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Egalitarian
Little League
by
John Galvin
Christopher
Woodhead, the former Chief Inspector of the British school system,
appears to be the only man in Great Britain (or the US for that
matter) willing to tell the truth about falling standards of education.
In
a recent article he again points out the disastrous process
by which the government lowers test standards, increases the number
of places at universities, and then "scrapes the bottom of
the barrel" to fill these places with unqualified students.
Mr.
Woodhead must be commended for his honesty and admired for his courage.
Not many in England would be willing to decry "bog-standard
universities." It takes real nerve to quote Kingsley Amis to
the effect that "More means worse." This is heresy against
the ruling order of the blackest hue. Displaying real temerity,
he goes so far as to question the value of a university education
at all for the majority of students.
But
even he does not go all the way and identify the source of the problem.
Call it the "Peter Principle" if you will. This theory
that sparked a best-selling book in the 1970s is famous for pointing
out that in a meritocratic system, "each man is promoted to
his level of incompetence." In a lesser-know section of the
book, he draws the corollary that a stratified system allocates
talent more efficiently.
I
first noticed the effects of this process while coaching Little
League. Like nearly all such leagues, we had a 2-tier system that
we called "Majors" and "Minors" (other leagues
call them "A League" and "B League"). Players
in the "Majors" were primarily 11 and 12-year olds, while
players in the "Minors" were primarily 9 and 10-year olds.
But the assignment was not based strictly on age, so a talented
9-year old might be in the Majors while a less-talented 12-year
old might never make it out of the Minors.
The
league in our town had an "elitist" system in which there
were only 6 teams in the upper league while there would be around
14 teams in the lower league depending on turnout. The feeling had
been that only truly qualified players should make it to the Majors.
The rest should stay in the Minors where they could play at a less
competitive level. Under this system, a large number of 12-year
olds never played in the Majors.
A
movement was launched to change this system. The number of teams
in the upper league was increased from 6 to 10. Every 12-year old
had to be drafted onto a team in the Majors. "No one must be
left behind." I must confess that I voted for this change.
Only
after the new system was implemented did it become apparent what
had resulted: the level of play dropped all across the league. The
skill levels in BOTH the Minors and the Majors decreased significantly.
Our teams became uncompetitive. Several years in a row we were unable
to win a single game in the first round of the national Little League
tournament.
In
my astonishment at this unanticipated result, I tried to analyze
what had happened. Only then did I realize that we had violated
a fundamental principle of which my egalitarian upbringing had left
me ignorant. Every time you lower standards, you lower the average
level in BOTH the top group AND the bottom group. We had taken a
group of less talented players and moved them into the upper league,
significantly lowering the standard of play in that league. This
was not unanticipated as a drawback to the plan. But while these
players were comparatively less talented than the original players
in the upper league, they were the best of the bunch in the lower
league. So now the lower league was stripped of all its best players,
lowering the skill level there as well.
This
was predicted by the "Peter Principle" which said that
the result of a system which tries to raise everyone will be to
take the men who would have made competent plumbers, honest policemen,
and reliable builders and make them instead into 2nd-tier
lawyers. Society will suffer on both ends, as much from a lack of
capable manpower to fill essential roles as from an excess of less
capable manpower filling roles to which the barriers to entry have
been lowered.
But
I was still puzzled by the mathematics of the situation in the Little
League. How could it be that everyone suffers? Doesn’t someone come
out ahead? Viewed on an individual basis, the math does balance
out when you consider that the disadvantages suffered by all the
other players are equal to the advantages gained by the favored
group. In a league of 240 players, 48 players are the beneficiaries
of this program of "affirmative action," 72 would have
been in the upper league anyway, and 120 will remain in a lower
league. The 72 players will never have a chance to play on a team,
and in a league, where all the players are required to meet an exacting
standard. They must play at a lower level where you just don’t know
whether someone will catch the ball when you throw it. The 120 players
are now reduced to playing glorified tee-ball since all the skilled
players (especially those who can throw a fastball) have been removed.
In contrast to the 192 who suffer, the 48 players who are moved
ahead to the upper league do play at a higher level than they would
otherwise have done.
So
on an individual basis, the minority who have been pushed ahead
by the system benefit to the extent of the losses suffered by the
majority. Viewed on a society-wide basis, however, everyone suffers
a loss. The absolute level of play drops across the board for everyone.
Every team is weaker. The league loses its ability to compete with
other leagues. And the system as a whole has lost its ability to
develop talent. The one player who might some day play at a professional
level, the couple of players who might some day play at a college
level, the handful of players who might some day make varsity high
school teams, even the entire top half of the league who will go
on as teenagers to play full-size baseball beyond the Little League
level, all these players have seen their opportunities severely
diminished.
Of
course there will be some "victims" of any system. With
the 120th and last pick in the Majors draft, I took a
12-year old who obviously would never have had a chance to play
in the upper league under the old system. Yet that year he blossomed
into one of the best players in the league. Shouldn’t I be glad
that he received this opportunity?
Sure
I was very happy to see this kid prosper. One of the reasons he
wasn’t drafted was that he was going through a divorce situation
(note to parents: believe me, coaches are very aware of these things).
His successful season of baseball did wonders for his self-confidence.
But remember, he was one of the minority of beneficiaries who was
profiting at the expense of the majority. And there’s an even bigger
issue.
The
vast majority of these beneficiaries of affirmative action don’t
blossom as he did. They would have been much better off in the lower
league. They’ve been pushed ahead to a level of competition where
they don’t belong and can’t keep up. On that same team, for example,
I had another 12-year old who would not stay in the batter’s box.
He was scared to death. He would have been so much better off in
the Minors.
I
know this from experience because I coached several 12-year olds
during my time in the Minors when the league had maintained its
more "elitist" structure. They had a wonderful time and
enjoyed their chance to be the "big fish in the small pond"
for a change. Of the four 12-year olds I coached in two seasons,
all four went on to play full-scale baseball as 13-year olds, unlike
about half of the players in the upper league.
What
then is the logical conclusion about drawing standards? Someone
might point out, in a reductio ad absurdum, that according
to this theory the ideal cutoff level would always be one. Medical
schools should accept one candidate to be a doctor, law schools
one candidate to be a lawyer, etc. I propose that the ideal number
is always the minimum necessary, thus always setting the
objective standard level at the highest attainable. In many
cases, this might indeed result in only one successful candidate.
After all, only one pianist wins the Van Clyburn competition; an
elite science program might find only one worthy candidate to join
their department. But in every case, the best result is obtained
by keeping the standard as high as possible.
In
our Little League, for example, the ideal number of players admitted
to the upper league would probably have been 48, enough for 4 teams.
This would have been the minimum number of players required to maintain
a competitive league. As a matter of fact, before my time (back
in the days when our town could still compete on the state level
in the Little League tournament), the upper league did consist of
4 teams; the increase to 6 teams represented an earlier concession
to egalitarianism. Was an earlier generation of coaches more knowledgeable
about political theory than we were? Or was it the accumulated experience
from years of trial and error that allowed them to arrive at the
optimal result that we so blithely overthrew?
August
17, 2001
John Galvin is a businessman living in Cincinnati.
His most recent publication is "Humanae Vitae: A Critical Re-evaluation."
©
2001 LewRockwell.com
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