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By Dr. Harry Tennant

Comments: Dan S. Martin's Principal Rider

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Sunday, April 1, 2012

Education Ride 365: Priority One = All Teenagers Should Be Employed!



After a most enjoyable week in San Antonio with my daughter, she and I rode the Cycle of Education back 300 miles to the DFW area where she resumed school.  For my part, I continued north to Oklahoma bound for yet another childhood home and points beyond.  Incidentally, in my previous post I neglected to mention Skye's swimming obsession.  During our week in the Alamo City, she swam probably 15 hours in the indoor hotel pool and even ventured into the VERY cold outdoor pool pictured below for an hour or two!  Kids!

!

It was Day 86 when I arrived in Edmond, Oklahoma.  In my March 28th blog entry I mentioned a conversation I had during this stop with the current owner of a house my family first owned.  I would like to touch on this visit to Edmond again to briefly address the value and perils of minimum wage labor during childhood.  I'm torn on the topic.



From a really early age I worked to earn money.  My first jobs were car waxing, lawn care, and paper routes.  I did those things in middle school.  When I lived in the house above and turned 14, I qualified for a motorcycle license and could then work further from home.  Incidentally, I now think it is very unwise for a 14 year old boy to have a motorcycle license!  Street cycle danger exacerbated by a dose of teenage recklessness is a flirtation with the grim reaper!

My first restaurant job was as a bus boy at a restaurant called "Johnnie's."  I also worked at a "Schlotzsky's" during my couple of years living in this home.  Concurrently, I threw newspapers in the wee hours of the morning, before school.



There are definitely pros and cons to young people throwing newspapers before school (yea---I know---that is so 20th century), working at restaurants late into the night, and otherwise joining the workforce before completing high school.  Responsibility can be developed.  Skills can be learned.  Family budgets can be helped.  An appreciation for personal budgeting and the effort it takes to earn money can be gained.  These and other benefits may outweigh the cons.  I personally remain unsure.

Two cons bother me in particular:

1) School is the most important job people under 18 years old have.  In my mind, school should be priority number one.  I was always tired as a teenager.  Too many of my hours were spent working jobs other than my most important one---> getting a good education.  I slept through classes, rarely did my homework, and otherwise spent much more energy on jobs outside of school than on the job of getting a good education.

2) Some of the least savory individuals I've met in my life worked in these jobs.  There were, of course, many good people too.  Nonetheless, there were too many real counter-examples to success and healthy life habits!  Teenagers are impressionable.  They are often thankfully ignorant of the seedier aspects of life.  Give them a minimum wage job with a vehicle and an excuse to be away from home way after dark and they will receive a crash course in vice...often corrupting adult vice. 

I'm torn about publishing this because later on in high school I was lucky enough to get some more "professional" jobs that were very good experience for the enterprising young person I was.  That is a story for another day. 

Yet, still to this day, I have a heavy education loan burden due at least in part to my lack of focus on the real job of the teenage years----> a focus on getting educated and excelling in school. 

For me personally, both the pros and the cons were more numerous than I've suggested here.  What do you think?  Should teenagers work before finishing high school?  Is school their most important job?  Should it be their only job?  Or, should we just be more selective about which jobs (and what hours) we allow them to work?


Riding Stats: Day 84 & 85---Preparation for the next leg of the journey.  Day 86---232.5 miles traveled, 4 hours and 19 minutes of moving time, 1 hour and 12 minutes of stopped time, 53.7 miles per hour average moving time, 42 miles per hour overall average, and a max speed of 78.7 miles per hour. 

Posted at 8:13 PM Keywords: Education Ride 365 , EdClick , Cycle Of Education , Teenage Employment 2 Comments

 
Harry Tennant said...
I definitely agree that education is job one. I didn't work during the school year but I did during summer vacation. I had some manufacturing jobs, was a lifeguard and swimming instructor for several summers then a pool manager, apartment rental agent and other jobs.

I completely agree that students shouldn't jeopardize their education for the sake of a few extra bucks. I also agree that the wrong job can expose an impressionable kid to unwholesome situations. I was a golf caddy for a short time in junior high and just hated spending time in the caddy shack for reasons like those you listed.

One other big potential benefit of an early job is the chance, if you are lucky enough, to see people doing the kind of thing that you would like to do some day. Is it as you imagined it would be?

Monday, April 2, 2012 8:09 PM

   
Kathie said...
My parents didn't allow me to work during high school for many of the reasons you have discussed. My father's idea wqas that school WAS my job. I have, in turn, been the same way with my tow children. I have allowed only summer jobs. The type of people they were exposed to was also limited by the jobs: lifeguarding at the local pool, retail stores, etc.

I think too many times children try so hard to grow up too fast. I have a friend whose children all went to school in England while they were stationed there and she said the biggest difference she noticed was that the kids there were ahead of American students. She thinks it might be due to the fact that England does not make 16 the 'magical number'. No driver's license, no dropping out at 16, etc.

Maybe America could or should explore that concept...

Thursday, April 5, 2012 9:45 AM

   

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