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When is competition valuable?

Posted on Jul 3rd, 2008 by I-P : Individual-Person I-P
This is in Response to the Questions and Reflections for July 03, 2008:

I think competition is a social and psychological pathology involving a relative failure of individuation, extrinsic and relatively ego-based motivations and insecurites and many other relatively unhealthy tendencies and I can't remember  ever not feeling this way though i can certainly remember not being able to the feeling into words). probably twenty or so years ago I came across a book that confirmed most of my intuitons about this whole subject. The Book is Called No Contest by Alfie Kohn and I recommend it extreemely highly. Heres a summary on the book I got onlline:

 

No contest book cover

No Contest

The Case Against Competition

(Boston: Houghton Mifflin, 1986 / 1992)


From the Book Flap:

No Contest, which has been stirring up controversy since its publication in 1986, stands as the definitive critique of competition. Drawing from hundreds of studies, Alfie Kohn eloquently argues that our struggle to defeat each other -- at work, at school, at play, and at home -- turns all of us into losers.


Contrary to the myths with which we have been raised, Kohn shows that competition is not an inevitable part of "human nature." It does not motivate us to do our best (in fact, the reason our workplaces and schools are in trouble is that they value competitiveness instead of excellence.) Rather than building character, competition sabotages self-esteem and ruins relationships. It even warps recreation by turning the playing field into a battlefield.

No Contest makes a powerful case that "healthy competition" is a contradiction in terms. Because any win/lose arrangement is undesirable, we will have to restructure our institutions for the benefit of ourselves, our children, and our society. For this [1992] revised edition, Kohn adds a comprehensive account of how students can learn more effectively by working cooperatively in the classroom instead of struggling to be Number One. He also offers a pointed and personal afterword, assessing shifts in American thinking on competition and describing reactions to his provocative message.  

What People are Saying:

"Alfie Kohn marshals the evidence that [competition] is not the mainspring of achievement in industry, the arts, education, or games."

-- Dr. Benjamin Spock


 
"We have been in prison from wrong teaching.  By perceiving that cooperation is the answer, not competition, Alfie Kohn opens a new world of living.  I am deeply indebted to him."

-- W. Edwards Deming


 "Alfie Kohn's critique of the role of competition in our society is a really impressive piece of work.  Challenging and thoughtful, it reaches to the heart of many problems of our social life and the ideology that constrains and distorts it."

‑‑ Noam Chomsky


"Well‑researched and sound, No Contest exposes erroneous assumptions about the inevitability and value of competition.  This book...deserves our attention."

‑‑ Carl Rogers

"Superbly researched, lucidly written."

-- Los Angeles Times

 

Table of Contents:

1

The "Number One" Obsession

2

Is Competition Inevitable?:  The Human Nature Myth

3

Is Competition More Productive?: The Rewards of Working Together

4

Is Competition More Enjoyable?: On Sports, Play, and Fun

5

Does Competition Build Character?: Psychological Considerations

6

Against Each Other:  Interpersonal Considerations

7

The Logic of Playing Dirty

8

Women and Competition

9

Beyond Competition: Thoughts on Making Change

10

Learning Together

Afterword


There are a lot of good reviews of this book at Amazon.com which i was tempted to copy and paste here but it makes more since to just direct folk to them. I am feeling lazy right now or I would write my own review, adding a few more arguments against competition from a Healthy Culture perspective. Maybe I'll do that some other time. If you are intrigued and interested but would like a shorter sampling of Kohns writing on competition and similar subjects.before diving into the Book, you can find a fair amount of shorter essays and interviews at Alfiekohn.org.


--i-p
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