I was once riding to my
family’s hometown, Vidalia, GA, where everyone is your cousin. The trip from
Detroit is 12 hours straight down I-75. I fell asleep and when I woke up, we
were in West Virginia. My cousin stopped to get some gas and got on the wrong
highway going southeast rather straight south. I was furious as the trip to me
was intuitively simple, 12 hours straight down I-75. It took us 20 hours to get
Vidalia. However, I learned a great lesson, “Many people need a road map to
remind them where they are going.” That lesson applies to adults and children
equally.
Children-Students need a
life road map to their adult destination — their career. Many have no idea
which career is suitable for themselves and worse yet, they have no idea that
school is important foundation for their career. Before college, military or
professional sports, students need to graduate from high school. For us adults
this fact seems intuitive. However, students are children, whose mantra in life
is folly and play.
Without a road map, they
wander from class to class, school to school, playing and trying to find
themselves. Their wandering, often, translates into failed classes, behavior
issues, truancy and then low graduation rates.. When they finally land at high
school graduation, they are 23 years old and forced to get a GED. Every child
deserves a road map by the end of the 5th grade, no later than the beginning of
the 11th grade to remind them of where thy are going.
![]()