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Jennifer Owens

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5 Lessons Our Kids Don't Learn in School For Success in Life

Posted: 08/07/2012 6:38 pm

Back-to-school season is about to kick in, and parents everywhere will be breathing a collective sigh of relief as their kids return to a more structured learning and activity-filled environment. Reading, writing, rhythm and rules -- my kids are already itching to get back to school to meet their amazing new teachers and discover what's in store for them.

And yet, even as my husband and I steel ourselves for another year of homework, class projects and field trips, I have become acutely aware from my own professional experience that certain life lessons still remain to be taught to our kids -- critical lessons that we parents must take responsibility for.

In the August/September issue of Working Mother, we boiled those lessons down to the 5 Things Schools Don't Teach Our Kids, and they're good ones: how to advocate for yourself, how to fail, how to feel empathy for others, how to keep a singular focus (versus the tendency to multitask -- or in my house, multiscreen) and (the one we still have trouble with in our house) how to talk to grown-ups.

While schools focus on academics and prepare our kids for the oh-so-important standardized tests that hold the key to advancement for so many, it is up to us parents to teach our children the lessons they'll need to succeed in life.

My personal favorite of these is how to advocate for yourself. I learned this important lesson for myself in fifth grade, when I wanted desperately to be a school crossing guard at Lear North Elementary School. At a parent-teacher conference, my mom mentioned my desire to my teacher who said, "She never mentioned that!" I still remember how much I loved wearing that neon orange belt and silver badge -- thank goodness Mrs. Malinar made it happen! As my Working Mother colleague tells her kids, "You don't ask, you don't get." Whether it's an extension on a paper for good reason or reconsideration of a grade that seems unfair, we need to teach our kids to forget the whining and know when and where it is their right to speak up for themselves. Helping our kids role-play how to ask for what they need to ask for is one way to get them ready.

Learning how to fail is a skill that will serve all kids well later on, especially at work. A child who can pick herself up after falling flat on her face -- and move on without fear -- will always eventually succeed. Help your child by showing her how to create a strategy that turns a failure into problem solving. Even better: Next time you fail at something, explain to your child what happened and ask his or her advice on how to manage it.

And then there's empathy. In many schools, empathy is a focus for kindergarten or something to cover in the early years, but as school gets more demanding, the focus of caring for others gets low priority in school -- especially when grades become even more important. And yet, having feeling for others is imperative to success in life and in the workforce. Think about ways to help your children show concern for others, from using "please" and "thank you" to sending thank you cards for a gift to participating in a community or charity project.

The life lesson of how to keep a singular focus has become a real challenge as our children jump from watching a video to texting to homework, all in a single sitting. Consider establishing a "turn off the power" night where conversation or activities without electronics are your family's focus. One thing I do with my 5-year-old: We work together to see a task all the way through -- say, from making a grocery list to shopping to buying to putting it all away.

Talking to grownups seems to be a life lesson with even more meaning for a generation buried in their cell phones and tablets. Teaching the value of how to address a grownup -- starting with how to respond politely to questions -- means passing on a skill that will serve kids well for successful matriculation into real life way beyond high school.

Our calendars will soon fill up with the appointments that fill our busy lives and those of our kids. I propose that as parents, we take a moment to stay focused on making sure our kids are well-adjusted and prepared for the increasingly complex world they will join sooner than we can imagine.

 

Follow Jennifer Owens on Twitter: www.twitter.com/@working_mother

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Back-to-school season is about to kick in, and parents everywhere will be breathing a collective sigh of relief as their kids return to a more structured learning and activity-filled environment. Read...
Back-to-school season is about to kick in, and parents everywhere will be breathing a collective sigh of relief as their kids return to a more structured learning and activity-filled environment. Read...
 
 
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06:13 AM on 08/14/2012
Very interesting post and a lively discussion indeed! There are so many diverse views and a healthy discussion. I believe that the responses to such a topic would depend, to some extent, on the region/country/culture that the group belongs to. I was writing a blog on similar lines so while searching what people have said/ written so far, I stumbled upon this blog. I wonder if it would be ok if I provide a link to this blog? I am very new to blogging - my blog is yeducationmatters at wordpress.

