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Helping Teens Succeed
Academically : article
They
wish to put their feet up, stare mindlessly at the
TV, even read a book. What they feel the least like
doing is wrapping their overstrained minds around high
school algebra or the structure of an academic essay.
This is fine. I'm glad we got that out in the open. At
least now our imperfect lives will not be overshadowed
by paragons of parenting that supposedly find self
sacrifice a painless natural instinct. We are, most of
us, the same. We want the best for our teens. We love
them and we want them to excel it's just that we wish
that there was paid leave to pursue parenting duties
when we are fresh and enthusiastic.
The French have a saying: with the eating comes the
appetite. Yes, I am afraid that is exactly what I am
suggesting. We have to do it. That is, we have to switch
off the TV, sit upright and put the big light on so we
can see the small print in the textbook and our sullen
and confused teenager directly behind it. And our
exhausted reluctance is often not our only obstacle. We
are going to have to find enough energy to convince our
offspring that they need our help. (Help is used here
with qualifications. Never do the work for a child, help
means pointing them in the direction of
self-sufficiency.) This is a tough one because teens
have perfected the unworkable combination of arrogance
and neediness. This results in us wanting to
simultaneously hug them and drop them off somewhere on a
deserted highway. So this is the scenario. Just when you
thought it was safe to come home and collapse in a heap,
life requires that you find an elusive measure of
maturity, stir in a little intelligence and garnish with
love. I said it wasn't going to be easy. So you're
sitting there and mutual resentment is clouding the
otherwise soft evening air. You don't want to be here
doing this and your teen doesn't want to be here doing
this either. You think you are doing a good job of
hiding this overwhelming fact and your teen doesn't even
care to disguise his own disenchantment. He or she
doesn't believe in you. You can't blame them because you
don't believe in you either.
Ordinarily this would not be a recipe for success. This
would not be a clip from The Little House on the
Prairie. But, I have been there when the chips were down
and our backs were against the writing, which was on the
wall, and I have seen it change. I have seen scowls
dissipate and sighs die. I don't know what it is.
Perhaps something wonderful and magical supports us in
our heroic endeavors to overcome our limitations and
reach for excellence. When I have had the sheer
willpower to get beyond my own exhaustion I have seen
absolute miracles of communication that cannot help but
reinforce academic excellence as well as lots of other
important stuff.
I have remembered more than I ever thought possible and
I have had the absolute pleasure of passing that on to a
child that has forgotten to be sullen and thanks me like
it comes from the heart. In this stumbling way I have
learnt how to make a difference to my children's
academic experience. I have learnt to listen to them and
found myself forgetting about the program I was missing
or the book I was reading. When you sit down with your
teenager you realize that school is not a comprehensive
educator and that you need to supplement it in
significant ways. You need to get involved to do this,
and once you're involved it comes naturally. You stop
feigning interest and start generating excitement about
the material. This enthusiasm of yours is contagious and
before you know it your children are experiencing
academic success that helps them believe in themselves.
And that is all I ever wanted. I knew that if my teens
had that, the rest would follow naturally.
Gail Walter ,
Boulder, Colorado, from parentingteens.
Parenting teenagers
Other
articles in this series
Parenting Teenagers
How to keep kids safe online
Helping teens succeed academically
Home Schooling Teens
Drugs in
Schools
Dealing with falling
marks
Truancy in Teenagers
Bullying in schools
Overweight Children
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