(TROH.fee chyld)
n.
A child used to impress other people and enhance the status of the parent or parents.
— trophy-child adj.
Example Citation:
Research finds that by grade three, one cannot tell the difference between children who came to first grade knowing their ABCs, number facts, or even how to read and those who came as academic "blank slates."
The notion that exercises of this sort produce a smarter child or a child who consistently achieves at higher levels is bogus.
The fact is, these so-called "jump start" programs are a huge waste of money and time. They appeal to parents who are desperate for what I call "trophy children" — children they can show off, brag about, and (it should go without saying) live through.
— John Rosemond, "Jump start' programs a waste of time and money," The Charlotte Observer, October 30, 2002
Earliest Citation:
Hausner says some youngsters are often "trophy children" whose parents see them as nothing more than an extension of themselves.
"There is so much pressure to perform: They have to be in the best schools; they always have to look good. These parents are so narcissistic, they can't see their child as an individual, only a reflection of themselves," Hausner says.
— Frances Grandy Taylor, "Children of the rich suffer from wealth and neglect," The Record (Kitchener-Waterloo), November 23, 1990
Also (as an adjective):
The pitfalls of spoiling children are well known, but many parents
don't realize that in subtle ways they also may transfer their own
ambitions onto their children, burdening them with too much pressure
too soon, Hausner says...
"You've got particularly what I call the trophy-child syndrome.
The child has to fit into the perfect picture of what the family is
supposed to look like. It's an expectation . . . and some very high
achievement standards are set," she says.
— Dawn Bonker, "Children of paradise," The Orange County Register, November 18, 1990
Also (slightly different meaning):
In my contacts with older couples now raising their children from a new relationship, I am impressed with the intensity of their parenthood, especially their eagerness to be the perfect mother and father, and to have the near-perfect child — a "trophy child." The parents want to do everything right "this time," so they dote over their trophy children.
— Lewis P. Lipsitt, "Trophy children," The Brown University Child Behavior and Development Letter, May 1990
Notes:
This sense of the phrase trophy child (also seen as trophy kid) was coined by psychologist Lee Hausner in her 1990 book Children of Paradise (see the earliest citations, below). It's part of a long series of phrases that use the adjective trophy to mean "something used to impress others and enhance one's status." The series includes trophy house (1981), trophy wife (1989), trophy girlfriend (1990), trophy tree (1991), trophy car (1992), and trophy job (1995). I'm still looking for trophy trophy.
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New words. 2013.