Rashmikant Makwana.
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CoachNelly2
08:05 PM on 08/12/2012
Schools do try to teach these things but unfortunately we run into parents who don't want their child to experience failure or disappointment. There's only so much we can do without parental support.
07:23 PM on 08/12/2012
Heres other things not taught in schools - respect and manners. Also to take personal responisibilty when you do something wrong. Nowadays everyone wants to blame someone else for mistakes they made. Oh yeah and common sense as that doesnt seem to be there anymore.
04:45 PM on 08/12/2012
Realize that parents also teach their bad habits to their children. If you resolve home conflict with physical threats, your child will do the same in school. If you disobey traffic laws, your child will break school rules. If you don't care what people think, or think about you; your child will do the same.
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sandmn7442
03:59 PM on 08/12/2012
An excellent article with provocative thoughts. I appreciate your work. As a high school teacher for 30+ years, I was aghast to see some even more basic parent teachings, totally absent from kid's lives. I have no idea if it's because families are busy, or if the missing elements are missing from the parent's lives also, but it seemed serious to me. 1. Common courtesy. Schools teach indificual work, but the real world requires team work, cooperation and mutual respect. It's appalling that I had to teach courtesy to teenagers, but I did. 2. Doing your best. I only asked for kid's absolute best (they had to look me in the eye and say it was their best) once a year, and it was too much for some kids. 3. Responsibility, both pos. and neg.. This includes integrity and analysis of results of behavior. 4. Where things like love and caring and friendship exist, inside each of us, forever. I had MANY boys attempt suicide because they thought their girlfriend took all their love with them when they broke up. 5. How to break up and say good-bye. The reality is you break up more times than you live happily ever after, but clinging persists, the dream of "Til death us do part" is stronger than the reality that NO relationship lasts forever, death guarantees that when you say hello, one day you must say good bye.
03:38 PM on 08/12/2012
"Learning how to fail is a skill that will serve all kids well later on, especially at work. A child who can pick herself up after falling flat on her face -- and move on without fear -- will always eventually succeed."

Learning how to cope with failing is what is important. "And move on without fear"? Are you serious? When a child fails, it would serve him/her better to learn to move on DISPITE fear.
03:32 PM on 08/12/2012
In my opinion, schools should teach NOTHING except reading, writing, math and language through 3rd grade. NO school should have ESL classes and ALL students should speak nothing besides english.

Anyone with any common sense would see that the writer's five points should be a parent's concern. In the past they always were.
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Lisa Tomlin
03:11 PM on 08/12/2012
Those things should be taught at home by the parents.
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kolblh
Like your freedom - Thank a Vet!
02:59 PM on 08/12/2012
Talking to grown ups. At an early age I learned respect and the adults were always Mr and Mrs, not dude and homey, you guys, not even first names. I'm in my eighth decade of life and over the years the parenting has changed to include society and society is doing a lousy job.
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dmoongo
Tempus Edax Rerum
02:12 PM on 08/12/2012
My grandmother taught me all of these things at home . . . often with a switch from the backyard peach tree.
02:27 PM on 08/12/2012
Yeah but now the modern parenting philosophy is to be their kids best buddies an let them "explore their desires".
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navymomincali
My microbio is empty because I want it to be empty
03:13 PM on 08/12/2012
Don't those switches hurt!!!!We had to pick our own.If we got the wrong ones and my Grandmother had to go out to pick we got it double..
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dmoongo
Tempus Edax Rerum
10:22 AM on 08/13/2012
I think hearing the switch whistle through the air before it touched skin was almost as bad.
Once, my grandmother was babysitting me and my cousin as the same time. We were the same age. Whatever we had done, she told us to go pick our switches. I got a normal sized one. My cousin broke off a three inch long twig. Grandma took a look at them and, in the wisdom of her age, she touched me on the arm with the twig, and proceeded to set my cousin's fanny afire with the switch I had chosen. ;-)
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dmoongo
Tempus Edax Rerum
10:25 AM on 08/13/2012
I think hearing the switch whistle through the air before hitting skin was almost as bad as being hit.
01:54 PM on 08/12/2012
Some good points. Much of this just may be the job of parents.
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01:35 PM on 08/12/2012
Looking at the newest batch of graduates....I don't think much of anything is taught at our schools, except maybe Angry Birds and texting.
01:24 PM on 08/12/2012
If kids need to learn how to fail, they simply have to go online or turn on the TV and see how the Obama administration has taken the country to the crapper.
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magus47
Liberal? Conservative? No. American.
01:20 PM on 08/12/2012
You forgot common sense. Definitly lost in America.

And how to think. I was lucky ebough to actually have a teacher who taught me how to think. Unfortunatly that puts me in the very, very , very, small minority in America.
01:33 PM on 08/12/2012
If this teacher was in the last 20 0r 30 years you got luck or are you of my pre-"new parenting" era?
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magus47
Liberal? Conservative? No. American.
02:02 PM on 08/12/2012
Oh yes it was definitely a long time ago. I don't even remember his name. He was a brilliant Professor of Philosophy from the University of Maryland teaching college courses on military bases in South East Asia during the Vietnam war.

I can give him the greatest compliment a teacher can have. He altered my life.
01:10 PM on 08/12/2012
All of these things should be taught at home. Parents these days seem to think that they should let their kids "explore their possibilities" and should be their kids best buddies.