Helping our children become successful adults should be one of our biggest concerns in life, yet many of us leave that job to someone else. Few households today have the luxury of having one parent stay at home. Most families today have to deal with the issues caused by two parents working. Single parent families must also be considered. These families may have an even harder time because one parent is left to perform all the duties at home.
However, leaving our own children’s success in life in the hands of someone else, typically the school systems, often sets the child up for disaster. I have been a school teacher for ten years, and I know first hand that the public school system, in general, does a poor job of preparing our children for a successful future. Teachers have been forced to demand that their students master the objectives for the high-stakes testing and often communication skills, interpersonal skills, and life skills are put on the back burner. Instead of encouraging creativity, resourceful thinking, and leadership abilities, we have become slave-masters of conformity. Everyone must read at the same level, spell at the same level, and complete math at the same level. This type of learning does not foster creative thinking or problem-solving abilities that are so necessary in our world today.
There is so much more that we need to be teaching our children. Parents must pick up the slack from the school systems or else our children’s futures are going to suffer. We as parents should be encouraging self-reliance and determination in our children. We should be encouraging them to follow their passions and be creative. How many of us are stuck in dead-end jobs doing something that we hate simply to pay the bills and keep food on our tables? I have been stuck in dead-end jobs, and I am sure you have been as well. Do we want that for our children? Or do we want them to follow their passions and find something that they really love to do in life? I know I want the second choice for my children. When we continuously force them to conform to standards, we are NOT encouraging them to be creative or think for themselves.
So how do we facilitate the development of the creative, resourceful, enthusiastic leaders that we want our children to become? There are some steps that we can take as parents. A myriad of information is available for parents who want to help their children succeed both in school and after they get out of school. I have recently purchased a suite of products that is helping me get my family on the right track. We are learning to discuss things more with our kids and let them in on the planning of certain aspects of our lives. Letting children help with goal setting and activity scheduling is very important. We are learning about time management and helping our children become good managers of their time by creating charts and drawings to let them remember that they have a certain number of activities to do today and only a certain amount of time in which to complete those activities. We are helping them develop better study habits and become self-starters and problem solvers. Self-esteem and confidence issues must also be addressed. All too often I have witnessed young people get into the wrong crowd because of low self-esteem. It is easy when we don't think highly of ourselves to find groups that make us briefly feel better. We have learned to do all of these things through this amazing course that we have purchased.
Donna Vingers has been in education for ten years. She has a BSE from Jacksonville State University in Alabama and a master’s degree from the University of West Alabama. She is married and has two children. She is also an online business consultant and entrepreneur. She is helping people reach their goals by assisting them in proactively seeking a better way of life for themselves and their families.
Visit her website now and contact her through that site at www.lifeofyourdreams.biz to find out more about this amazing course that has changed her life.
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