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What is your Child’s Education Situation?

Paul Adams · Friday, July 9th 2010 at 1:40PM · 383 views
The statistics are out there showing the “real” state of education in the US, high dropout rates, declining graduation rates, a growing inability to compete globally under the recent education standards. So, what do all these statistics mean to the single mother, living in West Chicago, with two kids in the local public school and one in daycare? Scrambling to keep her head above water and food on the table, she barely has time to sit down and take supper with her kids before running out to her night job, let alone spending time focusing on their homework.

So, how does this reality play out at school? More often than not, kids living in this setting are not motivated to drive themselves in school. Some kids have an ingrained love of learning or learn quickly and may be able to maintain a solid grade average and succeed. Those that need more assistance outside of the classroom become increasingly frustrated by a system that seems to not only discount them, but by a future that looks less and less appealing as they grow up.

This is not an unheard of or even surprising scenario, as most of us are aware. Many of our kids live in a world where living day to day is almost expected, and parents, single or otherwise, scramble to make ends meet with little time to offer to their kids’ schooling. In a time when we need to dig our heels in and push forward for better education, poverty and regional factors threaten to keep us behind in the global education race indefinitely.

You can help. Now is the time to motivate your children, your parents, your neighbors, and political policymakers to take action on the part of the future of education for our kids.

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Paul Adams Chicago, IL

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Comments (2)

Cynthia Merrill Artis Friday, July 9th 2010 at 9:56PM

Oh my... How did I miss this one.... I am one of those parent who loves learning and I am very involved in my son's education. I'm a returning student so I had this assignment... I had to draw and descripe the functions of the Long Bone for my Anatomy Class... like myself my son is naturally inquisitive... so he wanted to help me draw... since he the better artist.... I told him that this would be cheating and he should continue his drawings and i would turn both of our papers in for grades.... needless to say the look on his face was more than words could say when my son saw that his papers were graded by a college professor and that he was doing college work.... That's what I try to do... Keep learning fun and interesting... wow thanks for allowing me to share my story

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Paul Adams Thursday, July 22nd 2010 at 9:21AM

Cynthia - that's exactly the kind of work we need our parents to do - teaching their kids its fun to learn! Keep it up!

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