27 mai 2019

Triathlon and Adversity Score


We have touched this subject several times.  Nations want athletes to perform well and they put money into it.  Now a day’s performance in a test as well as in a race have to do with environmental factors which produce or not a competitive culture.  This is something well study to the point of creating an “adversity score” when taking a test as the SAT.  From the point of view of Human Rights, it is a big step, but let see how the involved parties play out; sometimes the pendulum swings to the other side and catastrophe appears also.  This is something we live in Mexico with the new government and happened after the Mexican Revolution. The rate exchange for the Mexican peso was one peso for two dollars before the Mexican Revolution (1910). The production decreased to almost nothing except for oil and raw materials after the Mexican Revolution; we still depend on these two. The worst part is that Mexicans live in the same conditions more than a 100 years later.  I grew up in one of the poorest states in Mexico and did my medical residency in New York, when these factors were not taken into account!  It took more than 30 years to challenge the “white privilege.”  The point is not to lower standards but to know that other factors are playing a role and we should improve conditions to make the floor even, or at least to know that somebody is competing with a handicap and have a competitive level.  We have paratriathlon for the physical conditions, but the social ones are handicaps of the same degree. I started with an average percentile my medical residency and finished residency at the 87th percentile (standardized test).
The Environmental Context Dashboard includes information about students' high schools, including the rate of teens who receive free or reduced lunch, and their home life and neighborhoods, such as average family income, educational attainment, housing stability and crime.

The dashboard "shines a light on students who have demonstrated remarkable resourcefulness to overcome challenges and achieve more with less," said David Coleman, chief executive of the College Board, which administers the SAT. "It enables colleges to witness the strength of students in a huge swath of America who would otherwise be overlooked."
The scores won't be revealed to SAT test-takers, but schools will see the numbers when reviewing college applications.
Fifty colleges and universities, including Yale, Florida State University and Trinity University, took part in a pilot program last year to test what some observers are calling an "adversity score."


We were asked in an interview why the central Americans and south Americans have not successful triathletes and apparently everything is in place for athletes; meaning Federations, tournaments, high performance centers, etc.  Obviously, the interviewers did not have knowledge that performance depends on the family and environment as it is vision in the “adversity score.”  Garry Kasparov, the one that lasted 20 years as a Chess World Champion, says that intuition is the big player in performance, and intuition is learned by experience in the environment.  Perhaps, fear of snakes is innate, but the rest we have to learn experiencing.

We have the subject of "adversity score" as a lecture in our team:

To even the floor, we started forming a subculture 20 years ago to overcome the problems mentioned above.  We want to develop and teach a better intuition to be competitive at the highest standards.


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