It’s that time of year again, a time of attending graduations and
graduation parties. i look back on the way i felt when i graduated from high
school, and truth to tell, i felt lost…author anne montgomery offers up some
sage advice on the subject on my blog today. –linda lee greene
It’s almost time for the
graduation season, and, in that regard, I want to mention an idea with which I
wholeheartedly agree. And yet, just a few years ago I would have been
completely against the idea.
In Abby Fawk’s USA Today
Article “College can wait, but finding your life purpose can’t,” Fawk opines
that American teens facing that jump to a postsecondary education are often
unsure what they want their future to look like, so heading straight to college
is a mistake.
As a former high school teacher of 20 years, I know Fawk is
correct. I have faced hundreds of children across my desk, and when I asked
what they thought their lives might look like in ten years, I was—more often
than not— faced with blank stares. I would then go into my, What do you want to be when you grow up? spiel. I’d ask: What do you like to do? What are you
good at? What will someone pay you to do? And again, I often received no reply.
Then the children graduated, most without any idea regarding
what might make them happy in their business lives. We teachers have hammered
into them that the next stop must be
college. (Note that when I say college, I’m referring to any form of post-high
school education. Wanting to be a carpenter, an electrician, or an
airplane mechanic are equally fine choices as wanting to be a doctor or a
neurophysicist.)
What isn’t fine is having
no idea what you want to study and then plowing ahead to your college of
choice.
That college education is expensive, so before you go, have a plan.
“College is the single
biggest investment we can make in a young person’s life,” Hawk said. “Four
years at a flagship state school can now cost $100,000 and private college can
run three to four times that figure. Yet the vast majority of students arrive
unprepared to make the most of the experience.”
Fawk believes that it’s
time for students to revisit the idea of a gap year. As I said earlier, I did
my best to dissuade kids who wanted to take a year off before getting
additional education, because statistics showed that once young people start
earning money, they are less likely to give up that cash flow and return to
school.
But Fawk explained that a
gap year, if done right, is not about losing forward momentum and can be a
rewarding launch pad to a bright future.
“It’s to gather
experiences and insights that inform everything that comes next,” she said.
Fawk is the founder and
CEO of Global Citizen Year, a program devoted to giving young people the chance
to immerse themselves in other cultures, to stretch their comfort zones, and to
forge relationships with people who are different than they are. If this sounds
a bit like the Peace Corps, it is. The idea is to take the year following high
school graduation and expand one’s horizons. To learn more about yourself by
living alongside others in a completely different environment.
But the GCY project is
not the only way students can accomplish these goals. A stint in the military,
the Peace Corps, or volunteering can also help young people find out who they
are and what they want in life.
Studies show that
American teens are growing up more slowly than the generations that proceeded
them. Young people struggle with basic skills like time management,
problem-solving, and navigating relationships. Why then do we shoehorn them
into making decisions that will impact the rest of their lives when many are
clearly not ready?
The idea is to give new
high-school graduates a little breathing room before they make that leap. A well-thought-out
gap year just might be the answer.
The past and present collide when a tenacious reporter seeks information on an eleventh century magician…and uncovers more than she bargained for.
WOLF CATCHER
Anne Montgomery
Historical Fiction/Suspense
TouchPoint Press
In 1939, archeologists
uncovered a tomb at the Northern Arizona site called Ridge Ruin. The man,
bedecked in fine turquoise jewelry and intricate bead work, was surrounded by
wooden swords with handles carved into animal hooves and human hands. The Hopi workers
stepped back from the grave, knowing what the Moochiwimi sticks meant. This
man, buried nine hundred years earlier, was a magician.
Former television
journalist Kate Butler hangs on to her investigative reporting career by
writing freelance magazine articles. Her research on The Magician shows he bore
some European facial characteristics and physical qualities that made him
different from the people who buried him. Her quest to discover The Magician’s
origin carries her back to a time when the high desert world was shattered by
the birth of a volcano and into the present-day dangers of archeological
looting where black market sales of antiquities can lead to murder.
REVIEW COPIES OF WOLF CATCHER AVAILABLE UPON REQUEST
Review/interview requests: media@touchpointpress.com
Get your copy where you buy books.
Thank you for letting me tell my story, Linda! ;)
ReplyDeleteIt was my pleasure, Anne.
ReplyDelete