Everyone knows that our school system, in general, is not giving our kids the basic reading, writing, ‘rithmatic and science skills needed to be competitive in the high-tech workforce of the upcoming generation (at least, that’s the general assumption, and we won’t argue it here).
But there’s much more to life than those basic subjects, and unless you have an exceptional teacher who is willing to break out of the mold, your child isn’t learning the crucial things he or she needs to learn in life.
Think about your own experience for a moment. When you got out of high school, did you know everything you needed in order to survive in life, let alone succeed? If you were lucky, you knew how to read and had some basic history and math skills, and if you were even luckier, you had good study habits that would serve you well in college.
But were you prepared for life? Most likely not, unless you had parents who did you that favor. In fact, many of us screwed up our early adult lives because we didn’t know those skills — and we’re paying the consequences now.
That’s a part of life, you might say, learning these lessons. But it’s also possible to prepare your child a bit before they go out on their own, and if we can’t get the schools to teach these skills, then let’s do it ourselves.
What follows is a basic curriculum in life that a child should know before reaching adulthood. There will probably be other skills you can add to this list, but at least it’s a starting point.
A note on how to teach these things: These subjects should not be taught by lectures or textbooks. They can only be taught by setting examples, by conversation, by showing, and by allowing the child (or teenager) to do these things on their own (with supervision at first). Once you’ve talked about the skill, showed your child how to do it, and let them do it under supervision a few times, give your child the trust to do it on his own, and to learn from his own mistakes. Check back every now and then to talk about what he’s learned.
Financial
** Saving. Spend less than you earn. It’s such a simple maxim, and yet very few young adults understand it or know how to follow it. Teach your child from a young age to put part of money he receives or earns in the bank. Teach him how to set a savings goal, and save for it, and then purchase whatever it is he was saving for.
** Budgeting. Many of us dread this task as adults, and suffer because of it, because we lack the understanding and skills necessary to make budgeting a breeze. Teach them simple budgeting skills, and what’s involved, and they won’t have problems as an adult. You could wait until teenage years to do something like this — but it’s a good thing because this shows them why basic math is necessary.
** Paying bills. Give them bills to pay and have them pay it on time, online or in the real world. Learn how to write a check, paper and online, and how to make sure that you’re never late with bills again — either pay them immediately or automatically.
** Investing. What is investing and why is it necessary? How do you do it and what are different ways of doing it? How do you research an investment? How does it compound over time? This is a good conversation to have with your teen.
** Frugality. This is something to teach them from an early age. How to shop around to get a good deal, to compare between products of different prices and quality, to make things last and not waste, to cook at home instead of eating out too much, to control impulse buying. When we go out and do a shopping spree, including before Christmas, we are teaching them just the opposite.
** Credit. This is a major problem for many adults. Teach them the responsible use for credit, and how to avoid it when it’s not necessary, and how to avoid getting into too much debt, and how to use a credit card responsibly.
** Retirement. Is it better to work hard and retire or to take mini-retirements throughout life? That’s a personal question, but your child should be aware of the options and the pros and cons of each, and how to do each. Why it’s important to start investing in retirement when you’re young, and how much of a difference that can make through compound interest. How to do it automatically.
** Charity. Why this is an important use of your money, and how to make it a regular habit. This should be not only a financial issue, but a social one. Show them how to volunteer their time and effort as well.
Thinking
** Critical thinking. One of the most important skills not taught in school. These days, we are taught to be robots, to listen to the teacher and not to question, to accept what we are told and not to think, to be good employees and to shut up. If you’re an employer, you might want your employees to be like this, and if you’re a politician, you might want your citizens to be like this. But is that how you want your child to be? An unquestioning, naive, ignorant citizen/employee/student? If so, carry on. If not, just start introducing the habit of questioning why? And the skill of find out the answer. And how to question authority — there is no one right answer. Conversation is a good way to accomplish this skill.
** Reading. Sure, we’re taught to read. But schools most often make this boring. Show your child the wonderful imaginative worlds there are out there. And show them how to find out about stuff in the world through the Internet, and how to evaluate what they read for credibility, logic, factualness.
Success
** Positive thinking. While critical thinking is an important skill, it’s also important to have a positive outlook on life. Sure, things may be screwed up, but they can be changed for the better. Find solutions instead of complaints. And most of all, learn to believe in yourself, and to block out negative self-thinking.
** Motivation. Learn that discipline isn’t the key to achieving a goal, but motivation. How to motivate yourself, different strategies, and how great it feels to achieve a goal. Start them with small, easily achievable goals, and let them develop this skill.
** Procrastination. It’s a problem we all deal with as adults (and even as kids). Now, I believe that there should be a time for goofing off, being lazy, and having fun. But when there’s something to do that we really need to do, how do we get ourselves to do it? Learn the reasons behind procrastination, and how to address them. How to beat procrastination.
** Passion. One of the most important ways to be successful is to find something you’re passionate about, and do that for a living. Your child won’t know the answer at a young age, but you should show her how to find her passion and how to pursue it, and why that’s important.
