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Best in Class

Best in Class

πŸŒŸπŸ†

Everyone is good at something! You might run fast, draw pretty pictures, or be a great friend. ⭐

Trying hard is what makes you the BEST. Keep trying! πŸ’ͺ😊

What Does "Best in Class" Mean?

"Best in class" means being really, really good at something. In school, a teacher might give a special award to someone who tried their hardest or did something amazing.

Can Everyone Be the Best?

Yes! Everyone is the best at something different. Maybe you are the best at sharing. Maybe your friend is the best at building towers. Maybe someone else is the best at telling funny stories. There are SO many ways to be great!

What About Trying Hard?

Sometimes being the best is not about winning. It is about trying your very hardest, even when things are tricky. When you keep trying, your brain grows stronger. That is pretty amazing! 🧠✨

Class Awards

Some schools give fun awards at the end of the year, like "Best Smile" or "Most Helpful." These awards remind us that being kind and working hard matters just as much as getting the right answer. πŸŽ–οΈ

What Does "Best in Class" Mean?

"Best in class" is a phrase that means the very top of a group. In school, it might mean the student who earned the highest grade or worked the hardest. Outside of school, people use it to describe anything that is the finest example of its kind β€” a "best in class" car, a "best in class" restaurant, or even a "best in class" dog at a dog show!

Different Kinds of "Best"

Being the best does not always mean being number one on a scoreboard. There are many ways to excel:

At many American schools, students vote on fun "superlatives" at the end of the year β€” things like "Most Likely to Become President," "Best Laugh," or "Class Clown." These are printed in the yearbook and are a fun tradition that celebrates everyone's unique qualities!

Growth Mindset

Psychologist Carol Dweck discovered something important: people who believe they can get smarter through hard work actually DO get smarter. She calls this a growth mindset. Instead of saying "I'm not good at math," a person with a growth mindset says "I'm not good at math yet."

The word "yet" is powerful. It means you are on a journey, and you have not reached the end!

Personal Bests

Athletes often talk about their "personal best" or "PB." This means the best score, time, or distance THEY have ever achieved β€” not compared to anyone else, just compared to their past self. Beating your own personal best is one of the most satisfying feelings in the world because it proves you are growing.

What "Best in Class" Really Means

The phrase "best in class" has traveled far from the classroom. Originally it described the top student in a school class, but today it is used across industries, from technology ("best-in-class processor") to business ("best-in-class customer service") to competitive dog shows, where breeds are judged against their own breed standard. The concept is simple: within a defined group, who or what is the finest example?

Competition vs. Mastery

Psychologists distinguish between two orientations toward achievement:

Research consistently shows that mastery-oriented students are more resilient, more creative, and more likely to persist through difficulty. Performance-oriented students may achieve high results in the short term, but they are more likely to avoid challenging tasks for fear of failure.

Carol Dweck's research on growth mindset vs. fixed mindset revolutionized education. Students with a fixed mindset believe intelligence is static β€” you're either "smart" or you're not. Students with a growth mindset believe abilities develop through effort. Dozens of studies show that teaching growth mindset improves grades, especially for students who are struggling.

How Cultures Define Success

Not every culture values the same kind of "best." In the United States and many Western countries, individual achievement is celebrated β€” think spelling bees, science fairs, and MVP awards. But in many East Asian educational traditions, the emphasis is on collective effort and steady improvement (kaizen in Japanese). Finnish schools, consistently ranked among the world's best, rarely give grades before age 12 and have no standardized tests until age 16. Their philosophy: reduce competition, increase collaboration.

Class Superlatives and Social Dynamics

The tradition of "class superlatives" (Most Likely to Succeed, Best Dressed, Class Clown) dates back to American high school yearbooks of the early 1900s. These awards reflect social values β€” what a community considers worth recognizing. Interestingly, research on yearbook superlatives shows they are poor predictors of actual outcomes. "Most Likely to Succeed" recipients are no more likely to achieve career success than their peers. What DOES predict success? Persistence, curiosity, and the ability to recover from setbacks.

