For many high school students, the culmination of all of their years of hard work (or less than stellar effort) comes in the form of a letter from the colleges of their choice. A thin one sinks hearts, and a fat one has them shrieking to the world that they actually did it. Only if you're a student in New York, there's no shrieking allowed. In fact, students in some prep schools there are flat out banned from even announcing that they got into any college in person or via social media like Facebook. They're also not allowed to wear t-shirts or other gear on which their new school's name or logo is displayed.
Why? Because it might hurt the other students' feelings. I kid you not. The New York Post cites several examples of schools with such policies designed to minimize the pain for students who don't get into the college of their dreams.
I can't imagine a more ridiculous, over-the-top example of the coddling and kid gloves with which kids today are too often treated.
Sarah Tarrant, director of college counseling at Calhoun School, told the paper that students have weekly classes in which they learn “the appropriate way to share news of acceptance. “The weekly conversation reins in kids who might run around yelling, ‘I got in! I got in!’ ” she said.
It's even happening in public schools there. Darby McHugh, college coordinator at Bronx HS of Science, told the paper:
It can be bad and it can get weird. We send a notice out to all faculty telling them, ‘Please don’t congratulate students in public, no high fives, no hugging, and please be sensitive so that if you see someone crying, you refer them to the college-adviser office immediately.


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Comments 75
So...it's okay to cry and pout so the adults can all come running to mollycoddle you all the way to the college advisor's office, but it's not okay to be openly happy if you got accepted?
That's crap.
it is! So many of these kids are going out in the world and they are SO not prepared for the realities of life. Competition is good for kids... it teaches them how to win and lose gracefully.
Such a nerve struck here. My children of the "Me Generation" have at least 50 various sports trophies and they were not athletes. We paid the fees and they showed up. However, they were smart and their A's in AP classes earned them the same recognition as those who made A's in much lesser courses. Sure building self-esteem is important in raising a child but, false accolades does not prepare them for life......My daughter has just been accepted to medical school at Vanderbilt and I'm afraid to post it on Facebook as it would be bragging or, hurt someone's feelings. That's just not right.
Greatdays-- Congrats to your daughter for getting into Medical school!! Go ahead and post it. You are proud of your daughter and you shouldn't be afraid to express that simply because someone might get hurt.
Greatdays - post the news!!! That's awesome your daughter got into med school! That takes some darn hard work and dedication and is worth celebrating. Congrats to her! :-)
This kind of coddling is also why so many older kids seem lost. When no one ever bothers to tell you that you're bad at something, you don't bother to get better or try something new instead.
What's the most troubling about this culture of coddling, is that it creates loosers who think they are winners. If you don't even know something is broken, how are you ever fix it.