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SCHOOL LIFE: Leaving "School" Out of High School
By Niki Lefebvre
The Winding Road to Academic Excellence
Our training shoes quietly slapped the rubbery surface of the track as we barreled down the final stretch. One by one we crossed the line and doubled over, desperate to catch our breath. Despite the burning in my lungs from the cold autumn air, I felt great. I had been in college for only a few weeks and was keeping pace with some of the older, veteran runners. Unfortunately, off the track, in the classroom, I wasn’t even keeping up with the other freshmen. After practice that night, despite the chill in the air, I took the longest possible route back to my dorm, dreading the research paper and the mountain of books and journal articles and notes and outlines that had littered my desk for weeks. I was just beginning my first semester of college and already knew I was unprepared.
“How did you do it in high
school?” asked my roommate, a graduate of a New Mexico prep
school. How did I do it in high school? I didn’t. In my public high school, a
small school in rural Massachusetts, I was a conscientious student
with a straight-A average. But I never had to write a 12-page
research paper. In fact, in high school I spent a lot more time on
the track and engaged in other pursuits than I did studying. I was
captain of the varsity cross-country and track teams, a class
officer, president of the National Honor Society. I volunteered at
a local women’s shelter, represented the student body on the
town school committee, worked at a craft store. I was a Girl Scout.
School was something else. Even in my Advanced
Placement courses I did not have to write research papers. My
classes rarely required me to fit even an hour of homework into my
afternoon schedule, and doing homework on the weekends was an
anomaly at best. As I tried to settle in at college, I began to
realize that high school had involved very little school. None of my
assignments ever required much time or effort, nor did
“big” assignments occur frequently enough that I had to
pare back my long list of after-school activities. Far more often
than not, a 45-minute study period provided me with sufficient time
to complete the day’s assignments satisfactorily.
No Records, No Goals
At my first high-school track practice, the
coach gave everyone a list of school records. He challenged us to
break them throughout the season. I had six classes on my first day
of high school and didn’t receive one list of records to
break, standards to meet, or goals to achieve.
That’s why college was a shock. My
high-school transcript may have been filled with As, but I quickly
learned that an A in college cost much more. The five-paragraph
essays, multiple-choice exams, and short homework assignments
required by my high school didn’t fill my pockets with much
college currency. And I wasn’t alone in being so broke.
According to a recent survey conducted by the
Indiana University High School Survey for Student Engagement, the
majority of high-school students spend three hours or less on
homework each week, and the majority of those students reported
earning As and Bs. Only 22 percent of the 1.2 million high-school
graduates who took the ACT Assessment in 2004 achieved scores that
would deem them ready for college in English, math, or science.
When did school get pushed out of high school? Most students
will do what is expected of them, but so often more is expected on
the athletic fields, in after-school clubs and jobs, in volunteer
organizations, and in social circles than in the classroom. School
must be more of a priority in high school if students are to
succeed in college and beyond.
Niki Lefebvre, a 2005 honors graduate in
history and philosophy from Mount Holyoke College, is currently
director of the Concord Review Society.
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