The Problem with Rankings

Rankings create a zero-sum game: for one person to be number one, everyone else must be lower. This can foster unhealthy competition, anxiety, and even cheating. Some schools have moved away from class rank entirely. The National Association for College Admission Counseling found that fewer than half of U.S. colleges now require class rank in admissions.

Best in Class: Excellence, Meritocracy, and the Competition Paradox

The concept of "best in class" sits at the intersection of several forces that shape modern life: meritocracy (the idea that the best should rise to the top), competition (the mechanism for sorting who's best), and identity (we often define ourselves by what we excel at). Unpacking this phrase reveals deep questions about what we value and why.

The Psychology of Achievement

Achievement motivation theory, developed by David McClelland in the 1960s, identifies three needs that drive human behavior: the need for achievement (nAch), the need for affiliation (nAff), and the need for power (nPow). People high in nAch seek moderate challenges, want feedback on performance, and prefer situations where effort determines outcomes. Importantly, McClelland found that high achievers are not necessarily competitive β€” many are driven by internal standards rather than comparison to others.

Carol Dweck's growth mindset framework, published in her 2006 book Mindset: The New Psychology of Success, added a critical insight: your beliefs about the nature of ability shape how you respond to challenges. Fixed mindset individuals interpret failure as evidence of fundamental inadequacy. Growth mindset individuals interpret it as information about what to work on next. The practical implications are enormous: praising children for effort ("You worked really hard on that") rather than ability ("You're so smart") produces measurably better outcomes in subsequent performance.

Self-Determination Theory

Edward Deci and Richard Ryan's Self-Determination Theory (SDT) identifies three psychological needs essential for motivation and well-being: autonomy (feeling in control of your choices), competence (feeling effective), and relatedness (feeling connected to others). External rewards β€” grades, trophies, rankings β€” can actually undermine intrinsic motivation by shifting the locus of control from internal to external. This is called the "overjustification effect": when you reward someone for something they already enjoy doing, they may lose interest once the reward is removed.

Cross-Cultural Perspectives on Excellence

The meaning of "best" is culturally constructed. Some examples:

The Valedictorian Myth

Eric Barker, drawing on research by Boston College's Karen Arnold, reported a striking finding: valedictorians rarely become visionaries or industry leaders. They tend to be excellent students who continue to be excellent employees, but the traits that produce the highest GPA (compliance with standards, consistent performance across subjects) are different from the traits that produce groundbreaking innovation (obsessive focus on one domain, willingness to fail, tolerance for ambiguity). Being "best in class" by one metric does not predict being best by another.

Angela Duckworth's research on "grit" β€” the combination of passion and perseverance for long-term goals β€” provides a complementary framework. In studies of West Point cadets, National Spelling Bee contestants, and Chicago public school students, grit predicted success better than IQ, talent, or socioeconomic status. Grit is not about being the best right now; it is about refusing to quit.

When Competition Helps (and When It Hurts)

Competition produces optimal performance under specific conditions: when the task is well-defined, when competitors are evenly matched, when effort (not just talent) determines outcomes, and when losing carries no catastrophic consequences. Outside those conditions, competition often backfires. Cutthroat academic environments are associated with higher rates of cheating, anxiety, depression, and, paradoxically, lower creative output. The healthiest form of competition may be competition with your past self β€” the "personal best" model used in athletics.

Best in Class: Meritocracy, Measurement, and the Meaning of Excellence

The phrase "best in class" is so ubiquitous it has become almost invisible. Companies claim it. Schools chase it. Parents want it for their children. But dig into what "best" means, who defines "class," and how we measure both, and you find a concept that is far more complicated β€” and more culturally loaded β€” than it appears.

The Meritocracy Problem

The word "meritocracy" was coined by Michael Young in his 1958 satirical novel The Rise of the Meritocracy. It was a warning, not an aspiration. Young described a society where IQ plus effort determined social position, which sounded fair until it produced a rigid class system with a new justification: if your position reflects your merit, then inequality is deserved. The concept has since been thoroughly critiqued by philosophers like Michael Sandel (The Tyranny of Merit, 2020), who argues that meritocratic thinking corrodes the common good by encouraging the successful to believe they deserve their success and the unsuccessful to internalize their failure.

