{"id":4047,"date":"1964-11-01T01:00:00","date_gmt":"1964-11-01T01:00:00","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/www.rbc.com\/en\/about-us\/history\/letter\/november-1964-vol-45-no-11-the-failing-student\/"},"modified":"2022-11-28T01:27:28","modified_gmt":"2022-11-28T01:27:28","slug":"november-1964-vol-45-no-11-the-failing-student","status":"publish","type":"rbc_letter","link":"https:\/\/www.rbc.com\/en\/about-us\/history\/letter\/november-1964-vol-45-no-11-the-failing-student\/","title":{"rendered":"November 1964 &#8211; VOL. 45, No. 11 &#8211; The Failing Student"},"content":{"rendered":"<div id=\"layout-column-main\">\n<p class=\"boldtext\">Many Educators and lay writers                     have commented in recent years upon the serious problem of                     school dropouts and underachievers. Articles in professional                     journals and on the family pages of general periodicals are                     evidence of the widespread concern of parents and teachers.<\/p>\n<p> We think of a &#8220;drop-out&#8221; as a student who leaves school                     before completing a course of study which is in harmony with                     his abilities. An &#8220;underachiever&#8221; is a student who does not                     study up to the peak of his natural capacity for learning.<\/p>\n<p>What we seek is to channel these unfortunate students back                     into the stream so that they may receive the education they                     so vitally need in order to cope satisfactorily with life.                     Sometimes a friendly pat on the back will suffice, said Orville                     White in <em>The Educational Record<\/em>, but in many cases                     a strong push is indispensable.<\/p>\n<p>Plenty of explanations may be put forward for failure, but                     failure it remains none the less. As Churchill said in one                     of his war-time memos: &#8220;Pray do not let it be thought                     that you are satisfied with such a result. If you simply take                     up the attitude of defending it there will be no hope of improvement.&#8221;<\/p>\n<p>There is one sort of excusable failure: if a research project                     fails it is often as valuable as an experiment that succeeds                     because it eliminates one method of attacking the problem                     as being unprofitable. Some failures in school may have similarly                     good results by showing that the student is headed in the                     wrong direction. But this reason holds good only if it is                     undoubtedly true.<\/p>\n<p>Underachieving students are young people who could do better                     but will not, in spite of being warned, encouraged, punished,                     counselled and tutored. Some are rebels who pay lip-service                     to parental demands and go through the motions of classes                     and study, but whose minds are idling. Others look upon education                     as an affliction they are compelled to endure. Instead of                     showing lively interest and curiosity they sit neutrally as                     an audience and wait in a docile way for the teacher to compel                     them to learn.<\/p>\n<p>What are the pressures that hold back certain children from                     the attainment reached without undue effort by others of similar                     ability? Some students may need counselling by the school                     guidance worker or by a psychiatrist to set right an emotional                     upset. Other students must be taught to appreciate the value                     of working now for future benefits. They need to set up a                     target at which to aim.<\/p>\n<p>It should be the ambition of every parent and every teacher                     to so animate pupils&#8217; minds that they are always aspiring                     and testing their talent and developing their latent abilities.<\/p>\n<h3>The way things are<\/h3>\n<p>All the ingenuity we may put forth cannot alter the nature                     of things. Life in today&#8217;s world is of a sort to prosper only                     those who accept its limitations and value its opportunities                     and do not shirk the labour involved in learning how to handle                     both limitations and opportunities.<\/p>\n<p>Dr. S. R. Laycock of the University of British Columbia                     said in an address in 1962 that the world has recently witnessed                     four major explosions each more important than a hundred-megaton                     bomb: in knowledge, in population, in space and in freedom.<\/p>\n<p>More new things have been discovered in the past ten years                     than in the previous one hundred years, and the rate of the                     increase of knowledge is accelerating.<\/p>\n<p>The space programmes bring us face to face with a new demand                     for international co-operation and control if we are                     to assure survival.<\/p>\n<p>The population explosion, discussed a few months ago in                     our <em>Monthly Letter <\/em>on &#8220;The Hungry World&#8221;, has exposed                     us to the still unresolved problem of helping the people in                     underdeveloped countries to improve their standard of living.<\/p>\n<p>Finally, the freedom explosion in Africa and the East poses                     critical questions affecting the Western way of life. Nations                     with newly gained freedom which they have not yet learned                     to manage are bewildered and restless, enviously suspicious                     of better developed nations, and unready to accept guidance                     in government and in industrial evolution.