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Home»Latest»What happens when kids are told they’re the best
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What happens when kids are told they’re the best

info@thewitness.com.auBy info@thewitness.com.auSeptember 15, 2025No Comments3 Mins Read
What happens when kids are told they’re the best
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I remember the first time I realised I was brilliant. I was in year 3, and we had just sat one of those statewide tests in mathematics. My teacher, a tight-lipped 50-something who never joked except on the last day of term, handed out everyone’s certificates in order of how well they’d done (insane) – starting with those who had received a “Participation”, then the “Credits”, and finally the lauded “Distinctions”. I didn’t know what any of those words meant. All I knew was that, when she’d reached the end of the Distinctions, I was the only one left sitting empty-handed.

Is it possible to create a culture where instead of lauding gifted children, we celebrate the ordinary?

Is it possible to create a culture where instead of lauding gifted children, we celebrate the ordinary?Credit: Getty Images

“You may have noticed Eleanor didn’t receive anything”, she said ominously, returning to the front of the room. “That’s because she received a different mark. It starts with an H. Can anyone guess what it is?”

My heart thudded. I had no idea what she was implying, but suspected it wasn’t good. Had I somehow gotten a zero? Did H stand for Horrible?

Nobody guessed. They were probably too busy revelling in their own results, or couldn’t think of any H words; or maybe they were just more interested in who would be “in” for 44 Homes at lunch. In any case, after approximately one billion years, she brandished my certificate and gave us the answer: “High Distinction. She got an almost perfect score”.

I remember regaling my family with this tale over dinner. I thought it was hilarious. I mean, what a narrative arc: that I’d had no idea how well I’d done, only to learn that the answer was very! The initial fear that I was stupid, so obviously unfounded in hindsight! So funny. So cute.

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Bizarrely, everyone indulged me, probably because you can’t call a 9-year-old out for being a wanker. And so I coasted on, secure in the belief that I was officially better than everyone else. It wasn’t just the test: it was what it represented. I was apart from the crowd; destined for greater things, a bigger life.

Since then, I have collected the moments someone has called me special like kernels, to feast upon in times of self-doubt. The conductor of the junior string ensemble, who admired my rhythm. My year 9 French teacher, who complimented my “natural flair”. My friend’s parents, who, upon watching our self-choreographed performance of Bohemian Rhapsody, plainly labelled me a genius.

But as the number of kernels has grown over time, so too has my tolerance for them; like when you drink too much casually during COVID and then realise it now takes you nine standards to get tipsy. Things that used to fill my cup now barely scratch the surface. I need more. Tell me I’m special! Tell me I’m the best! Tell me I’m destined to change the world!

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