THIS IS AN ISSUE demanding reflection: "Teenagers And High School Teachers." It is because educators have powers to influence, to shape, to sculpt, and to develop our teenagers' abilities and talents. Assuming responsible parenthood, it is critical to wonder if a teacher has demonstrated that he or she has mastered How To Teach.
Bring up the chair, and you be the judge.
Another of my articles reads that "There seems to be a few parents realizing how important it is to have not only well prepared, skilled, and knowledgeable teachers but teachers who inescapably are proficient to execute something vital and crucial: How To Teach."
» will it be possible that a teenager fails in high school because mother nature made a mistake with his brain and the guy does not have enough intelligence to learn ?
» will it be possible that a teenager fails in high school because teachers presently fail to have mandatory skills to masterfully execute a "teaching-learning process"?
Assuming that a youngster developed normally, nature's mastermind decided that when reaching teen years his brain will wide-openly acquire knowledge, expand his aptitudes, develop talents, and germinate nature-given gifts more than at any other age. We may deduce that when something is not well in High School, it may not be that a young mind is failiing as a result of nature's mistake.
As an editor, publisher, and parent, I felt compelled to write about teenagers' education in the hope that you ~as a parent I presume~ may have wanted to read about an issue with powers to adversely influence initial stages of a teenager's life, and to potentially harm the development of his adult life.
We parents have the inescapable obligation to become conscious that our teenagers may not be in the best position to speak up when confronting what they likely perceive as such intimidating establishment of adults unlikely to admit wrong-doings. Most likely, adults flip their pancake over ~so to speak~ and present teenagers as those being the ones on the wrong side of matters.
Yet another inescapable obligation we parents have is to help our teenagers to achieve success in life rather than choose the path of least resistance being unconcerned during the most formative chapters of their lives.
let's remember that we should be our teenagers' best asset.
should we parents fail doing our job, we send them a very
damaging message: "it is just fine if you fail doing yours."