<\/p>\n<p>To enable children of today to live successfully in this                     difficult and fretful age, said Dr. Laycock, we need to focus                     our emphasis on these things: a broad background of meaningful                     and interrelated knowledge, a well-established set of                     generalized habits and attitudes toward creativity, scientific                     method, and critical thinking, and wholesome personality growth                     and devotion to a set of moral and spiritual values.<\/p>\n<p>How else than by building a firm foundation of elementary                     and secondary education are children to be prepared for this                     advanced thinking? How else are they to obtain the high degree                     of emotional sturdiness and mental maturity that they will                     need to stand up to the remaining years of this century?<\/p>\n<h3>The new needs<\/h3>\n<p>Mere living, let alone holding a job in business, industry                     or agriculture, demands the ability to deal with many complicated                     processes and relationships. If students are to be prepared                     to match their hour they must be educated in harmony with                     the spirit of science, and yet, in spite of the excitements                     of its new frontiers, they must be deeply conscious of the                     need to preserve individual liberty and democratic institutions.<\/p>\n<p>There is a fighting spirit in all of us. It is one of the                     agencies that keep the human race going. Our ancestors fought                     barren deserts, tangled forests, unkempt wilderness, and the                     hallucinations which peopled them with malevolent spirits.                     Our job is to give young people as thorough a preparation                     of their thought processes as possible so that they may meet                     unafraid and master effectively the difficulties that we cannot                     even imagine.<\/p>\n<p>Industrialization has brought an ever increasing need for                     broader and higher education. In previous generations, an                     elementary school education was sufficient for employment                     in most jobs; today, due to mechanization and automation,                     a high school or an equivalent technical diploma is necessary                     for many occupations, and university-educated men and                     women are in increasing demand. The drop-out, therefore,                     faces the prospect of a succession of unskilled blind-alley                     jobs, and even they are becoming harder to find.<\/p>\n<p>It is a rule of business and the professions to give the                     tools to those who can handle them. Desiring a job and being                     willing to work hard are no longer good enough qualifications.                     The uneducated find themselves obsolete before they start                     work.<\/p>\n<p>Studies in 1963 showed that seventy per cent of Canada&#8217;s                     unemployed persons had only grade eight education or less.                     Another measure of the changing education need is given in                     a tabulation of employment and occupation covering the years                     1949 to 1959: employment in Canada increased by 24 per cent;                     professional employment increased by 71 per cent; skilled                     employment increased by 38 per cent; white-collar employment                     increased by 34 per cent; semi-skilled and unskilled                     employment increased by only 19 per cent.<\/p>\n<p>Despite this evidence of need that has been before us for                     many years, a brief presented to the Senate Committee on Manpower                     and Employment by the Canadian Welfare Council in 1961 declares                     that, if the present pattern of inadequate education continues,                     the make-up of the labour force under age 25 in 1970                     will be: one-third will have left school with no more                     than elementary school education; another one-third will                     have dropped out before obtaining junior matriculation standing                     or its equivalent; less than one-fifth of the new entrants                     into the labour force will have senior matriculation standing                     and only some 6 per cent will have completed a university                     or college course.<\/p>\n<p>The young person who drops out of school before obtaining                     the best education available to him finds that the status                     of all his adult life has been determined and fixed on a low                     level by his action. He is likely to be the first to lose                     his job in a slump. Studies show that he will probably move                     down the occupational ladder rather than up. His life will                     be unsatisfying, and he is unlikely to make a useful contribution                     to society.<\/p>\n<h3>Causes of failure<\/h3>\n<p>In view of these disquieting facts, it is pertinent to ask                     &#8220;what is the cause of failure, drop-out and underachievement?&#8221;<\/p>\n<p>Generally speaking, the student decides to drop out because                     he has no substantial goal in life. Our strong economy, with                     its blatant display of affluence and flight from hard work,                     fosters thoughts of enjoying ease and comfort without effort.                     