WORKING MOTHER
September 1987
The Case Against Competition
By Alfie Kohn
When
 it comes to competition, we Americans typically recognize only two 
legitimate positions: enthusiastic support and qualified support.
The
 first view holds that the more we immerse our children (and ourselves) 
in rivalry, the better. Competition builds character and produces 
excellence. The second stance admits that our society has gotten carried
 away with the need to be Number One, that we push our kids too hard and
 too fast to become winners -- but insists that competition can be 
healthy and fun if we keep it in perspective.
I used to be in the
 second camp. But after investigating the topic for several years, 
looking at research from psychology, sociology, biology, education, and 
other fields, I'm now convinced that neither position is correct. 
Competition is bad news all right, but it's not just that we overdo it 
or misapply it. The trouble lies with competition itself. The best 
amount of competition for our children is none at all, and the very 
phrase "healthy competition" is actually a contradiction in terms.
That
 may sound extreme if not downright un-American. But some things aren't 
just bad because they're done to excess; some things are inherently 
destructive. Competition, which simply means that one person can succeed
 only if others fail, is one of those things. It's always unnecessary 
and inappropriate at school, at play, and at home.
Think for a 
moment about the goals you have for your children. Chances are you want 
them to develop healthy self-esteem, to accept themselves as basically 
good people. You want them to become successful, to achieve the 
excellence of which they're capable. You want them to have loving and 
supportive relationships. And you want them to enjoy themselves.
These are fine goals. But competition not only isn't necessary for reaching them -- it actually undermines them.
Competition
 is to self-esteem as sugar is to teeth. Most people lose in most 
competitive encounters, and it's obvious why that causes self-doubt. But
 even winning doesn't build character; it just lets a child gloat 
temporarily. Studies have shown that feelings of self-worth become 
dependent on external sources of evaluation as a result of competition: 
Your value is defined by what you've done. Worse -- you're a good person
 in proportion to the number of people you've beaten.
In a 
competitive culture, a child is told that it isn't enough to be good -- 
he must triumph over others. Success comes to be defined as victory, 
even though these are really two very different things. Even when the 
child manages to win, the whole affair, psychologically speaking, 
becomes a vicious circle: The more he competes, the more he needs to 
compete to feel good about himself.
When I made this point on a 
talk show on national television, my objections were waved aside by the 
parents of a seven-year-old tennis champion named Kyle, who appeared on 
the program with me. Kyle had been used to winning ever since a tennis 
racket was put in his hands at the age of two. But at the very end of 
the show, someone in the audience asked him how he felt when he lost. 
Kyle lowered his head and in a small voice replied, "Ashamed."
This
 is not to say that children shouldn't learn discipline and tenacity, 
that they shouldn't be encouraged to succeed or even have a nodding 
acquaintance with failure. But none of these requires winning and losing
 -- that is, having to beat other children and worry about being beaten.
 When classrooms and playing fields are based on cooperation rather than
 competition, children feel better about themselves. They work with 
others instead of against them, and their self-esteem doesn't depend on 
winning a spelling bee or a Little League game.
Children succeed 
in spite of competition, not because of it. Most of us were raised to 
believe that we do our best work when we're in a race -- that without 
competition we would all become fat, lazy, and mediocre. It's a belief 
that our society takes on faith. It's also false.
There is good 
evidence that productivity in the workplace suffers as a result of 
competition. The research is even more compelling in classroom settings.
 David Johnson, a professor of social psychology at the University of 
Minnesota, and his colleagues reviewed all the studies they could find 
on the subject from 1924 to 1980. Sixty-five of the studies found that 
children learn better when they work cooperatively as opposed to 
competitively, eight found the reverse, and 36 found no significant 
difference. The more complex the learning task, the worse children in a 
competitive environment fared.
Brandeis University psychologist 
Teresa Amabile was more interested in creativity. In a study, she asked 
children to make "silly collages." Some competed for prizes and some 
didn't. Seven artists then independently rated the kids' work. It turned
 out that those who were trying to win produced collages that were much 
less creative -- less spontaneous, complex and varied -- than the 
others.
One after another, researchers across the country have 
concluded that children do not learn better when education is 
transformed into a competitive struggle. Why? First, competition often 
makes kids anxious and that interferes with concentration. Second, 
competition doesn't permit them to share their talents and resources as 
cooperation does, so they can't learn from one another. Finally, trying 
to be Number One distracts them from what they're supposed to be 
learning. It may seem paradoxical, but when a student concentrates on 
the reward (an A or a gold star or a trophy), she becomes less 
interested in what she's doing. The result: Performance declines.
Just
 because forcing children to try to outdo one another is 
counterproductive doesn't mean they can't keep track of how they're 
doing. There's no problem with comparing their achievements to an 
objective standard (how fast they ran, how many questions they got 
right) or to how they did yesterday or last year. But if we value our 
children's intellectual development, we need to realize that turning 
learning into a race simply doesn't work.
Competition is a recipe
 for hostility. By definition, not everyone can win a contest. If one 
child wins, another cannot. This means that each child comes to regard 
others as obstacles to his or her own success. Forget fractions or home 
runs; this is the real lesson our children learn in a competitive 
environment.
