Let children set their own goals!steemCreated with Sketch.

in life •  7 years ago 

Most adults talking to a child have the annoying tendency to ask: 'What do you want to be when you you grow up'? The answers small children give to such question are sweet and fun. Small children are allowed to answer astronaut or lion tamer – no worries, they'll grow out of it when they figure out how the real world works.

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Older children, however, are expected to come up with sensible answers – you know, doctor or businessman. A career choice to make their parents proud. If the poor child dares to shrug the question with a mumbled 'I don't know', the adults feel the need to offer some helpful suggestions, based on the child's favorite subjects – another question grown-ups like to throw at every child they meet.
An honest answer, like 'How do you want me to know what I'd like to do as a grown-up. I'm only ten', will not do.

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In many parts of the world, the public education system is designed to force the pupils to make a decision as early as possible. In my country, for instance, children are expected to have some idea about their future by the time they're 14, when they have to choose the high-school they'd like to attend. When they do start high-school, there's no more time to lose. They need to focus on the subjects required for admission exams at he college of their choice – because they must have made a choice by that time.

Parents and the extended family are often those that put the most pressure on the kids, sometimes debating the merits of various careers while completely ignoring the children who are right there, in the same room. Careers are discussed in terms of money, primarily. The pros, rarely the cons.

Children are judged in respect to the best possible career (job) they can achieve. The question of what they would like does not come into question. A straight A pupil is expected to want to go to a good college and work hard to get a good job, although what he likes most is writing stories. There's no money in writing – parents object shooting down the child's dream.
Faced with the disdain of their elders, many kids just give up on their dreams and resign themselves to achieving the goals others set for them.

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  • The main job of parents should be to refrain from pushing their own ideals on their children and try to help them discover what makes them happy, what do they see themselves doing in the future.

  • Give them time – you cannot expect a teenager to make such important decisions with the limited life experience they have. Youngsters should be encouraged to take a gap year before starting college – to discover the world as adults, see what they might want to do with their own lives. Unfortunately, some countries have pushed legislation penalizing kids who choose to take a break.

  • Course correction – Children should be taught that it's OK to change your mind. Maybe they discover they don't actually care for the job they've decided upon when they where 15. How do they tell that to their parents who have worked so hard to help them get there. In my country, parents spend a small fortune on private tutors to get their kids to medical school. These kids cannot simply go to their parents after one year and say they've changed their minds and would rather become musicians or fashion designers. Not necessarily because they fear the parents' anger, but because they cannot face their disappointment.

Giving advice to others is something everybody's good at, but, before telling their children what to do with their lives, parents should take a good look at what they've done with their own lives and admit that maybe they don't have all the answers.

Thanks for reading

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I think we should teach kids skills and subjects that are needed in the real world, then they will be able to choose what to do. Exactly what modern education doesn't offer.......

In our state our colleges have a "general education" degree that one can receive and therefore it will allow the student to get the basics that are needed and maybe by then the student will have decided on a major they want to pursue. My son is only 7 and so far he's decided to become a Lego Master. LOL

Mine is going to be a gamer :)

This is true, I don't get why parents and schools want children to choose their careers when they are only teenagers! that's why a lot of them end up studying something they don't like at all. I think a teenager is not mentally prepared to know what they really want, and haven't experienced enough things either. There may be some exceptions, but many cases are the same, and it is dangerous to have professionals who don't like what they do, very dangerous...

Sometimes kids have to give up their dreams because of family pressure. They want to do something, but their parents want them to do something else.

We all should do what makes us happy. Parents can give suggestions to their children, but it's their kids who make the final decision in future.
Thank you @ladyrebecca for sharing this!

Your child will learn to talk when you hear it. Besides, he will also learn to separate another word from the word. So, the more you speak to him, the more scope of learning his words will be created. According to some researchers, the more you talk to the child with the child, the more you play, the more you learn, the easier it will be to learn the language. Even after being two years old, it will be very nice to learn how to speak, language will also be rich. His word storehouse will be very full.

Thanks for sharing I like your childhood post
Just like all the forests are spilled in a single flowering aromatic tree, so all the saints are blessed with a son of the Supreme. "
"All the forests are burned out from the fire of a queen coat, so also a virgin is burned."