Parents and teachers may not openly condone school failure,                     but they contribute to it by failing to stress the worthwhileness                     of working toward success.<\/p>\n<p>Failing students are not necessarily mentally retarded.                     Some drop-outs have IQ&#8217;s as high, based on standard intelligence                     tests, as those who graduate. For them, something has gone                     wrong. An article in <em>School Life <\/em>says three factors                     are particularly influential: a low academic aptitude, a slow                     rate of emotional and social development, and lack of parental                     interest in education.<\/p>\n<p>One reason frequently given for failure and drop-out                     is the distraction of working to supplement the family income.                     Research has shown that grades do not necessarily suffer because                     the student is working part time. In fact, a survey in Illinois                     revealed that proportionately more among those who become                     graduates hold after school or Saturday jobs than do those                     who drop out. Some students find that the hours spent in gainful                     employment provide needed recreation and a rest from school                     work. Their mental health is made better by the gratification                     of doing socially useful work.<\/p>\n<h3>Parents&#8217; responsibility<\/h3>\n<p>A philosopher once said: &#8220;Children are loved for the ample                     reason that they are children, and because children are fragrant                     and beautiful and full of the untold possibilities of becoming.&#8221;                     But parental love is not a passive thing. It must be alive                     and even pushful.<\/p>\n<p>To love children is to wish the best for them and to take                     the action that will assure its becoming available. Nothing                     can be more meaningful in life than knowledge, and the gaining                     of knowledge starts as early as your reading aloud the bedtime                     story. By stimulating curiosity through stories, you awaken                     the child&#8217;s desire to learn. You make him thirsty now so that                     you shall not have to force him to drink later.<\/p>\n<p>You cannot inoculate your child against failure, but you                     can give him emotional vitamins which will set up resistance                     to it. They build self-respect and self-confidence                     which fortify him against the temptation to quit.<\/p>\n<p>Active interest by parents in school work is of the greatest                     help as an incentive to study. It will not take up much time                     of an evening to impart a sense of the benefits of learning,                     and it is time well spent when your child&#8217;s future is at stake.<\/p>\n<p>Interest in school work should continue without break until                     graduation day. Praise the child whenever he merits it; pin                     up his first grade pictures on a wall without being jocular                     about them; find out from the school what its requirements                     are in the way of homework, and be firm about home study,                     but don&#8217;t nag; be willingly available to explain and give                     information; expect to see marked test-papers and then                     help the child to fill in the missing knowledge; encourage                     conversation about school work at meals and at other times.                     Do not forget that though the sums are easy to you, the stories                     familiar, and the history old stuff, to your child all these                     are new and challenging. To add 4 and 5 is a triumph at one                     age, just as it is an achievement to extract a square root                     at another age.<\/p>\n<p>Give your child the best possible environment for studying.                     He should have a separate room, or at least a quiet study                     corner where he will not be disturbed by the rest of the family                     or by radio and television.<\/p>\n<p>If your child should fail, consider whether he is overmatched                     by the course he is taking. You may be able to head off further                     hurt, even tragedy, by transferring him to a new setting.                     Merely to make a change from an environment where he has failed                     to an environment where he may cut a niche for himself might                     be a determining factor in making a come-back.<\/p>\n<p>Common sense, thoughtfulness, good-heartedness and                     a little time: these are the ingredients of parent help. It                     has been suggested that parents should get together at two                     or three meetings during the school year to talk about methods.                     In discussion with teachers and guidance workers they would                     learn to give leadership without meddling and help without                     pampering.<\/p>\n<p>They would hear about the danger of over-indulgence.                     Some children are given so many possessions and privileges                     that they do not learn the essential connection between effort                     and reward.<\/p>\n<p>Sloth is one of the Seven Deadly Sins, responsible for a                     great deal of the failing and underachieving we see, but idling                     away one&#8217;s time is not enjoying life. &#8220;Not to be occupied                     and not to exist amount to the same thing,&#8221; said Voltaire.                     