“I don’t want to go to school!” We hear these words, we say
these words, we think these words. Why? Because in America we have to go to
school. We have to. The government
tells us we have to go to school or be homeschooled. There are states that if
we aren’t sending our kids to school, we can get in trouble with the law. Students
are unmotivated. Students fake sick, slack on their homework, joke around too
much, deliberately just skip class - they
just don’t care. Don’t get me wrong, I know there are students who do take
school seriously, and sometimes even a little “too seriously” by some peoples
standards. Kids all across the globe dread going to school….
Actually they don’t.
This isn’t a bashing on America post. Well, it isn’t
intended to be one, so hopefully I don’t do that. Time and time again I am
reminded of how little we Americans,
especially those who are in middle school and high school, appreciate the fact
that we are ‘forced’ to go to school. When did becoming educated become a bad
thing in America?
That is not how it is everywhere. Here in Ethiopia, students
are lucky to get passed the 8th grade. Let me stop you right there.
It is not, and I repeat not, because they are undereducated or
unable to do school. It is because there is an extremely hard test that every
student must take in order to pass 8th grade. What happens if they
don’t pass? Their education is stopped. So they study. Night and day. More than
I have ever studied throughout high school and college. And they are in 8th
grade. For those that pass the test, they have one year to study more, and more, and more,
because they have to take another test in order to get to 10th
grade. Finally when they make it to grade 12 there is even more pressure to
study their brains out because if they don’t score well enough on this one
test, the chances of them getting into college goes down severely. Why? Because
they can’t afford to go to a good University. Let me make it a little more
personal.
My friend, Gilany, from Nekempte is a good student. She
studied, and made it to 9th grade. Then she studied, and studied,
and praise God she made it to 10th grade. Her entire high school
career she devoted to educating herself, absorbing as much knowledge as she
possibly could. Why? Because senior year she has to take a test that will determine
the course of her life. She took the
test. We eagerly awaited the results, prayed, and waited, and prayed, and
waited. Finally the day came that she got her results. She came to Bible Study.
She spoke in afan Oromoo to Doretha. On the way home Doretha told us the results:
she didn’t score high enough.
She doesn’t know where her life will go. She doesn’t know
what she’ll do. All she knows is she failed.
For those that pass the test and are able to go onto
University, they don’t hold much weight in the decision of their career path.
You get to put down 7 choices of majors, starting from the one you want most.
The school can, and often does, deny the major you want. They’ll tell
you what you are going to study. Let me make this a little more
personal.
What I want you to take from this is that the education system
in America gives us freedom. We don’t have to put on more stress than should be
allowed as a 13 year old. We don’t have to study ourselves sick just to make it
to 10th grade. We don’t have to worry ourselves to death that we won’t
be able to get into a college. For those of us that go to college, we have the freedom to choose our major. We get to decide
the course of our life. We all need
to stop taking our education for granted. We all need to own our education. We all need to start taking our education a little more seriously. We all need to take a step back and
realize how privileged we really are to be “forced” to go to school.