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School Honors Nights
Next week we have to go to a couple of honors nights and my husband and I were thinking back over years of attending them, both as teachers and as parents. You know how they usually have an award for each subject, like Outstanding Student in Spanish 1, Outstanding Student in Geometry, etc.
So one year we were teaching at the same school and Awards Night was truly the "John Smith" show. This one kid took every award in his grade, including Citizenship and other non-scholastic awards, except for P.E. Other parents were commenting on how they weren't sure why they even showed up, other than to pick up their kids' Perfect Attendance Awards. The next year, it was the "Joe Smith" show in which his brother took every award except P.E. Some schools limit the number of subject awards that a student can win to 1 or 2. Others give them to the student with the highest average, even if it does lead to a Smith Show. Which do you think is preferable? |
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Back when I was in high school, each department gave awards to the top 3 or 4 students. So while a school honors night could still "sort of" turn into a "John Smith show", there were plenty of other students getting awards - e.g. the math awards would go to John Smith, Rose Tyler, and Martha Jones, while the science awards would go to John Smith, Donna Noble, and Amy Pond. At my high school, awards were also listed in the commencement program and read out when you got your diploma. We all got little cards that we'd hand to the announcer. If you hadn't received any awards the card just had your name on it. If you had received one or more awards, they were listed on the card, e.g. "Recipient, Social Studies Department Award, English Department Award - Sarah Jane Smith". There were always three or so people who raked in a lot of awards - usually the valedictorian, salutatorian, and class president, who were the last 3 to walk - and it was traditional that the class would count their awards. "Recipient, Social Studies Department Award - " - "ONE!" - "Math Department Award - " - "TWO!" - etc. I think I hit 14... I understand that they did away with this the year after I graduated - all the awards are still printed in the program, but the only awards that are announced are valedictorian and salutatorian. |
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As a teacher, I know that usually several students are in close competition for the awards and maybe if they even gave top 3, it'd work. I don't think that everyone on every team deserves a trophy--we do far too much of that. On the other hand, there were those Smith Shows that went on and on forever and there were 4 years of those for each brother. BTW, everyone really liked John and Joe and they are now thirtysomething lawyers. |
My school only did the top student for every class and the valedictorian and class president. The teams were also mentioned (debate team, student body council, winning sports teams, school paper and a/v crew).
Really liked it that way because this way a lot of students were mentioned. |
We had Senior Awards, but the only awards were things like valedictorian, salutatorian, national merit (semi)finalists, state scholars, major scholarship recipients, community service honors, etc. I don't recall any department awards. For the awards we had, though, it was common that a number of students received honors. Still, I would say many students did not receive any awards. They didn't give out perfect attendance awards, either.
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Around here, your child gets an invitation for Honors Night if s/he is going to receive an award. It might be a biggie (department or overall award) or just Perfect Attendance. I'm picturing what Awards Night would've been like in the early nineties at ole MHS without the Perfect Attendance awards- hahaha! For 2 grades, only the "Smith" parents and a couple of others would've been invited instead of the usual 60 per grade or so.
ETA: every time I type about these boys, I accidentally put in their real names and have to go back and redo it.:mad: |
The way it was done at my high school was that every student who was nominated for an award received an invite, and the "reveal" was done at the banquet. The banquet also served as an induction for the new NHS members and the giving out of chords for graduating members. Overall, those two groups tended to overlap, so almost everyone got something.
I don't recall anyone "sweeping" the awards, but several people got more than one. When I was in college, however, there was one student who won all of these awards on campus, was generally the "darling" of everyone, had a ton of press coverage (then and now) etc. I overheard a faculty member say, "well, why did we all bother to get dressed up? you could have just had her do a press conference." Whiiiich was pretty much how I felt at that point, because it was pretty overwhelming. |
I teach middle school. When it comes to the subjective awards, the team teachers get together to coordinate and make sure the same student is not sweeping all of the awards. But not every kid receives an award--it's not a pizza party for a t-ball team!
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I always got pretty angry about the Perfect Attendance awards, because they basically punish kids who take Jewish/Islamic/whatever else holidays off of school.
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I don't like them (or any programs that honor perfect attendance, such as letting the awardees ditch finals) because kids who are as sick as dogs come hacking and sneezing to school and infect everyone else. Not to mention that some of those kids actually come to college never having taken a final and they try to do everything they can to get out of theirs.
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Students should be given awards even if they really weren't the true high achiever in the category. That way they can expect to get into the top tier sorority on their college campus too. :rolleyes:
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I don't remember much about school award nights from high school (other than the fact that there was delicious cake involved), but I liked the one for seniors we had in college for the students that had the highest GPA in each major + significant contributions to campus community (so, the president of SGA, Panhellenic President, IFC President, Activities Programming Board, etc. were all recognized).
That meal was fantastic. |
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