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Tuesday, March 1, 2005
Losing Our Kids and Businesses To Stupidity
BIZNETDAILY COMMENTARY
Posted: March 1, 2005
By Marilyn Barnewall
© 2005 Marilyn Barnewall
According to the U.S. Department of Education, in 2001 57 percent of high school
seniors had a below basic reading proficiency level. Those who have
analyzed the data put out by the Department of Education suggest that as many
as 100 million adults in America do not possess the literary abilities to
function effectively in society.
In 1988 and 2000, U.S. companies surveyed by the American Management Association
said that 32 percent of job applicants lacked the reading skills required for
the jobs for which they applied. All applicants interviewed nationally for a
position by Motorola failed tests on seventh-grade English and fifth-grade math.
Is the problem with our economy that companies cannot create jobs? Or, is the
problem that the young adults who graduate from our public schools and universities
do not have the qualifications to fill jobs that can stimulate business growth?
We like to think other nations dislike us because they envy our quality of
life. Really? Of all U.N. member nations, we rank 49th in literacy.
Are kids today so much worse than those of 60 years ago? Or, is the social
environment we have built to raise them so much worse?
A part of the answer to this question came to me once as I sat on the runway
at a major Florida airport talking with my seat partner. He was a successful,
affluent businessman. He owned several television stations. He was on his way
to Washington, D.C. to lobby for license renewals.
"I just attended my youngest child's graduation from college," he
told me with a proud smile.
"I had two families...you know, divorced, remarried, three children by
each wife," he said. Strangers on airplanes often share personal information
with one another... moments of this kind truly represent two ships passing in
the night.
We talked for a few more minutes as he explained how it had taken him until
he was almost 35 to get his college degree. His family was poor, his father
had died when he was just a child, and he was the oldest of several children.
He had to keep leaving school to go home and help support his family.
"I'm so relieved all of my children were able to complete their educations
by the time they were 22 years old," he said.
We talked a few minutes more. We discussed many of todays social problems.
He made several comments about children his own, and kids in general.
They do not seem to have the same traditional sense of respect and commitment
for family, he said. He compared their lives to his when so many years
ago he kept postponing his education to ensure his loved ones had food on the
table. As he spoke, an insight I never had before came to me. They were difficult
words to say to a friend let alone a stranger. But I thought they might
give him some insight into what was obviously troubling him.
"It seems to me what you are saying is that you made life as easy for
your children as you could. You made things so easy, they had no opportunity
to face challenges and develop character. Now you lack respect for them because
they dont have the strength of character that overcoming challenges teaches
human beings."
As I said, people on airplanes say things to one another that would normally
not be socially accepted topics of conversation. In the first class section
of a DC-10, it is very unlikely someone will hit you for making a statement
not meant as an insult, but taken as one.
He stared at me for the longest time. His eyes reflected first the perceived
insult... that I was somehow telling him he had done the wrong thing. Then his
look became thoughtful, questioning, then accepting. He nodded his head.
"I believe you may be right," he concluded.
I have thought many times about that conversation. I learned a great deal from
it.
I believe one major reason a lot of American kids became unmanageable brats
and teenagers in the 1960s came from battle-wearied soldiers standing on Europes
shores. They awaited a ship to take them home after the WWII. They were so grateful
to be going home alive, so grateful for the families or future families awaiting
them, they made a promise:
My kids are never going to have a tough life like the one Ive just
lived. Things are going to be better for them.
Unfortunately, like my seat partner that day, they made life too easy for their
children. It resulted in unchallenged kids, insecure, undisciplined youths.
Kids need to be challenged. The only way to gain self-respect and a sense of
self-reliance is to take a chance
start with small challenges win
some, lose some -- and grow from there.
I was eight when WWII ended. The generation of kids that came up right behind
me were the ones protesting at UC Berkley and at Yale and Cornell... upper and
upper-middle class young adults.
We were not raised thinking it was the worlds job to entertain and amuse
us. During summer vacation, we took part in reading programs at the public library.
We never heard of fast food restaurants. Few of us were fat we were
too active to gain weight. We did not get a weekly income for doing little or
nothing. As a member of a family, we were expected to be responsible and productive
members of the unit.
Our boys were allowed to be boys with all male traits. Girls were allowed to
be girls. We celebrated the difference. The thought of same sex marriage never
entered our minds, let alone our legislatures.
Our music was about love not hate and violence. Dancing was an artistic rather
than a sexual expression. Public education was free... but was available to
us only if we performed to specific expectations.
Then, we did what my seat partner did. We created a risk-free society so our
kids didnt have the chance to face challenges. By doing so, we removed
their opportunity to develop character and now we dont like the
lack of character. We want them to be people we can trust.
It is because our kids have had the chance to develop character removed from
them that a large majority believe it is okay to cheat. That is our legacy to
Americas youth. How sad!
Someone ought to give the senior citizens who thought sixties escapism
into drugs was cool the people who caused this problem a good
spanking!
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Marilyn Barnewall, in 1978, was the first female to be named vice president
in charge of a major loan and deposit portfolio at Denvers largest bank.
She started the nations first private bank, resigned to start her own
firm and consulted for banks of all sizes in America and other countries. In
June 1992, Forbes dubbed Barnewall the dean of American private banking.
Author of several banking texts, she has written extensively for the American
Banker, Bank Marketing Magazine, and was U.S. consulting editor for Private
Banker International (Lafferty Publications, London/Dublin). Article originally
appeared in the Grand Junction Free Press. Marilyn can be reached at marilynmacg@juno.com.
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