And Emerson followed up with &#8220;God offers to every mind its                     choice between truth and repose. Take which you please ( you                     can never have both.&#8221;<\/p>\n<h3>A national problem<\/h3>\n<p>Education should be regarded as the chief domestic issue                     of the decade. Its aim is to develop every pupil&#8217;s ability                     to live usefully in society and to meet successfully the demands                     which society has a right to make upon him. Education is for                     individual excellence and happiness, for a society of equals,                     for a government of free men, for security and plenty, and                     for beauty.<\/p>\n<p>Education in Canada is looked upon as a right, available                     to all children. The true democratic ideal is not equal distribution                     of education to all, but equal opportunity in proportion to                     capacity. The pupil is not to be a passive receiver, like                     a barrel being filled through a funnel, but must make a serious                     effort to take in what is offered.<\/p>\n<p>What a child learns at school is capital, to be invested                     and drawn upon all through life. If he resists, he should                     be taught that many things are eventually useful, though not                     immediately convertible.<\/p>\n<p>Education provides knowledge by which the student may guide                     himself in the best development of his capacity for efficient                     and happy living. It is not true to say that this education                     is becoming more complex, but it would be true to say that                     because society is becoming more complex it is necessary that                     education be more complete.<\/p>\n<h3>What to do<\/h3>\n<p>A forceful endeavour should be made by everyone who feels                     concern for children and their future to find a positive way                     of meeting the challenge.<\/p>\n<p>It is not enough to catch failing and underachieving students                     in their final year in high school. The unskilled readers,                     the potential drop-outs, the slothful students, should                     be detected early and corrective measures taken. As the Assistant                     Superintendent of Schools for Vancouver wrote a few years                     ago: &#8220;Failure for a poor student should be delayed long enough                     so that he might learn enough to be made into a good citizen.&#8221;<\/p>\n<p>Our obligation is to impress upon the student that he faces                     certain needs which are inescapable. We should show him the                     causes of his failure and the possibility of their being removed.                     We should provide him with a programme that gives promise                     of successful activity in his educational, vocational and                     social future.<\/p>\n<p>A whole-hearted getting together of parents, teachers,                     boards of education and persons interested in social services                     would start the ball rolling. This is not a task for the schools                     alone, but one whose successful completion demands the co-operative                     effort of all the community.<\/p>\n<p>Union members who are willing to talk to students about                     the qualifications needed for jobs can perform a real service.                     Positions requiring knowledge and skill are going begging,                     while young men and women who failed to obtain the necessary                     education are unable to get work. YMCA&#8217;s, YWCA&#8217;s, YMHA&#8217;s,                     boys&#8217; clubs, and other agencies serving youth can, through                     their study groups, bring home the desirability of having                     every boy and girl pursue education to the extent of his and                     her capacity.<\/p>\n<p>Some youth centres have provided study rooms for those who                     have not quiet corners at home. Others have arranged for bright                     senior students to coach younger ones who have bogged down                     in some subject. A stimulating project by a &#8220;domestic peace                     corps&#8221; in Philadelphia may blaze a path for others to follow.                     One hundred and seventy-five college students have volunteered                     to coach youngsters who need extra help.<\/p>\n<p>When United States schools opened last year, thousands of                     students who had dropped out, or who intended to drop out,                     returned to their class-rooms. Their return was brought                     about by the campaign conducted at the urging of the late                     President Kennedy with the help of $250,000 from his Emergency                     Fund. Campaign workers got into touch with 59,300 drop-outs                     and potential drop-outs, of whom 51 per cent, or 30,361,                     returned to school. The most impressive results were obtained                     from effort by schools, welfare agencies, business men, parents,                     employment agencies, churches, and news media when they planned                     together for complementary activities. Students gave various                     reasons for returning to school, but chief among them was                     the personal interest shown in them by the community.<\/p>\n<p>In Canada, an exhaustive survey was made by the Canadian                     Education Association&#8217;s Research Committee on Practical Education                     during three years ending in 1951. The <em>Globe and Mail <\/em>observed                     last year: &#8220;Little has been found since that was not encompassed                     by this study.