Adviser Update Spring 2016 | Page 21

21 Belonging Without Competing I ncreasingly competition turns me into a man I do not like. Feeling inferior, stretched, incompetent (not good at competitions) turns me into a person who is hard to live with. Most of the time this unpleasant, angry and jealous person remains hidden behind the mask of pleasantries I have used to deal with what Carl Jung called our “shadow side.” As a self-acknowledged nice man, I work hard to make people happy, smooth over waves and always, always show deference to whatever person I am working with, like Carson (Head Butler from the PBS series, “Downton Abbey”) to the Earl of Grantham, Robert Crawley. This was the persona that helped me survive childhood in the Midwest. my students’ work to bring home the hardware, in spite of all of the odds they face. If they are doing it for me in the guise of doing it for my program that is even worse. I want my students to feel appreciated, loved and respected without competing. I would love the same thing for my program.I want to find a way to join my wonderful, hard working, family of advisers in this state and in the nation and leave Thomas at home in the Abbey, or better yet invite him upstairs into the abbey proper and help to make everyone equal in the best of American traditions. But when my Mr. Carson gets stressed, tired or feels unappreciated then my shadow self, my own Thomas Barrow (Butler) comes slipping out sideways. This bitter, complaining, and never happy servant, who works so very, very hard to please others but never quite succeeds or gets to the top, to the golden crown of achievement he so desperately wants, then becomes devious, conniving and downright mean at times. The crux of the matter, the heart of the struggle, is it is literally impossible for me to imagine what a convention or conference gathering would look like without any competition at all. After a brief web search I could not find one instance of a gathering for high school students that was not linked to a competition of sorts. Makes sense, high school is all about measuring, One of the evaluating, and check-in tables at the Washington classification Journalism right? Well that Education Association was the old conference held at Auburn High model. While I have not fallen to the depths of depravity of my namesake working in bowels of Downton Abbey, nor succumbed to the dark side of the force, nevertheless I do not like the man that I become when involved in competitions. I do not like how desperately hard I have tried for three weeks now to come up with a different model and cannot. But I would love to have a School was carefully watched by none other than Queen Elizabeth. Thomas Kaup, Auburn’s adviser uses cardboard cutouts to draw attention to journalism events. (photo by Jordan Layacan, Photo Editor Auburn Trojan Journalism) conversation with those who would like to look for something different. Something to do, perhaps, in a ddition to competitions, or in lieu of them, that would be an honorable, noteworthy and valuable non-competitive time with other journalism students and advisers from around the country Thomas Kaup recently completed his 30th year of teaching at Auburn High School, Auburn, Washington. Kaup has advised and taught in Nebraska, Iowa and Washington. Kaup is the co-author of Middle School Journalism, a textbook published by TeachingPoint.net. Kaup founded the Magnet journalism program at Alice Buffett Magnet Middle School in Omaha, Nebraska. Kaup was selected as the Washington Journalism Adviser of the Year in 2014 and has written articles for Herff Jones and Walsworth yearbook magazines. Kaup advises Trojan Journalism at Auburn High School, which produces the Troy InVoice and Invader yearbook.