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Nov. 5th, 2009 11:11 pm![[personal profile]](https://www.dreamwidth.org/img/silk/identity/user.png)
From the NurtureShock article Why Teenagers Are Growing Up So Slowly Today:
Yeah, that sounds about right.
Here’s a Twilight Zone-type premise for you. What if surgeons never got to work on humans, they were instead just endlessly in training, cutting up cadavers? What if the same went for all adults – we only got to practice at simulated versions of our jobs? Lawyers only got to argue mock cases, for years and years. Plumbers only got to fix fake leaks in classrooms. Teachers only got to teach to videocameras, endlessly rehearsing for some far off future. Book writers like me never saw our work put out to the public – our novels sat in drawers. Scientists never got to do original experiments; they only got to recreate scientific experiments of yesteryear. And so on.
Rather quickly, all meaning would vanish from our work. Even if we enjoyed the activity of our job, intrinsically, it would rapidly lose depth and relevance. It’d lose purpose. We’d become bored, lethargic, and disengaged.
In other words, we’d turn into teenagers.
Yeah, that sounds about right.
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Date: 2009-11-06 06:07 pm (UTC)I'd be happier if we had not only a gap year but a gap five. You could get out of high school with your hormones raging and instead of spending that time partying punctured by cramming sessions and all-night essay binges, you'd work as a journeyman.
This would be modern apprenticeship. If you're interested in the sciences, you'd work at a lab or a hospital. If you're into engineering, you'd schlep with surveyors. If you want to write, you'd work at... oh wait, we don't have newspapers anymore. Maybe you'd work at a firm as a technical writer or web author.
We did something like this when I was in high school and it really made a difference for me. Unfortunately it was too short -- one summer right before senior year. I learned that I didn't like civil engineers but I really liked computers and new tech. If I could have spent the next couple years just working with computers in the real world, I would've saved myself nearly a decade. Instead I had to do it on the sly until I gathered a crazy number of skills but had no paper proof.
What about all of those hormones? Work doesn't involve cramming when you're off the clock. Youth would be able to go out but not incur hundreds of thousands in debt for the privilege. Let's have them live in dorms but not at schools. The dorm life is vital for mature development (you have peers instead of parents, for example).
Summary: After high school move out after high school and live in a dorm with other young adults. Perhaps that move-out age should be 16. Go to work, hang out after work, do some volunteering. It'd still be a little more supervised than normal adult work: the job slots would be transitional and involve orientation, the dorm fees would come from the work, you could transition to a different career if you find one doesn't suit you, et cetera.
If after a couple years you find a real match, then you'd go to college. You'd be a little more mature, you'd've worked out some of your issues and you'd know exactly whey you're in school.
This is just a loose theory and it needs beating up. Thank you for getting me thinking about this.