&#8221; The survey, sponsored by 57 Canadian firms                     and other organizations, led by the Canadian Bankers Association,                     the Canadian Chamber of Commerce, the Canadian Congress of                     Labour, and the Canadian Manufacturers Association, encompassed                     the academic and post-academic careers of 12,124 high                     school graduates and 14,219 drop-outs. Said J. Bascom                     St. John in the <em>Globe and Mail <\/em>of the findings and                     recommendations twelve years after the survey: &#8220;They could                     have been made the basis of a new era in Canadian education,                     and they could have given us a head start on the needs which                     now rise before us in crucial urgency, but neither the politicians                     who run our governments, nor the professional educators who                     advise them, had the initiative to take the steps required.&#8221;<\/p>\n<h3>Adult failures<\/h3>\n<p>Adults, too, may be failing or underachieving, although                     their failure does not show up in marks on examination papers.                     If they are not coping with their children&#8217;s difficulties,                     if they are bewildered by events without doing something positive                     to understand them, they are failing. They have not matched                     themselves with the day&#8217;s needs.<\/p>\n<p>About the time their children are born, the parents&#8217; active                     curiosity in the world around them fades. They begin to digest                     the data they have collected and put it together to build                     a simplified working model of the universe to which they will                     refer for the rest of their lives ( and through which their                     children will first become acquainted with the world.<\/p>\n<p>That process cannot continue with satisfaction. Society                     is becoming more complicated, puzzling and demanding, not                     only for the children of today but for the adults of today.                     Everyone must keep on learning if he is to secure maximum                     self-realization and fulfil his duties as a parent and                     as a citizen.<\/p>\n<p>To be ignorant is not a crime, but to abide in ignorance                     when it can be avoided: that is a crime against oneself. From                     inexpensive paperback books and educational television to                     the variety of courses offered by community institutions and                     universities, there are myriad ways beckoning Canadians to                     catch up and keep up.<\/p>\n<p>Every normal adult feels a deep-rooted necessity for                     completion. We wish to fulfil our potential for happiness                     to the utmost. As Donald C. Peattie wrote in <em>An Almanac                     for Moderns<\/em>: &#8220;Life is adventure in experience, and when                     you are no longer greedy for the last drop of it, it means                     no more than that you have set your face, whether you know                     it or not, to the day when you shall depart without a backward                     look.&#8221;<\/p>\n<h3>No niggling physic<\/h3>\n<p>Is it possible to cure the illness afflicting so many of                     our young people without causing pain? There will have to                     be readjustment, and it will have to be spread over all the                     organs affected ( the children, the parents, the schools and                     society. It should, however, be less painful than some people                     fear: more, in fact, an overcoming of laziness and inertia                     and prejudice and custom than a severe operation.<\/p>\n<p>But this is not the moment for the bedside manner and a                     niggling bottle of physic. Both young and old, we need the                     adventurous daring to accept ourselves as bundles of possibilities,                     and undertake the most interesting task in the world (making                     the most of our best and expecting more of ourselves).<\/p>\n<\/div>\n","protected":false},"author":79,"featured_media":0,"template":"","categories":[1],"rbc_letter_theme":[],"rbc_letter_year":[44],"class_list":["post-4047","rbc_letter","type-rbc_letter","status-publish","hentry","category-uncategorized","rbc_letter_year-44"],"acf":[],"yoast_head":"<!-- This site is optimized with the Yoast SEO Premium plugin v27.2 (Yoast SEO v27.2) - https:\/\/yoast.com\/product\/yoast-seo-premium-wordpress\/ -->\n<title>November 1964 - VOL. 45, No. 11 - The Failing Student - RBC<\/title>\n<meta name=\"robots\" content=\"index, follow, max-snippet:-1, max-image-preview:large, max-video-preview:-1\" \/>\n<link rel=\"canonical\" href=\"https:\/\/www.rbc.com\/en\/about-us\/history\/letter\/november-1964-vol-45-no-11-the-failing-student\/\" \/>\n<meta property=\"og:locale\" content=\"en_US\" \/>\n<meta property=\"og:type\" content=\"article\" \/>\n<meta property=\"og:title\" content=\"November 1964 - VOL. 45, No. 11 - The Failing Student - RBC\" \/>\n<meta property=\"og:description\" content=\"Many Educators and lay writers have commented in recent years upon the serious problem of school dropouts and underachievers. 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Articles in professional journals and on the family pages of general periodicals are evidence of the widespread concern of parents and teachers. 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