Monday, May 29, 2017

I never posted my second op-ed OOPS!

Put the Gap in “Gap Year”
By: Shelbie Martin

When we are in kindergarten we think we have it all figured out. We want to be teachers, doctors, firemen, policeman, astronauts, actors or even fishermen. But, when we are asked that very same question senior year of high school the crickets begin to chirp.

In today’s world, it is becoming the standard to graduate from high school and for students to be prepared to take the next step in their life. They are expected to have their bags packed and to leave their homes to start college the upcoming fall.

High school seniors are being pushed by the staff in their school, their teachers, their activities or athletic directors, their peers, and their families to put in application after application to get that “we are pleased to inform you that your application to blah blah blah university has ben accepted.” These students are then forced to make some of the biggest decisions of their life.

These students are left on their own to decided where to go to school, what to study, and ultimately the rest of their life at the age of 18.

We are asking teenagers and young adults who must raise their hands to ask for permission to go to the bathroom to decide what to do with the rest of their lives when all they care about is the next “promposal” is going to hit.

Why are we encouraging high school seniors to rush off to college when they are not ready? Why are we setting them up for failure?

I believe that in the United States of America we should be encouraging students to take “the gap year” much as they do in Europe.

“Gap year?” “What is a gap year?”

A gap year is a time in which a senior who just graduated from college takes a typical academic year off before attending college. The students are allowed the time that they need to figure out whom they are and what they want to be without the added stress that typically comes along with the education setting.

During the year off from secondary education to post-secondary education students will typically spend time traveling abroad, volunteering with nonprofit groups, picking up a part time job or all three. Ultimately, they are taking a break from the traditional academic track and deciding where to go from there.

I mean come on these students were just in a classroom for 7 hours a day for the past 13+ years.

According to research from the National Association for College Admissions Counseling, taking a gap year ultimately helps a student have success in college. The gap year allows a student to be more focused, mature, and motived for their undergraduate experience.
Taking a gap year has many added benefits for students. In a study conducted by the American Gap Association, there were many benefits student stated that had from taking the gap year.

These benefits were academic benefits such as learning to work in groups, solving issues with academic burn out, re-igniting a sense of curiosity for learning, gaining the mindset to go to college with a purpose, gaining practical field experience and so much more. 

The students who took a gap year also saw many personal benefits. These benefits were things like cross-cultural understanding, creative problem solving, evaluating person values, creating own version of success and so much more.

One of the main benefits of the gap year that was common among most of these student was saving money to pay for their college career as well as taking the time that they needed to deiced what to major in.

Taking a gap year has been on the rise in the United Stated with even iconic students in the media such as Malia Obama ready to take advantage of the gap year.


We should be pushing our high school seniors to take advantage of the gap year. We should be encouraging them early on to take the year off of academic. We should do this so when asked what they want to be when they grow up the crickets wont chirp, but rather passion will fill the room.

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