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* [http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/discussion/2006/09/08/DI2006090801182.html Interview in the ''Washington Post'']
* [http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/discussion/2006/09/08/DI2006090801182.html Interview in the ''Washington Post'']


One of the worst books ever made
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[[Category:American non-fiction books]]
[[Category:2006 books]]

Revision as of 13:55, 24 October 2012

The Overachievers
AuthorAlexandra Robbins
LanguageEnglish
GenreNon-fiction
PublisherHyperion
Publication date
8 August 2006
Publication placeUnited States
Media typePrint (Hardback & Paperback)
Pages448 pp (hardcover).
ISBN1-4013-0201-7

The Overachievers or The Overachievers: The Secret Lives of Driven Kids is a nonfiction book written by Alexandra Robbins. Using the example of some American teenagers, it centers upon overachievement in high school, emphasizing its negative effect in modern American society. It specifically examines the belief that being successful depends on attaining the perfect GPA and being accepted by the "right" college.

Throughout the work, the author follows many diverse students who have a lifestyle where overachieving takes priority. She also occasionally interrupts to address certain issues which affect one of the teens, and explains its negative effect on an international scale. She discusses how social pressure from parents and friends, drugs, drinking, and suicide all play a part in driving high school teenagers to the brink of insanity.

She also puts the No Child Left Behind Act in a negative light by placing an emphasis on standardized tests and claims the college admissions process in the United States to be corrupt and inefficient.[where?]

The Overachievers

For three semesters (July 20, 2004 - December 9, 2005) Alexandra Robbins followed eight Walt Whitman High School students around in their daily lives to document their lives and incorporate them into her book. Robbins chose Whitman because "in the mid-1990s, in many ways Alexandra Robbins was these students, rushing through the same hallways, cramming anxiously for tests in the same classrooms, battling rivals on the same varsity fields." Whitman is also one of the best public schools in the nation and is located in Bethesda, Maryland.

  • "AP" Frank (later just Frank) is a mixed race Korean/white college freshman attending Harvard. As a high school student, he had to deal with horrifying parental pressure to succeed and to come out on the top. His Korean mother's traditional Asian upbringing and values clashes against those of his white father.
  • Audrey is a Hispanic junior who deals with perfectionism throughout the book. She works vigorously (often on weekends) on a Physics project consisting of building a bridge out of toothpicks that can hold a certain amount of weight. After crafting it, she leaves it in the physics classroom, only to discover later that it is gone. Her physics teacher decides to give her an A, but Audrey still wants first place in the competition.
  • C.J., perceived as the class flirt, she has to deal with misconceptions about being an overachiever.
  • Julie is a self-driven overachiever who runs cross country. She fools people into thinking she is confident, perfect, and has everything under control. Julie finally relaxes when she arrives at Dartmouth College. Instead of taking herself so seriously and worrying so much about her image, she adopts the mantra "my life is a joke" and thus becomes immune to awkward situations.
  • Pete is labeled an underachieving "meathead" who has the necessary skills to succeed but not the motivation. His image and parents' financial issues have been stifling him.
  • Sam is perceived as the teacher’s pet, and an overachiever who feels that if he doesn't get in a name-brand school, his hard work in high school would be wasted.
  • Taylor is popular, but she is also friends with the "smart kids" and frequently has trouble balancing these two worlds. She often hides her intelligence from her "popular" friends, knowing that they will judge her for re-taking the SAT when she got a 1490 [including a perfect score on the math section] on her first try.
  • Ryland is perceived as the slacker and struggles with dropping grades, too many extracurricular activities, and a form of ADD that he uses Ritalin for, which his mother is convinced he does not have and does not need to use.
  • The Stealth Overachiever, a mystery junior who flies under the radar, and who we later discover is someone familiar.

References

Robbins, Alexandra. The Overachievers: The Secret Lives of Driven Kids.

One of the worst books ever made