This is directly relevant to "best in class" because the phrase presupposes that comparison within a group is meaningful and that being at the top reflects something real about the individual. But what if the group is poorly defined? What if the measurement tool captures only a narrow slice of ability? What if the starting conditions are radically unequal?

The Psychology (Revisited)

The academic literature on achievement motivation is rich and, at times, contradictory. Key frameworks:

Goodhart's Law and the Measurement Trap

"When a measure becomes a target, it ceases to be a good measure." This principle, articulated by British economist Charles Goodhart, explains why "best in class" is so slippery. Class rank incentivizes GPA maximization, which incentivizes taking easier courses (or schools weighting honors courses differently, creating a secondary arms race). U.S. News college rankings incentivize selectivity, which incentivizes encouraging more applications to reject more students. Every ranking system produces gaming, and the gaming distorts the very quality the ranking was meant to capture.

Jerry Muller's The Tyranny of Metrics (2018) documents this phenomenon across medicine, policing, education, and business: quantitative targets consistently produce perverse outcomes because the measurable proxy is never identical to the underlying quality of interest.

Cross-Cultural Excellence: What the Research Shows

PISA (Programme for International Student Assessment) data, collected triennially by the OECD since 2000, provides the largest cross-cultural dataset on educational achievement. Key patterns:

The Superlative Industrial Complex

American yearbook superlatives emerged in the early 20th century as a benign social ritual. Today, the logic of superlatives has metastasized: LinkedIn endorsements, Yelp stars, "Top 40 Under 40" lists, university rankings, Michelin stars, and app store ratings all impose the "best in class" framework on domains where it may not belong. Cathy O'Neil's Weapons of Math Destruction (2016) shows how ranking algorithms, presented as objective, embed the biases of their creators and can perpetuate inequality while appearing to eliminate it.

Reframing Excellence

The most interesting contemporary thinking about excellence moves away from comparison entirely. Mastery-based frameworks (drawing from Csikszentmihalyi's flow research, Ericsson's deliberate practice model, and SDT) define excellence as progressive refinement of skill in a domain the individual finds intrinsically meaningful. By this definition, "best in class" is a category error β€” the relevant comparison is between your current self and your potential self, not between you and others.

This is not anti-competitive softness. Elite athletes, musicians, and scientists thrive on competition. But the research consistently shows that the healthiest and most sustainable forms of excellence emerge when external competition is treated as useful feedback rather than as the primary source of motivation. The person who practices piano because they love music will outlast the person who practices to win competitions β€” even if the competition-driven pianist wins in the short term.

Sources

  1. Dweck, C.S. Mindset: The New Psychology of Success. Random House, 2006.
  2. Sandel, M.J. The Tyranny of Merit: What's Become of the Common Good? Farrar, Straus and Giroux, 2020.
  3. Duckworth, A. Grit: The Power of Passion and Perseverance. Scribner, 2016.
  4. Sisk, V.F., Burgoyne, A.P., Sun, J., Butler, J.L., Macnamara, B.N. "To What Extent and Under Which Circumstances Are Growth Mind-Sets Important to Academic Achievement?" Psychological Science, 29(4), 549-571 (2018).
  5. Deci, E.L., Ryan, R.M. "Self-Determination Theory and the Facilitation of Intrinsic Motivation, Social Development, and Well-Being." American Psychologist, 55(1), 68-78 (2000).
  6. Hattie, J. Visible Learning: A Synthesis of Over 800 Meta-Analyses Relating to Achievement. Routledge, 2009.
  7. Muller, J.Z. The Tyranny of Metrics. Princeton University Press, 2018.
  8. O'Neil, C. Weapons of Math Destruction. Crown, 2016.
  9. Young, M. The Rise of the Meritocracy. Thames and Hudson, 1958.
  10. Arnold, K.D. Lives of Promise: What Becomes of High School Valedictorians. Jossey-Bass, 1995.