Archive - Generation iY RSS Feed

This week, I have blogged about the changes adults have made in the way we lead, teach and parent kids, over the last thirty years. Kids are definitely growing up in a more controlled—yet more paranoid—environment than I did.

Social scientists agree that kids today are highly confident, and believe they can change the world. Unfortunately, there have been some unintended consequences to our new leadership style. Over a four-day period I am suggesting four of them, and what we must do to balance the negative impact they bring:

  1.  Adults often won’t let kids fail.
  2. Adults often won’t let kids fall.
  3. Adults often won’t let kids fear.
  4. Adults often won’t let kids fight.

Today, let’s take a look at the fourth item we must correct. Continue Reading

In: Culture, Education, Generation iY, Leadership, Parenting

The past two days, I have blogged about the changes adults have made in the way we lead, teach and parent kids over the last thirty years. Kids are definitely growing up in a more controlled environment than I did. My conclusion is—there are shifts we’ve made that have had unintended consequences to them. Four of those shifts are what I’ve focused on in this series. Adults have not let kids…

  1. Fail.
  2. Fall.
  3. Fear.
  4. Fight.

Today, I will handle the third change and how it’s affected young people. Continue Reading

In: Culture, Education, Generation iY, Leadership, Parenting

Yesterday, I blogged about the changes adults have made in the way we lead, teach and parent kids over the last thirty years. Kids are definitely growing up in a more controlled environment than I did.

Social scientists agree that kids today are highly confident, and believe they can change the world. Unfortunately, there have been some unintended consequences to our new leadership style. Over a four-day period I will suggest four of them, and what we must do to balance the negative impact of the following:

  1. Adults often won’t let kids fail.
  2. Adults often won’t let kids fall.
  3. Adults often won’t let kids fear.
  4. Adults often won’t let kids fight.

Yesterday, I blogged about number one on this list. Let’s examine number two today.

2. Adults won’t let kids fall.

In many ways we’ve refused to allow our kids to be harmed, emotionally or physically. Helmets. Kneepads. Safety belts. More kids play inside in structured virtual games than outside where they can get hurt. This makes sense, but consider the potential damage in the long run. I know parents who’ve demanded that jungle gyms or monkey bars be removed from playgrounds. They’re too dangerous.

Psychologists in Europe have discovered, however, that if a child doesn’t play outside and is never allowed to experience a skinned knee or a broken bone, they may have phobias when they are adults. The truth is, kids need to fall a few times to learn it is normal; teens likely need to break up with a boyfriend or girlfriend to appreciate the emotional maturity that lasting relationships require. Pain is actually a necessary teacher. Consider your body for a moment. If your body didn’t feel pain, you could burn yourself or step on a nail and never do something about the damage and infection until it was too late. Pain is a part of health and maturity.

What can we do? First of all, don’t rescue kids from harm. Guide them, coach them and advise them on how to handle difficult times—but allow them the struggle of working their way through the process. Give them some freedom. Just like a butterfly must fight their way out of the cocoon in order to be strong enough to fly—young people must build emotional strength through hardship. No pain, no gain. Recently, our friends were outside with their eight-year old son. As we talked, their boy fell off the swing and began to cry. Instead of panicking, his mother calmed him and nursed his small wound, then told him he would be OK. Then, she shared how she had skinned her knee as a little girl…and everything turned out OK. Instantly, his tears dried up, he smiled and went back to his play.

Let me know your thoughts. Have you seen this same reality? Am I too concerned?

In: Culture, Education, Generation iY, Leadership, Parenting

Kids are growing up in a very different world than the one I grew up in. Both teachers and parents have changed the way they approach leading students. Some of these changes are great—but some have had unintended consequences. Continue Reading

In: Culture, Generation iY, Leadership, Parenting

via weknowmemes.com

I know, I know. You’ve heard many times already about how kids are finding ways to cheat in school today; ways we never could even imagine when we are kids.

But may I introduce an actual person who makes a living at helping kids cheat?

His pseudonym is Ed Dante. He is a paid ghostwriter who gets requests to write papers for them (for a class) via a website and then an email. Students will write in requests like this one: “You did me business ethics proposal for me I need proposal got approved pls can you will write me paper?”

There are three basic types of students who enlist his services.

  • Many of his requests are from international students.
  • Many are from hopelessly deficient students.
  • Then, many are from kids who grew up right here in the good ole’ USA and they have the money to pay for someone to do their schoolwork for them. They’re just lazy and lack ethics.

Ed says that over the last year, he’s written roughly 5,000 pages of scholarly literature, most on very tight deadlines. He’s written for a master’s degree in cognitive psychology, a PhD in sociology and even some postgraduate credits in international diplomacy. Now, here’s the clincher: Ed has actually ghost written:

  1. Legal briefs and lab reports.
  2. Military strategy assessments.
  3. Even papers on academic integrity.

Wow! Talk about hypocrisy. Ed says he’s been commissioned to write many a passionate condemnation of America’s moral decay as exemplified by abortion, gay marriage and the like. I guess plagiarism didn’t make the list. Nursing majors make up a huge portion of his clients, but the worst is…can you guess? Education majors.

Hmmm. What are they thinking?

Today, a number of websites can be found to obtain such a paper. Students can visit a website and punch in the topic of their paper, how many pages it must be, how many sources must be cited and even the gist of its big idea. Within days, bingo! A paper is sent to the student to be turned in under their name to receive a grade.

Get ready. This kind of education produces graduates who:

  • Value pragmatism over principles. There is no moral compass to guide them.
  • Believe laziness trumps the value of labor. Work ethic is in decline.
  • Think speed and convenience are more important than delaying gratification.

I understand the temptation to cheat, as I remember my early years as a kid school. Sadly, we now live a world full of anonymous, electronic ghostwriters ALONGSIDE of a world of adults who’ve not modeled the value of absolute ethics and morals. Sadly, it has produced a new industry called electronic ghostwriters.

Talk to me. What will our world look like if these students become our leaders?

In: Education, Generation iY

Page 1 of 5412345»102030...Last »
New look, same great blog.