The Culture of Childhood; Dropping Enrollment in Public Schools Around the Country

The Culture of Childhood; Dropping Enrollment in Public Schools Around the Country

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The Culture of Childhood

Many people hold that adults play a significant role in raising, socializing, and educating children. That is such a misguided idea, and, in any case, if one does not understand, children learn most things from their fellow children. Usually, parents’ roles in children’s lives are far-fetched and exaggerated and only based on beliefs and theories on how children develop. It is quite an obvious truth that children require adults in their lives for things like food, shelter, security, and to encourage them. Adults usually act as children’s role models though it is not apparent that adults always act according to moral principles. However, parents, or instead, adults do not necessarily raise, educate, or even show children how to socialize; instead, they do that independently. Children often set their character by merely observing and learning from other children. It is so much about their peers than adults.

Biologically, children are made to grow up in a childhood culture. Contemplate a child’s taste in certain hobbies, music, clothes, manner of speech, among others. People could often associate that with adults or even the parents; however, everything has to do with other children’s likes or what they are doing. Children biologically learn from one another to fit in that particular environment, learn what the other does, and know what they know. There are some misguided attempts to discredit children from achieving their social childhood life and turning educating jobs over to adults. From a traditional perspective, there two distinctive cultures, childhood and adulthood cultures. They are both somewhat dependent on one another. In socialization, young children socialize with young teenagers to learn and explore, but away from adults. Perhaps it takes a village to raise a child because only a village can offer or instead provide enough kids to form a playgroup.

Children must spend their childhood interacting with other children to learn about different cultures, games, traditions, values, and even different ways of making friends. Children will tend to know new cultures to fit in and integrate with their peers. The only way they can learn is through their peers and not from adults. Based on the natural selection theory, human children tend to evolve a strong inclination towards spending most of their time with other children instead of adults. Children can learn more from their fellow peers than they would with adults. Through interaction with other children, they can learn authentic communication. Have you ever listened to a communication between a child and an adult? Adults tend to be condescending towards children and always ask some dishonest and stupid questions. If it was between children, every conversation is meaningful and is majorly based on the play’s context. Think of questions asked by teachers. They are often based on testing a child instead of sharing ideas or understanding their thoughts. Children learn how to be courageous and independent when they interact with other children.

Dropping Enrollment in Public Schools Around the Country

Amid the Covid-19 pandemic, schools in the United States are struggling to resume regular learning. Over the past few months, over 20 states have recorded a significant drop in enrollment in public schools around the country. As the country is still struggling to fight the Covid-19 crisis, so do the schools are trying to improve their remote learning and adopting some safety measures to facilitate how to minimize the risk of spreading Covid-19. The vast majority of the people are concerned about the children’s safety and unequal access to technology across the country. In particular, Washington’s state recorded a 2.8% enrollment drop, orchestrated by a 14% decrease in kindergarten. Perhaps, families are trying to find the best solutions concerning the safest and most suitable learning environments for their children. District schools are already feeling the heat of massive cuts on their budget, making it hard for them to operate as the funding is done based on the students’ turn-up rate. If that trend persists, there will be adjustments to be made by many districts even as they prepare to enroll large numbers of kindergarten and first-grade classes next year.

The average decrease in kindergarten and pre-K stands at 16%. Educational experts and the vast majority of parents have a dived opinion concerning remote learning virtues on very young children. Pre-K and kindergarten are somewhat play-based learning and would be of less significance if children cannot interact among themselves. Reducing the risk of spreading the virus would mean taking children to private school tuition where parents would be forced to work even harder to afford to pay such a school. The district schools are on the edge of losing money because public schools get funded on a per-pupil basis. In October, all public schools are supposed to give out their official enrollment count so that the states can determine the amount required for the subsequent year. It presents a hardship for district schools as they continue to struggle with the cost of schooling amid the pandemic—some of the expenses involved masks, sanitizers, and hiring additional teachers. The Covid-19 has induced recession in the education budget as massive amounts meant for education have been redirected towards fighting the Coronavirus. The only thing the district schools can hope for is for students to start going back to school in large numbers to make the cost of running the schools relatively easy. The budget pressure seems to be the only push factor towards the school reopening; otherwise, they would not.