Interesting read so far. There have been some great points about why America's youth are so behind the rest of the world. I agree with most. I just want to state my few points:
1) It is no longer considered to be fair to honor those students who succeed compared to the other students. It hurts the feelings of the students who don't achieve that success and makes them feel bad.
2) Parenting is done by TV.
3) Many parents take the side of the student over the side of the teacher for anything that occurs in the school. After all, "my child never lies."
4) It's always someone else's fault for the student's failure. There is no ownership of actions or accountability.
5) I'm gonna be a professional athlete. I don't need an education. (I hear this more than I care to admit)
Exactly - it seems as if I was correct in assuming that my initial thread might open up Pandora's box on a surge of feelings that people have on this subject, and thankfully - helps reassure me that I'm not the only one troubled by these things.
You brought up some very good points, and these things really echo the context of what this thread was intended for - with an added bonus:
lack of personal accountability. That has yet to be touched upon, and I suppose I should have included that in my previous list of things a person needs to be successful and competent - although I suppose it does tie in with credibility and honesty to a degree.
We as humans are only as good as we make ourselves to be. If once is all said and done, we can look back and say, "Yes, I did the very best I could do," then you are successful, NO MATTER your end financial status, demographic, and/or social class.
One is either helping to contribute to society, or they are a burden on it.
Oh, and
when are we going to stop worrying about hurting people's sensitive feelings? I'm glad you mentioned that too - it kills the aforementioned concept of competiveness - that in order to be recognized, you
must do something that earns that recognition, plain and simple - that is the way I was brought up, that was the way my own father taught me; and here's the bombshell -
I speak from experience on a lot of these issues, because I did go through much of my life as one of these troubled, mis-guided teens. Luckily, for the grace of god (or whomever), and my father who
somehow, against all odds, managed to instill in me an underlying work ethic, and desire to learn as much as I could about life in general, and was there for me every step of the way, even when I rejected him. Looking back on it now, I can realize just how silly and ignorant I was living, even though I thought I had all the answers in the world - I was dead wrong.
And it pains me today to see so many of our youth going through the very same thing, but with one major difference: they don't have that strong support structure that my father provided for me, so the future is looking rather bleak.