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Exam results are one thing but getting results in life is another

We do our children a disservice by focusing so intensely on academic prowess

August 19, 2024 10:31
jy13hw
JY13HW JY13HW Happy students have received their exam results in high school. They are cheering and celebrating.
3 min read

It’s exam results season and I’m a teenager again. Each summer, I feel the same residual throb of anxiety – the one that only comes when you’re waiting to find out if you remembered all your French participles and adequately described the repeal of the Corn Laws.

That said, back then I had the gift of an incredibly supportive family. In my grandmas’ case, this came with fierce, sometimes aggressive, loyalty. They were both Maureen “you-got-an-ology” Lipman on kosher steroids. I could have come home with an envelope stuffed with Fs, Us and personal abuse from the examiners and they’d still have cheered me like I’d won a Nobel Prize. But not everyone’s so lucky.

We all know the old joke about the Jewish mother at her son’s presidential inauguration. She turns to the woman next to her: “You see my son there, the president – well his brother’s a surgeon.” I suppose if you’ve spent the past few centuries telling your offspring to go into law or medicine, it’s not that surprising that doing well in exams becomes so consequential.

For some in the Jewish community, exam results are everything. There can be a total focus on grades, and that can lead to all sorts of harmful outcomes. On the one hand, there can be the extreme smuggery about success, with families schepping naches all over the place like exploding firehoses. It was something I often saw when I was growing up: parents competitively dropping A*-bombs during the kiddush – grandmas, up in the Ladies Gallery, rubbing top marks in each other’s faces. But it’s not just the excessive pride (though that can be bad enough). The flipside to all that extreme super-naches is shame. There’s the crushing communal “oy vey” when people don’t match up – a hundred raised eyebrows over the fish balls when someone doesn’t bring home a dozen As.

Topics:

Education