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At my kid's first competition they gave medals to everyone on every event, including kids who had scratched. There were a lot of unhappy faces during that awards ceremony. It was awful. My kid still hates participation medals and meets where they place out all the way.
As a brand new level 3 parent of a dd that seems to be behind many of her teammates and isn't on the podium and getting many medals her first few meets I was wondering if it is always required to stay for the awards. She has been handling it okay, but VERY ready to get out of there ASAP as many of her friends are already getting awards in nearly every event. I know it is giving her lots to work towards and improvement will be much more sweet, but it's a rough start.
But we often see other teams scooting out when their age groups are done, even before team awards. .
That is just bad form
Are you talking about "achievement" ribbons that are given out first?
Those are not given to the lowest-scoring girls. Those are given to be girls who were registered to compete achievement versus placement. That means their scores were never considered for medals. The came with the intent to compete just for the experience. Achievement kids could theoretically score higher than anyone and they still wouldn't get a medal.
Lots of gyms have their level 3s compete achievement.
Except that isn't a thing in our region. If you compete you compete. There's no "achievement" here.Are you talking about "achievement" ribbons that are given out first?
Those are not given to the lowest-scoring girls. Those are given to be girls who were registered to compete achievement versus placement. That means their scores were never considered for medals. The came with the intent to compete just for the experience. Achievement kids could theoretically score higher than anyone and they still wouldn't get a medal.
Lots of gyms have their level 3s compete achievement.
The only meet I've been to where everyone got a participation "something" was old L5 states -- every girl got a small participation trophy whether they placed on anything or not. I was OK with that because getting to states was an achievement in itself and it was really the first big competition for many girls.
Other than that, all awards we've been to go out 50% tops. And while waiting for awards to start can sometimes be long, the actual awards seem to finish in 30 minutes or less.
Nope, these are just participation medals handed out for kids that competed but did not place. I’ve never heard of competing for achievent, but our gym only competes for placement, and there are a few girls who don’t often place but always get a participation medal.
This seemed fair and I am not saying it should have been handled differently, but later I realized this kid actually scored very well and would have placed in the top three of almost every event if he had competed with the next highest age group. Just another lesson in why, at least before you get into the very high echelons, placement is an unreliable measure of how well one did at a meet.
One of the lower scoring girls on our team usually always places top 3 in most events and AA for her age group. And our stronger scoring girls, by 1.5-2 points from the lower girl, have less top 3 finishes just because of the age group they are on. They gymnastics are much better but they get less bling. It is what is and fortunately they get it.
What we do if there is just 1 in an age group (L9, especially at our meets), we call the girl up once and say "In first place on all events and AA, Gymnast X" and give her all her awards.I have no problem with participation medals or ribbons for kids (and I agree they should not say participant) who are so young they are not really understanding much about placement anyway, and these are the kids who are usually so young that going home with nothing after working so hard is particularly difficult. After all at the younger levels especially it is supposed to be about fun and bling is fun. And in my opinion the longer you can keep kids from focusing on placement, the better.
Placement is so arbitrary - The kid who gets first at an "easy" meet with little competition in her age group could be last at a more challenging meet. Due to some recent changes to MAG levels, at a meet last year my boys attended, there was one kid who was the only competitor in his level and age group. They only gave him an AA award, presumably because it would have been ridiculous to bring him up again and again for events. This seemed fair and I am not saying it should have been handled differently, but later I realized this kid actually scored very well and would have placed in the top three of almost every event if he had competed with the next highest age group. Just another lesson in why, at least before you get into the very high echelons, placement is an unreliable measure of how well one did at a meet.