist to motivate kids who lack internal motivation. (Some internally motivated kids mop of the awards anyway.) The people who *want* the awards don't matter. The awards don't matter. Your daughter is ahead of the game if she has an internal compass. Better, in fact, if she's not even playing the game, and living a life instead.
I have a shelf full of high end trophies to arrest to this.
The "awards" don't stop coming after the age 18 or 22. There are pretty well defined metrics of success in most fields, and, if nothing else, you can also compare money.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote: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....
OP here. She isn't mad she's not at the tippy top. She has made a choice to approach school in a different way and is happy with her choice. She just gets down because sometimes it's hard to see classmates honored and awarded for their choices, and not get that same validation.
There is no award for "most well rounded student" or "student synthesizing some themes from Moby Dick into a pretty cool art project" or "read and understood the most unassigned science books." Individual teachers might recognize that stuff (sometimes, sometimes they don't), but there are no trophies for those kinds of things. My kid is on a different path than the more competitive kids who are gunning for Ivy admission and other very visible rewards (though she does have straight As). I think a lot of the time, she just does her thing and it's fine. She's just struggling with the end of the year awards where a kid like her doesn't get much attention, even though she's worked very hard over the course of the year, just in ways that don't result in academic awards. That's it. She's not mad she's not at the tippy top, she's just sad that in not being at the tippy top, she feels kind of invisible at the moment.
1. Green is ugly color on her.
2. People who are obsessed with awards collapse hard when the awards stop coming after age 18 or 22. The awards only exist to motivate kids who lack internal motivation. (Some internally motivated kids mop of the awards anyway.) The people who *want* the awards don't matter. The awards don't matter. Your daughter is ahead of the game if she has an internal compass. Better, in fact, if she's not even playing the game, and living a life instead.
I have a shelf full of high end trophies to arrest to this.
The "awards" don't stop coming after the age 18 or 22. There are pretty well defined metrics of success in most fields, and, if nothing else, you can also compare money.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I still don't know what OP or her kid are upset about!
that she is not considered the very top student at her school. yes, it sounds crazy, but it still requires managing.
Wow you need to reset her expectations. There will always be someone better. Nobody is perfect.
I don't think it was the OP who provided the above explanation ("that she is not considered the very top student"). I think that was just someone's take. Because the actual OP has said in a previous posts that her DD is NOT actually upset about not being at the tippy top. She just sort of wants more recognition for her particular strengths, or something. Or she is disgruntled that the same kids win multiple awards? . . . Again, I'm confused!
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I still don't know what OP or her kid are upset about!
that she is not considered the very top student at her school. yes, it sounds crazy, but it still requires managing.
Wow you need to reset her expectations. There will always be someone better. Nobody is perfect.
easier said than done. hence OP.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I still don't know what OP or her kid are upset about!
that she is not considered the very top student at her school. yes, it sounds crazy, but it still requires managing.
Wow you need to reset her expectations. There will always be someone better. Nobody is perfect.