Too Many Activities Affecting Achievement
According to a study in the March 2007 issue of
In his book Beyond the Classroom, Professor Laurence Steinberg states that work competes with school. It is not the complement to school many parents believe it is. His research revealed that students will take easier courses so school doesn’t interfere with their job (isn’t that backwards?). The title of chapter nine in his book is All Work and All Play Makes Jack a Dumb Boy and places the blame of low achievement not with schools or teachers but what students do after school. Think about how many times you have heard over the past year that boys are under-achieving in school and not going to college at the same pace of previous generations. Do you think the lure of earning $100 a week and living in the parent’s basement may have anything to do with that trend?
The average teenager now spends up to 80 hours a week on activities that have no relationship to school or achievement (for example, jobs, social activities, gaming, TV, Internet). That’s almost 50 percent of all available hours during the school year. A person under 18 first impulses is to have fun and today’s distractions don’t help keep them focused.
If these kids sleep 8 hours per night, that only leaves 32 hours for school and related activities. If you did the math, your conclusion is they are not getting 8 hours of sleep per night since school takes up about 40 hours per week. Can you picture these kids snoozing, dozing and sleeping during school hours? Even if they can stay awake, fatigue will prevent them from concentrating and achieving excellence in school activities. Not getting a full night of sleep is extremely counter-productive and can be dangerous.
So now in the 21st century, a kid with a part-time job means that parents don’t need to provide spending money (allowance) and businesses have a plentiful source of cheap labor. Working students that have a steady amount of discretionary income means these kids fuel the American economy (they are called the greatest consumers in the world). Isn’t 14-18 the target demographic for TV advertising? And of course, once they roll past 18, let’s be sure to bombard them with credit cards so we can keep them hooked on being good consumers.
It would seem the US has a choice if it is serious about improving scholastic achievement: either make working under 18 illegal or make going to school beyond age 14 optional. The country can’t have it both ways.
GROWTH <> LEADERSHIP <> EXCELLENCE
© 2007 3 Minute Learning LLC