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In
Praise of 'Thought Competition'
By Rebecca Wallace-Segall
Monday: After a long day at his New York City private school, Ben, 16, heads to my creative writing lab to work on his heartfelt memoir about his parents' bitter divorce. Tuesday: Alison, 15, rushes from her elite
private school in the Bronx to work on her short screenplay about a
gifted, mean and eccentric boy. Lily, 13, pops in whenever she can to
polish her hilarious short story narrated by an insomniac owl. So why, one might wonder, do these kids need an extracurricular creative writing coach? The
answer is simple, though twisted: Their schools -- while touting
well-known athletic teams -- are offshoots of the "progressive
education" movement and uphold a categorical belief that "thought
competition" is treacherous. So we at Writopia Lab help these kids to join the
10,000 young literati from across the country who are hurrying to meet
the event's January deadline, as well as deadlines for other
competitions. Most New York parents of
public or private school students have felt the awkward reverberations
of this trend -- which avoids naming winners -- when Johnny takes home
a certificate for "participation" in the school's science fair. (Do you
hang that one up on the wall?) "Two years after my son left a school that prohibited him from entering a national math competition," says one mother, "he still writes angry essays about why the jocks in his former school were allowed to compete throughout the city while he wasn't allowed to win the same honors for his gifts." Sam, her son, felt uncool in the eyes
of his peers, and undervalued (and sometimes even resented) by the
administration. When students are rewarded for participation rather than achievement, Dr. Levine suggests, they don't have a strong sense of what they are good at and what they're not. Thus older members of Generation Y might be in for quite a shock when they show up for work at their first jobs. "They expect to be immediate heroes and
heroines. They expect a lot of feedback on a daily basis. They expect
grade inflation, they expect to be told what a wonderful job they're
doing," says Dr. Levine. Positive competitions award
a good number of entries with a range of awards, and, in some cases,
send constructive comments back with the manuscripts. Negative
competitions, on the other hand, may charge high fees to enter or award
only the top three entries. In April, 24 of these students went to New York
University to
have honors bestowed upon them by famous writers, and another five went
to Carnegie Hall to receive national awards. But most importantly, the conversation turned to a defining aspect of an artist's world: the reign of arbitrary judgment. My students know that they don't each share the same response to their peers' work, and they proudly tout individually refined sensibilities. So the real questions
they should be asking themselves are: Did they try their best? Have
they learned in the process? Are they excited to try again? Luckily, there is an
extraordinary range of projects -- both collaborative and competitive
-- that inspire kids to produce their best work, bond with their peers
and prepare fully for adulthood. Originally published as a Commentary in The Wall Street Journal, Nov 28, 2007
~~~ The previous fall, she
had won a regional award from Scholastic for a short story and was
feeling confident about her new endeavor. I asked her (out of sheer curiosity) if she thought she'd wasted her time since she hadn't been recognized. "What?" she retorted in shock. "Now I know I want to be either a screenwriter or a director!" With that, we promptly began
working on a play that she entered into Stephen Sondeim's Young
Playwrights competition. She won third place and we had a ball at the
award ceremony. ~ ~ ~
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