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Don’t Let Your Teenager Become a School Dropout

Approximately 7,000 high school students drop out every school day. One in four students does not graduate. There are a number of reasons why students drop out of school, such as they feel like their classes are not interesting, they are failing in school, they are using drugs, they don’t feel as smart as their classmates, they don’t feel like they fit in, they have substantial family responsibilities, or their family has low expectations. The decision to drop out of school does not happen overnight; it comes after years of frustration and failure. Students who are at-risk of dropping out show signs of pulling away from school long before they actually drop out – they miss classes, skip school, do not complete homework, get low grades and engage in disruptive behavior.

Consequences

Parents must tell their teens the facts about dropping out of school:

Prevention

The National Dropout Prevention Center and America’s Promise Alliance both indicate that students need support in several areas to be successful:

In addition to helping your teen receive these five areas of support, parents can also help prevent their child from dropping out in the following ways:

  1. Help your teen establish goals. Teens who are excited about their future will work harder to attain it. Whether your child wants to be a doctor or a carpenter, an education is important, so take the time to talk with your child. Explain how things they are learning in school now will help them in the future. Give them some real-world applications of their education. Additionally, understand that setting goals is not an inherent skill, so you need to show a teen how to break down their ultimate goal into smaller goals with deadlines. Help your teen set small, attainable goals that are fun and have specific measures. Encourage them to celebrate each milestone achieved.
  2. Teach your child that failure is something that can happen to you, but not something you are. Everyone fails at something they try, and if they choose to look at it as a lesson learned, they will have much more success in the future. Establish an attitude of “trying” in your family. Remind your teen that Thomas Edison had to try over 10,000 experiments to find the perfect filament for the incandescent light bulb.
  3. Regular attendance is one of the most important factors in school success, so make sure your teen is there.
  4. Get involved with your child’s school. Actions really do speak louder than words, so when your teen sees you spending time in their school, they get the message that school is important.
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