Competition leads children to envy winners, to 
dismiss losers (there's no nastier epithet in our language than 
"Loser!"), and to be suspicious of just about everyone. Competition 
makes it difficult to regard others as potential friends or 
collaborators; even if you're not my rival today, you could be tomorrow.
This
 is not to say that competitors will always detest each other. But 
trying to outdo someone is not conducive to trust -- indeed, it would be
 irrational to trust someone who gains from your failure. At best, 
competition leads one to look at others through narrowed eyes; at worst,
 it invites outright aggression. Existing relationships are strained to 
the breaking point, while new friendships are often nipped in the bud.
Again,
 the research -- which I review in my book No Contest: The Case Against 
Competition -- helps to explain the destructive effect of win/lose 
arrangements. When children compete, they are less able to take the 
perspective of others -- that is, to see the world from someone else's 
point of view. One study demonstrated conclusively that competitive 
children were less empathetic than others; another study showed that 
competitive children were less generous.
Cooperation, on the 
other hand, is marvelously successful at helping children to communicate
 effectively, to trust in others and to accept those who are different 
from themselves. Competition interferes with these goals and often 
results in outright antisocial behavior. The choice is ours: We can 
blame the individual children who cheat, turn violent, or withdraw, or 
we can face the fact that competition itself is responsible for such 
ugliness.
Studies also show, incidentally, that competition among
 groups isn't any better than competition among individuals. Kids don't 
have to work against a common enemy in order to know the joys of 
camaraderie or to experience success. Real cooperation doesn't require 
triumphing over another group.
Having fun doesn't mean turning 
playing fields into battlefields. It's remarkable, when you stop to 
think about it, that the way we teach our kids to have a good time is to
 play highly structured games in which one individual or team must 
defeat another.
Consider one of the first games our children 
learn to play: musical chairs. Take away one chair and one child in each
 round until one smug winner is seated and everyone else has been 
excluded from play. You know that sour birthday party scene; the needle 
is lifted from the record and someone else is transformed into a loser, 
forced to sit out the rest of the game with the other unhappy kids on 
the side. That's how children learn to have fun in America.
Terry
 Orlick, a Canadian expert on games, suggests changing the goal of 
musical chairs so children are asked to fit on a diminishing number of 
seats. At the end, seven or eight giggling, happy kids are trying to 
squish on a single chair. Everyone has fun and there are no winners or 
losers.
What's true of musical chairs is true of all recreation; 
with a little ingenuity, we can devise games in which the obstacle is 
something intrinsic to the task itself rather than another person or 
team.
In fact, not one of the benefits attributed to sports or 
other competitive games actually requires competition. Children can get 
plenty of exercise without struggling against each other. Teamwork? 
Cooperative games allow everyone to work together, without creating 
enemies. Improving skills and setting challenges? Again, an objective 
standard or one's own earlier performance will do.
When Orlick 
taught a group of children noncompetitive games, two thirds of the boys 
and all of the girls preferred them to games that require opponents. If 
our culture's idea of a good time is competition, it may just be because
 we haven't tried the alternative.
How can parents raise a 
noncompetitive child in a competitive world? Competition is destructive 
to children's self-esteem, it interferes with learning, sabotages 
relationships, and isn't necessary to have a good time. But how do you 
raise a child in a culture that hasn't yet caught on to all this?
There
 are no easy answers here. But there is one clearly unsatisfactory 
answer: Make your son or daughter competitive in order to fit into the 
"real world." That isn't desirable for the child -- for all the reasons 
given here -- and it perpetuates the poison of competition in another 
generation.
Children can be taught about competition, prepared 
for the destructive forces they'll encounter, without being groomed to 
take part in it uncritically. They can be exposed to the case against 
competition just as they are taught the harms of drug abuse or reckless 
driving.
You will have to decide how much compromise is 
appropriate so your child isn't left out or ridiculed in a competitive 
society. But at least you can make your decision based on knowledge 
about competition's destructiveness. You can work with other parents and
 with your child's teachers and coaches to help change the structures 
that set children against one another. Or you may want to look into 
cooperative schools and summer camps, which are beginning to catch on 
around the country.
As for reducing rivalry and competitive attitudes in the home:
    Avoid comparing a child's performance to that of a sibling, a classmate, or yourself as a child.
    Don't use contests ("Who can dry the dishes fastest?") around the 
house. Watch your use of language ("Who's the best little girl in the 
whole wide world?") that reinforces competitive attitudes.
    
Never make your love or acceptance conditional on a child's performance.
 It's not enough to say, "As long as you did your best, honey" if the 
child learns that Mommy's attitude about her is quite different when she
 has triumphed over her peers.
    Be aware of your power as a 
model. If you need to beat others, your child will learn that from you 
regardless of what you say. The lesson will be even stronger if you use 
your child to provide you with vicarious victories.
Raising 
healthy, happy, productive children goes hand in hand with creating a 
better society. The first step to achieving both is recognizing that our
 belief in the value of competition is built on myths. There are better 
ways for our children -- and for us -- to work and play and live.
http://www.alfiekohn.org/parenting/tcac.htm
 
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