Natural Habitat: Elementary Schools
Diet: The necessity of literacy.
Specimen:
That's right, spelling bees. Now you're probably thinking, "Kidd, that's a really specific and relatively harmless thing to hate." Wrong. Spelling bees are the reason 72% of today's youth think "great" is spelled with a number. In theory, these competitions are designed to have the opposite effect, to encourage learning through competition and reward. Alas, it is but a charade; a horrible back-firing charade. Why? Because the spelling bee, by rewarding its winners, gives our children the impression that spelling is some kind of special skill to be specially rewarded, like not everyone should be able to do it. It's like celebrating graduation from kindergarten. Here, congratulations for doing something everyone is expected to do. Not only are you expected to do it, I'm pretty sure it's impossible to "not be able to spell." But that's exactly the sort of excuse that spelling bees enable.
One more thing. Nobody has ever spelled anything out loud in the history of man, outside the context of a spelling bee. We can write things down. That's what paper's for. In fact, that's the whole point of spelling in the first place -- to write things down for other people to read. If you're talking out loud, you just say the words. If you insist on having spelling bees, why not have them write the words? And if you still have trouble, we have whole big books dedicated to how words are spelled and what they mean. They're all already written down in there. What do you have to spell out loud them for? You heard it here first, spelling bees are the worst people in the world.
1 comment:
Add to that the fact that winning a spelling bee is notoriously detrimental to a kid's social standing in school (if they go to any school besides the home variety). Giving a kid the first place trophy is tantamount to saying "Congratulations, you're the biggest dork in the room."
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