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Parenting Your High School Graduate
by Ellen Gibran-Hesse
Description: Tips for helping your teen transition from high school to adult life.
I am a life coach for parents with young adults who have failed to
launch and for young adults navigating the early years of independence. I
am also a lawyer and single mom. I have two sons and my youngest,
Richard, is just about ready to finish high school. We applied to about six
colleges just before Thanksgiving, a rite that I had just done four
years ago with his older brother, and now are waiting to hear back for the
winning selections. It is worse than Oscar night. Many friends and
family tease me about the empty nest. What will I do with the “kids”
gone? I reply that is a fantasy that is one of the best kept secrets. No
one wants to admit that in this day and age, we have many young adults
not leaving home or coming back home after failed attempts out on their
own or after college. The latest number is 18 million young adults
living at home and not because they want to do so. The young adult leaving
home after 18 was traditional for previous generations, but it is not!
reality for our generation.
What is going wrong is that no one is preparing our young adults for
independence. We want to believe as parents that the schools and colleges
are doing that, but they aren’t. We have both parents working these
days and many single parents also working. As parents, we have been
lulled into thinking that somehow the schools will launch our kids into
adulthood. The sad fact is that our schools are doing a worse job than
they ever have. As Dr. Mel Levine says in his book, Ready or Not, Here
Life Comes, our high schools have become college prep institutions. This
was not the case just 30-40 years ago. The high schools then had been to
prepare the student with skills to enter the adult world. There is
virtually no preparation in that direction today. The focus is to create
better students for college and to obtain better test scores for funding.
The student is a product, not a human. But without better parenting and
parental involvement at this development stage, we are going to continue
to see lost dependent young adults because the fact is,
schools are not going to change any time soon.
Right now, according to a Time Magazine article in 2006, about 1/3 of
our high school students are dropping out. I’ve seen statistics that
about 1/3 of our high school students are going to college. That leaves
about 1/3 who are simply graduating and trying to find their way. If
high schools have become college prep institutions, they are failing 2/3
of our students. When I went to high school, there were three
“tracks” to better serve students and their families. There was the college
track in which students took honors classes to prepare them for
college. In addition, there was the business track for those going into office
related jobs, and there was the technical track which included car
repair and the like. The focus very much was on where students would be
going after high school and how best to prepare them to work in the real
world. The key here is the word, “work”.
In my coaching, I try to get parents to begin a dialogue with their
students in high school about what do they want to do when they grow up.
No one is asking teens how they see their life after high school. If you
ask any junior or senior, they will say they are going to college
because that is what everyone is supposed to be doing. Those who have no
intention of going will say they are going to college. We used to be able
to say to friends, “I’m going to get a job at such and such and
maybe go to college after a few years.” You can’t say that now.
Somehow work before finishing college is disgusting. Is it any wonder we have
young adults returning home?
Parents still need to be involved in raising their high school student.
They need to be imparting and supporting a number of skills. Teens need
to start living their lives, in part, as adults. They need to wake up
on their own, manage time on their own, work in areas they think they
might like as a career, drive a car, manage their own money, and pay some
of their own bills. Of course, a little course in cooking wouldn’t be
bad. Parents look at me as if I’m nuts. Work? At a job? There’s too
much homework or they have too many extracurricular activities to be
involved in so that their college applications look good. But every time
I have a client put their teens to work and let them manage money and
pay their own gas and other bills, a miracle happens. The teen starts to
mature. Work ethics don’t come with a college degree. They start in
the teens or as young adults. My sons both are getting into college and
both have worked. Work should accompany college plans. It is a foundation
of adult life. My sons have worked at several jobs and found out
which ones they don’t like and why. This is how young adults figure
out where they need to go. A college major is not a job. It is too late
after four years, and frequently now, five years of college and
thousands of dollars to find out that you aren’t going to be working in your
major.
If your young adult just isn’t the college sort, that’s fine. In
fact, that’s more normal than not. They have not failed and neither
have you! This is a great journey for them and you. Help them to get the
training and the sort of jobs they think they are interested in. I know
of many grown adults and young adults who don’t finish college. The
bottom line is finding out what career path you want and you can only do
that if you try it out. College will be more relevant and meaningful if
you know where you are going and what you want to do. Research out of
Stanford and Brown University shows that the teen brain is continuing to
grow until about age 25. These are learning and developing years in the
most significant sense. Both of my sons may not go the traditional
route of four years of college following high school and then getting a
job. I didn’t either. My oldest son has gone to two colleges and about
to go to a third. He is finding what he likes, where he likes to live
and who he is and that is the real goal of growing up, not a degree.
Parents are relieved when I tell them there is no path, just the
illusion of one. Their job for the next 4-8 years is one of supporting and
helping their young adult to find their way to independence. It is a
process to be involved in and enjoyed.
Ellen Gibran-Hesse is a solo practitioner attorney with a B.S. in
psychology and a single mother of two sons ages 20 and 17. She has done
extensive work in non-profit organizations with teens and young adults and
helped family and friends to successfully launch their children into a
successful transition into adulthood for over five years. She is
currently writing a book to assist other parents and parent groups based on
her research and experience. Website: http://www.kidsoutnow.com
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