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Back to School: Youngsters Also Have a Job to Do in Classes: Learn

Bill Bosher
Richmond Times Dispatch
(Reprinted with Permission)
September 10, 2000

With camcorders focused, children dressed, backpacks filled, and buses rolling, school begins again. Everyone “gears up” for this exciting time of the year. Despite the reality that the 1.2 million school-age children in Virginia come from 30 percent of the homes, opening day of school is a significant event for the entire community. Yes, 70 percent of the homes in Virginia do not have any school-age children. Even though parental involvement is critical to the success of students in school, the majority “owners” are people who hear about schools only through television, newspapers, radio, neighbors, churches, clubs, and the convenience store. Their voices are raised frequently at public hearings, volunteer activities, senior-citizen groups, AARP meetings, and . . . the ballot box.

While the good old days were not as good as we remember them to have been, they provided principles and values that are the foundation for today’s institutions. The generation of warriors, money-savers, and intact families, being joined quickly by baby boomers, has a story to tell - and an investment to protect. Fundamental to its ethic is the belief that hard work pays off.

AS PARENTS and professional educators, we need constantly to make our children aware of the advantages of an education. Compulsory attendance laws in Virginia require that young people attend school. There are, of course, exceptions for home schooling, tutorial, and bona fide religious purposes. Attendance is a right, but an education is a privilege. To earn an education, then, requires one fundamental ingredient: hard work.

The Center on Education Policy in Washington, D.C. (ctredpol@ctredpol.org) has posted a paper under the title, “Tell Your Children - It Pays to Study Hard!” In the education-reform efforts across the country, little discussion is taking place regarding the most important factor in academic achievement - student effort. This article, however, points to several studies and articles that drive home the point that personal success seldom comes without a significant investment of time and energy.

In addition to providing statistics regarding the economic advantages of getting a good education, the policy center paper also offers recommendations for parents as they advise their children.

Encourage your children to take challenging courses in middle and high school.

Make clear that school is the No. 1 priority for young people.

Look at your own beliefs about achievement and the messages you send.

Encourage and supervise your children’s studies at home.

Become involved with your teen-ager’s school activities.

Help to create a society that values academic achievement.

WHILE emphasizing that no matter what friends may say, “The person who will have the most impact on your future is you,” there is also a message for students:

If you complete more years of education, you’ll earn more money and be better prepared for a career that interests you.

If you learn a lot while you’re in high school or college, you’ll probably earn more money than someone with the same diploma or degree who didn’t learn as much.

If you take challenging courses in middle and high school, you’ll be more likely to attend college and complete a degree. If you’re going directly from high school to work, you’ll be better qualified for a good job with opportunities for raises and promotions.

STUDENTS who do not shy away from tough courses may have a lower GPA (grade point average) but a better education with all of its benefits. Parents who stay involved with their young person’s school experiences may have to forfeit more time from other activities, but the payoff for their children is usually significant.

The Center on Education Policy provides a final insight through the work of Harold Stevenson and James W. Stigler in The Learning Gap. Mothers in Japan or Taiwan believe that student effort plays a much greater role than innate ability in determining student success in school. American mothers tend to believe that some have it and some don’t. Their chil- dren reflected the same attitudes.

Having read these studies in the early ’90s, I find it still amazing that there has been little public discussion about the importance of hard work in increasing student achievement. Perhaps as the school year begins, those discussions should start at home. The majority “owners” would expect no less.



Bill Bosher, a 2000 Commentary Columnist, is executive director of the Commonwealth Educational Institute at VCU.

 

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