Social
** Anti-competition. As kids, we’re taught how to be competitive. In the adult world, that’s how we behave. And that results in back-stabbing, undercutting, feelings of resentment, and other life-affirming things like that. Instead, teach your child how there is room for many people to be successful, and how you’re more likely to be successful if you help others to be successful, and how they’ll help you in return. Learn that making friends and allies is better than making enemies, and how to do that. Learn cooperation and teamwork before competition.
** Compassion. Not taught in the schools at all. In fact, instead of teaching children how to empathize with others and try to ease their suffering, our schools often teach children to increase the suffering of others. Learn to put yourself in the shoes of others, to try to understand them, and to help them end their suffering.
** Love. Compassion’s twin brother, love differs only in that instead of wanting to ease the suffering of others, you want their happiness. Both are crucial.
** Listening. Are our children taught how to listen in school? Or how to talk at someone. Perhaps that’s why many adults don’t have this critical skill. Learn how to truly listen to someone, to understand what they’re saying, to empathize.
** Conversation. Goes hand-in-hand with listening, but the art of conversation is something that isn’t taught in school. In fact, kids are taught that conversation is bad in most cases. But in most cases, a conversation is what is needed, not a lecture. This is an extremely important social skill that should start in the home. Learn to converse with your child instead of talk at him.
Practical
** Auto. Why cars are needed (no, not to look cool), how to buy a practical car, how to take care of it. How the engine works, what might break down, and how it’s fixed. Should be taught to both boys and girls (that should be obvious, but I had to say it).
** Household. How to fix things around the house and keep things maintained. Plumbing, electricity, heating and cooling, painting, roofing, lawn, all that good stuff. The tools and skills necessary to do just the basic maintenance and repairs. And how to know when to call a professional.
** Cleaning. Too many adults grow up without knowing how to do laundry, to clean a house properly, to keep the house clean and uncluttered, to have a weekly and monthly cleaning routine. Teach your child all these things instead of just telling her what to do.
** Organization. How to keep paperwork organized, how to keep things in their place, to to keep a to-do list, how to set routines, how to focus on the important tasks.
Happiness
** Be present. For some reason, this extremely important skill is never taught to us when we’re kids. In truth, the younger we are, the more natural this skill is. As we get older, we start thinking about the future and the past, and the present seems to slip away from us. Some skills for living in the present would go a long way.
** Enjoy life. Kids don’t have much of a problem with this, but some awareness of its importance and how to do it, even as an adult, would be helpful. Set a good example of this, and your kids will follow.
** Find purpose. Whether this is a higher religious purpose, or the purpose of making your family happy, or the purpose of finding your calling, having a purpose in life is extremely important. Teach your children the importance of this and show how to do it yourself.
** Develop intimate relationships. The best way to teach this is to develop an intimate relationship with your child, and model it with your spouse or other significant other (within appropriateness). Teach them the skills for developing these types of relationships, talk about the importance of it, and how to get through the bumpy parts as well. There are bad times in every relationship, but with the right skills of communication, empathy and compromise, they can get through them.
Leo Babauta is the founder of the popular Zen Habits Blog. This post is shared here with permission.
Love this!!! We started a weekly tradition in our home 14 years ago to teach many of these skills to our four kids. At the time they were aged 4-13. They are now aged 17-26. We think it was the single best teaching/discipline thing we did with them. Learn more about it at TheTeamClean.com or email me carol@TheTeamClean.com
We learn in school as well as outside and at home . It is life which is teaching us . It may not be explicitly given as a subject but how our teachers behave , how we behave , how the environment is , everything counts . Many of the above things come via our interaction with the environment .
My husband and I have often talked about the lack of personal financial information being taught - seems like those could be pulled together into a curriculum for a high-school math class. Toss in 'organization' from the practical category too.
2 replies: Barbara, Joe | Post Your Reply
This is not about schools. This is not about schoolteachers per se. This is about life and learning and all people in a person's life and a person's relationship to the all. It helps to understand this.
"Critical Thinking" - I'm very glad this was put on this list, and feel pretty strongly that it should be taught in school. But it can't, what politician wants a society questioning their authority?
1 reply: Karen | Post Your Reply
I love the tip about critical thinking, but as an employer of a staff of 16, I don't like the insinuation that employers want employees who just accept what they are told. We want critical thinkers, and I think other good employers do, too! Teach your kids to think critically (plus the other stuff on this list), and then send them my way when they enter the workforce! :-)
I love this list and agree with its sentiment whole-heartedly. As a food educator I would love to see where the skill of preparing healthy meals for oneself and their family fits in! Being able to nourish our bodies with healthy food is at the root of achieving these other knowledge areas. Thank you for this important conversation!
My girlfriend and I are both involved in education. I have been saying this since day 1! Especially on the finance side. Money is unfortunately how we survive - yet some students learn nothing about it before being sent out into the real world? I think the entire education system needs to be morphed into something that teaches children how to LIVE - not memorize unrelated facts!
I love the lesson on being present - future oriented thinking destroyed a good junk of my life, living for today is essential.
