Worried about your high schooler taking college courses? You shouldn’t be.
by Dr. Jones on October 1, 2009
in Academics, College & College Prep, General Parenting, High School, Middle School, School-related Issues, Tweens and Teens
When high schoolers think ahead and pursue college credit early, they are motivated, and motivation is the #1 obstacle to high school graduation, not just for at-risk students, but all students.
For years, our high schools have needed to catch up with the modern momentum of today’s youth, but instead remain anchored in bureacratic traditions that hold students back and draw lines between high and college. What we need is a seamless offering that encourages movement and ties between the base purity of high school academics and the loftier and more dynamic applications of college.
Not only should senior year be optionally spent on college courses, but so should some of junior and even sophomore year. The level of challenge, both academic and career-tied, should always remain a few rings above the student, for optimum engagement and motivation.
Every student is different, and senior year is the ideal time to introduce more flexible systems to channel (and reward) budding maturity and academic consistency. This is a time when a child’s identity fulfillment is at it’s peak, when self-confidence and hope for future achievement can be at their height. It is not a time to hold children back with bureacratic restraints that fail to consider personal readiness for “something more.”

