Participation Suffrage

Words: 893
Pages: 4

The Damage Of Participation Trophies
Ever since a Pittsburg Steelers NFL player James Harrison took his opinion about participation trophies to social media parents have been ripping each other to shreds over the topic. Many determined parents argue that we need to teach kids that being on a team is important and that we value what they will learn from it. While other parents are very enthusiastic about the fact that kids need to learn that it is okay to lose from a young age so they aren’t narcissistic when they get older. I whole heartily believe that participation trophies are bad for today's youth and will teach them losing is not okay when in reality we all know that losing is in fact okay. I know for fact that there is some truth to
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(website #1) If you give a child who has done nothing all season and has shown up to maybe three practices a trophy you are giving them a trophy for their parents ability to sign a paper saying that they can participate not the child's ability. (website #2) many kids will get their grimy little hands on the golden statue to only say that they are better, or to brag that they got a trophy at school. These narcissistic traits of superiority and entitlement are not good for when they have to deal with real problems down the road. Your kids will grow up learning that it is okay to …show more content…
John O’sullivan the author of changing the game has stated that “The $2000-$3000 we spent every year on awards could have put dozens of kids on the field, and/or dozens of coaches through some quality coaching education, and I wish I had it to do over again.” He spent $3,000 on trophies alone a year. On average participation trophies are about $3.00. Each year John would have bought 1,000 trophies for kids and coaches. If you think that John has been doing this for ten years then he would have spent $30,000. If john wouldn’t have bought those 1,000 trophies and spent $3,000 on scholarships he could have paid for 75 kids to play. John could have saved that money and over the span of ten years put 750 kids on the field. (website