Best,
TJ
How-toBeHappy.com
I believe Financial is the largest category above because we don't have training on the core of society’s monetary system and specifically the fractional reserve system that is the reason that we need to "teach" things like Motivation, Passion, Listening, Find Purpose. Fractional reserve requires an ever expanding economy, greater consumption and perpetuates the belief that individualism is the highest value in society which is, obviously, an oxymoron.
Congressman Kucinich’s Historic Monetary Reform Bill HR 2990
September 21, 2011: Congressman Dennis Kucinich introduced an
employment bill reforming our money system: The NEED Act proposes a
historic money reform, containing all the monetary provisions of the
American Monetary Act including ending “fractional reserve” banking.
As a teacher, I am insulted by almost everything you have said. First you state that kids are not learning the "school subjects", then follow with all the other areas that are not being taught. Maybe you need to sit in a few classrooms a few days for a reality check! Very disappointed in the slant of this article!!
As a teacher I was also offended by the introduction of this article, which seemed to insinuate that schools are failing to teach our kids 'the basics' and that very few teachers make the effort to teach about life. Teachers have an incredibly important role in our children's lives, but that role has been stretched and blurred to include all manner of things that were once the domain of parents. Most are happy to -even strive to- incorporate 'life' lessons into an already busy curriculum, and do it well. For learning experiences to be truly meaningful and lasting, however, they really should be supported both at home and at school. In my experience, they often are.
Many of the 'skills' listed here are indeed valuable, but could have been framed in a much more positive way.
Children only permanently retain 1% of what they "learn" in school. School is a prison sentence with marginal benefits. See John Taylor Gatto's books.
Many of the things described as skill are not skill at all. They are Human Values which are to be understood from roots of Human Co-existance and evolving Human Consciousness. The title is misleading. Skill, as age advances, can not function with the same vigour and hence temporary, whereas Human values does not depend upon the age and are more permenant. The article is mixed of Human Values and the skill , not only on skill. Any way it is a good article and worth reading.
I taught for 20 years and each year my goal was to develop a classroom community in which children experienced these values of compassion, cooperation and self-motivation. My fellow teachers and I also tried to teach the joy of reading as much as how to read and to question things. Most educational leaders today also stress the value of questioning and critical thinking. Itherefore, am suprised at the blanket statements made in this article about the state of education today. I am also surprised that anyone who states a different opinion should be characterized as defensive.
I agree with Socially Conscious Teacher. I resent the blanket statements. I have worked in schools for 20 years and we always strive to teach listening, compassion, critical thinking and try to instill a love for different kinds of reading materials.
Adults rarely have to introduce the concept of asking why. Instead we need to stop quenching it!
It's interesting that teachers are getting defensive. The title is 27 Non-School Skills Children Need. I assumed this was geared toward parents.
i'd just like to say here that growing up, my parents were great role models for me and that i have borrowed traits from both of them.. :-)
The author should read the book The Antidote: Happiness for People Who Can't Stand Positive Thinking by Oliver Burkeman. Most of this article is well-advised, and the premise is golden. But putting pressure on young people to always have a positive attitude, set goals, etc. does not necessarily lead to happiness, as this book so clearly points out. Perhaps it's more important to notice each moment, live it to the best of our abilities and know that things will not always work out as we want them to.
The part under Cleaning should not be stereotyped to assume that only girls are taught how to clean. Boys and girls should be taught these responsibilities equally.
Loved the article :) ...Thanks for sharing it!!!!!!
My school's teachers DO teach and model a lot of the above virtues. We incorporate many ethical and moral building skills and behaviors into daily lessons. Teachers here WANT to cultivate a civic- minded and intelligent American culture. We encourage the rest of our small community to partake in nurturing our kids..hopefully generous giving will reap well-rounded citizens!
I agree...good teachers will also teach these things. Schools whose mission is preparing children for life, like the Waldorf schools, can be a great support for parents with this intention. thanks.
I agree with everything said here BUT ONE! I am an elementary school teacher and I see these things being taught by many qualified and socially conscious teachers including myself. Please don't make blanket statements about schools. You create ignorance, biase and put those that are trying to teach better on the defense. Great information excluding your comments about schools.
I agree with each of these EXCEPT "Anti-competition". It is an assumption here that "competition" is a "bad" thing... Absolutely NOT SO. Yes, the world can be a place of back-stabbing, etc. but that is not a RESULT of "competition", but instead the mind-set instilled in those who are not taught competition and good sportsmanship. This is a COMPETITIVE world. If you do not teach a child to be competitive and strive for his/her best, you may be in jeapardy of developing a mediocre child who does not strive to be THE BEST; even in "comparison" to those around him/her.
Great article! I really hope that people will take note of that. I noticed that many parents are too busy or lazy to spend time and teach their kids these important things. I learned all of that in my childhood and teenage years and I think, that is why I am so successful in my early adulthood life (while many of my friends are complaining about their debt and can't get their lives together..)
On Feb 20, 2014 KinderSuccess wrote:
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