- Reaction score
- 0
- Points
- 60
http://www.detnews.com/2005/ed itorial/0506/26/A15-227745.htm
Sunday, June 26, 2005
Stop the party: High school graduation means nothing
By Nolan Finley / The Detroit News
June is waning, and with it the high school graduation celebrations.
The tassels are flipped; the hats tossed in the air. And soon, the
last of the champagne corks will pop.
Big stinking deal. High school graduation is an archaic ceremony that
carries no significance today. It ought to be scrapped.
Parents are wed to the notion that graduation day marks a rite of
passage into the adult world; that their children have secured a
foothold on the future.
So they snap a few last school pictures to tape on the refrigerator
door, throw parties and shake down about everyone they know for a
check.
But if high school graduation is the last education milestone young
Johnny and Jill mark, then write them off as failures, or more
charitably, as having a high probability of leading a marginal life.
Despite what the local windbag said in that windy commencement speech,
finishing the 12th grade is no more significant than finishing the
10th, or the fourth, or the first. It's just one more year in an
education career that has to extend well beyond the senior year of
high school.
Abe Stokla, this year's valedictorian at Eagleville High School, had
his diploma yanked for saying in his speech: "You have given us the
minimum required attention and education to master any station at any
McDonald's anywhere."
But the kid was telling the truth. High school isn't preparation for a
single career. It's certainly no finish line.
The best a high school graduate can hope for today is to start work in
a menial, low-paying position and hope that on-the-job training will
help him or her move up the economic ladder.
But the odds are the climb will be limited. Over the course of a
lifetime, a college graduate will earn $1 million more on average than
a high school graduate.
And don't bother me with a nonsensical recitation of all the people
who excelled in life without a college degree. That list inevitably
starts with Bill Gates, the Microsoft founder and America's richest
dropout.
Take an honest look at that kid of yours who isn't interested in
college. Is he or she really Bill Gates material? Will they even get
the opportunity to drop out of Harvard, as Gates did?
If the traditional, four-year college track isn't in their stars,
they'd better at least be looking at a two-year community college
program, or some other technical or trade school training.
We'd serve our children better if we stopped thinking about education
as K-12, and started talking in terms of K-14 or K-16.
High school should be a staging ground to direct all students into the
next phase of education, and to begin steering them toward careers.
It might be best if we stopped handing out high school diplomas,
stopped even recognizing graduation day. That would deliver the
message that nothing's finished yet.
Hold the applause. Save the speeches and the checks. Keep the
champagne on ice.
Let the celebration begin when there's truly something to celebrate.
Nolan Finley is editorial page editor of The News. Reach him at (313)
222-2064 or nfin...@detnews.com
© 2005 Detroit News
Sunday, June 26, 2005
Stop the party: High school graduation means nothing
By Nolan Finley / The Detroit News
June is waning, and with it the high school graduation celebrations.
The tassels are flipped; the hats tossed in the air. And soon, the
last of the champagne corks will pop.
Big stinking deal. High school graduation is an archaic ceremony that
carries no significance today. It ought to be scrapped.
Parents are wed to the notion that graduation day marks a rite of
passage into the adult world; that their children have secured a
foothold on the future.
So they snap a few last school pictures to tape on the refrigerator
door, throw parties and shake down about everyone they know for a
check.
But if high school graduation is the last education milestone young
Johnny and Jill mark, then write them off as failures, or more
charitably, as having a high probability of leading a marginal life.
Despite what the local windbag said in that windy commencement speech,
finishing the 12th grade is no more significant than finishing the
10th, or the fourth, or the first. It's just one more year in an
education career that has to extend well beyond the senior year of
high school.
Abe Stokla, this year's valedictorian at Eagleville High School, had
his diploma yanked for saying in his speech: "You have given us the
minimum required attention and education to master any station at any
McDonald's anywhere."
But the kid was telling the truth. High school isn't preparation for a
single career. It's certainly no finish line.
The best a high school graduate can hope for today is to start work in
a menial, low-paying position and hope that on-the-job training will
help him or her move up the economic ladder.
But the odds are the climb will be limited. Over the course of a
lifetime, a college graduate will earn $1 million more on average than
a high school graduate.
And don't bother me with a nonsensical recitation of all the people
who excelled in life without a college degree. That list inevitably
starts with Bill Gates, the Microsoft founder and America's richest
dropout.
Take an honest look at that kid of yours who isn't interested in
college. Is he or she really Bill Gates material? Will they even get
the opportunity to drop out of Harvard, as Gates did?
If the traditional, four-year college track isn't in their stars,
they'd better at least be looking at a two-year community college
program, or some other technical or trade school training.
We'd serve our children better if we stopped thinking about education
as K-12, and started talking in terms of K-14 or K-16.
High school should be a staging ground to direct all students into the
next phase of education, and to begin steering them toward careers.
It might be best if we stopped handing out high school diplomas,
stopped even recognizing graduation day. That would deliver the
message that nothing's finished yet.
Hold the applause. Save the speeches and the checks. Keep the
champagne on ice.
Let the celebration begin when there's truly something to celebrate.
Nolan Finley is editorial page editor of The News. Reach him at (313)
222-2064 or nfin...@detnews.com
© 2005 Detroit News