I’ve taught in a private school, a public school, and I’ve home-schooled, each of which has its advantages and drawbacks. But I’ve learned something valuable in each of those learning environments.
I remember feeling almost overwhelmed when I stepped off the cliff and decided to homeschool my two elementary-aged children in a time when homeschooling was almost unheard of. Only radical, crazy people did that, I heard through the grapevine. Some even considered me to be an enemy of the public school, but that wasn’t the case. I maintained relationships with public school teachers and even served as the District PTA president one year even though my children were not in public school. I knew they would go into public school eventually, and that helped with the transition. And after folks realized that we weren’t hiding our children from society and reality, and that they didn’t turn out really weird, homeschooling was accepted as another choice for parents to educate their children. I’m grateful parents have the freedom to do that in this country if they’re able to and want to.
I remember the huge weight settling on my shoulders when I realized for the first time, the responsibility for my children’s success or failure in preparing them for life was entirely up to me. I didn’t realize how much I had previously depended on the school and church to teach and raise my kids. After homeschooling three and four years respectively up to when each of my children entered public school in the 7th grade, the most important thing I learned from those years was that no matter who was teaching my children, their education or preparing them for life was still ultimately my responsibility as their parent.
That was a huge shift in my perspective. But even with this awareness, there were still some areas that I assumed somebody was teaching them. They did well academically in school, but there were deficiencies when it came to things like my daughter not recognizing that a guy was treating her disrespectfully when he was getting too physical with her at a dance. Hmmm. That wasn’t covered in the textbooks, but I assumed she would just know that instinctively somehow.
Another common assumption among us parents is that our children will somehow inherit noble traits like honesty and loyalty and compassion, but too many staff and students alike are seeing instances where students haven’t learned them. How many have had things stolen from them, have been lied to, or have witnessed the rules being ignored when others think they can get away with it? Who’s teaching the kids integrity—the difference between right and wrong?
Outside of school and her job, a good friend of mine is working with a group of twenty+ teenaged girls who have never been taught how to set a table or use basic manners. I often speak greetings to students who don’t seem to know that it’s impolite to not respond or acknowledge someone speaking to you. Who’s teaching kids basic manners and social skills?
Our custodial staff and teachers witness daily that many students haven’t learned to pick up after themselves, or have to daily be reminded to do so. I wonder if students are allowed to be as messy at home as they are in school. One of our custodians came into the library this morning looking for a student who left her breakfast remains on the table, so he made her go back and pick it up, but too often, the messes are left unaccounted for.
I see young girls dressing provocatively and wonder what they’re hoping to accomplish with the signals they are sending out. Is someone talking to them about that? Who is teaching kids about social and relationship morals, or respecting themselves? A few of our classes cover these things briefly, but when the television and movies preach another morality with few consequences and happy endings, which message is shouting to our kids and which one’s become a whisper?
The school attempts to filter obscene and inappropriate Web sites, but not every computer a child comes across in life will have those barriers. Will they have the willpower to avoid viewing overly violent content that tends to desensitize their minds towards violence? Is anybody talking to kids about why pornography is harmful and that it distorts and damages normal, healthy relationships?
I see the drugs books and books about gangs checked out regularly, so there is a lot of interest among young people about those topics. But I’m concerned that some students are checking them out thinking they are “how to” rather than “stay away from” type books. Red ribbon week—one week a year isn’t enough. Kids are looking for something to belong to; will they make the right choices? Who’s teaching them about that?
When my son came to speak to a group of high school students a few years ago, I overheard a teacher on the Hutto HS campus give him some wise advice that I’ve never forgotten and wish I’d heard when my children were young. He said, “Assume they know nothing.” I laughed, thinking he was making a joke, but he was serious. And when I heard my son asking high school students some of the most basic questions about the leadership in our country and some highly publicized current events happening in the world, I was shocked to see that they couldn’t answer them.
As someone that’s been around the pond for many seasons, I want to encourage parents to talk to their kids about everything—relationships, acceptable behavior, manners, character traits, guarding their eyes, their health—everything. Assume they know nothing until they can show or tell you otherwise.
Monday, April 4, 2011
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