KIRO NEWSRADIO OPINION

Angela Poe Russell: The bold policy every school should adopt now

Mar 20, 2024, 7:43 AM | Updated: Mar 27, 2024, 1:52 pm

school students cliques...

Mercer Island High School marching band (Photo courtesy of KIRO 7)

(Photo courtesy of KIRO 7)

It’s a theme in movies that’s so cliché: Teenage students in cliques. The jocks, the drama kids, the band geeks, the nerds and then the dreamy guy or girl.

Last I checked, most kids actually don’t fit into a single box, and the problem with putting them there is it can be hard to climb out of.

What’s most infuriating? The schools themselves and the systems around them perpetuate these silos.

Yes, schools are part of the problem

The good news is schools also have the power to fix it, if they are willing to put aside their own agendas and prioritize students. The solution? Stop forcing kids to choose and specialize.

High school is when this pressure to choose really ramps up. But a kid’s teen years are supposed to be a time of exploration. But the experience for the majority of kids is that they have to find “their thing” and work on “that thing” so they can be the best at “that thing,” so their school can compete and win using “their thing.” As a result, they never get to try anything else.

More KIRO Newsradio opinions: ‘Gee and Ursula’ discuss how Bonney Lake’s mayor search revealed candidates ‘past’

Now look, it’s awesome when kids have their thing — their skill, their school subject, their sport, their hobby they can obsess over. But what if trying something else actually made them better?

There’s a book out on this topic with a ton of research behind it called Range, written by David Epstein. The premise is that keeping a broad range of interests improves performance later in life. He points out the most impactful inventors cross domains rather than deepening their knowledge in a single area.

It made me think about Albert Einstein, a musician himself, who said the greatest scientists are always artists as well. The great painter Leonardo da Vinci contributed to the study of the nervous system. And the man behind the Morse code and the telegraph was also an accomplished artist.

One of the hottest comedians right now, Trevor Noah, talked about this concept in a recent interview.

“I always feel that every discipline, whether it’s art or otherwise, can contribute or touch other disciplines in some shape or form,” Noah said in an interview with Esther Perel. “I don’t think you can talk about comedy without talking about psychology.”

You may be thinking that, with club sports and the rigor of high school, having more than a main interest just isn’t practical or possible. Trust me, I’ve heard it. But as the saying goes, where there’s a will there’s a way.

Schools adopting this practice

My daughter’s high school musical just wrapped and I was struck by the number of athletes who participated. I wanted to understand how this worked. Well, it is the school’s policy to encourage exploration as long as possible. I was told the theater department works with the athletic department to sync up schedules. And the coaches are flexible for important rehearsals and performances and vice versa. It’s adults working together for the benefit of the students. Imagine that.

This isn’t the only school to operate this way, but honestly, every student should have an opportunity to explore a wide range of interests. Think of it like cross-training for life. I totally get at some point in high school a student may need to specialize.

More from Angela Poe Russell: Russell Wilson, Ciara’s Oscar Party photo just what our culture needs

But keep in mind, at least when it comes to sports, only 7% of high school students will play in college. What do we want the others to take away from those years? And how do they want them to show up in life?

Keeping kids in boxes isn’t a strategy that’s going to prepare them for a rapidly changing world. They need adaptability, critical thinking and resilience that develops when they step out of their box and ultimately out of their comfort zone. That’s where true learning begins and isn’t that our job to push them there?

Angela Poe Russell is a longtime Seattle media personality and a fill-in host for KIRO Newsradio.

KIRO Newsradio Opinion

...

MyNorthwest Video

Video: Tucker Carlson Lies About Trump Raid

You can trust Tucker Carlson to spin a story. Did Biden try to ‘assassinate’ Trump when special agents raided Mar-A-Lago? Join Jack Stine and Spike O’Neill as they break this propaganda down, brick by brick. Tune in live to The Jack and Spike Show weekdays from noon to 3pm on KIRO Newsradio 97.3 FM. And […]

6 hours ago

...

MyNorthwest Video

Video: Stadium Food 👍 or 👎

When you go to the Mariners game, what is your go-to for food? And… is it worth the price? Listen to Seattle’s Morning News w/ Dave Ross & Colleen O’Brien Show every weekday at 5am on KIRO Newsradio 97.3 FM Listen to the Gee and Ursula Show every weekday at 9am on KIRO Newsradio 97.3 […]

6 hours ago

...

MyNorthwest Video

Video: Trump Was Mean Tweeting from Courthouse

Just prior to former president Donald Trump’s felony conviction on all 34 criminal counts in his hush money trial, he was making a TikTok with his son Donald Trump Junior, in what appears to be a utility closet. Jack Stine is pretty sure based on this video evidence that the president’s son is a maintenance […]

7 hours ago

public restrooms...

Angela Poe Russell

Angela Poe Russell: It’s time to reimagine public restrooms

It’s the Great Restroom Debate. How do we create public restrooms everyone can feel comfortable using?

2 days ago

...

MyNorthwest Video

Video: Could WA Turn Red? Trump and the Governor Race

Spike O’Neill sees right through Trump’s ’50 State Strategy’ and Jack Stine weighs the odds of Dave Reichert beating Bob Ferguson’s name recognition – especially now that there aren’t three Bob Fergusons – in the race for Washington governor. Polling suggests voters are much more undecided than we expected. Tune in live to The Jack […]

2 days ago

...

MyNorthwest Video

Video: Are Gas Prices Dropping? Not Really

Jack Stine investigates (aka, actually reads) a clickbait headline about gas prices. And Spike O’Neill is ready to buy an EV. Where’s Newt Gingrich when you need him? Tune in live to The Jack and Spike Show weekdays from noon to 3pm on KIRO Newsradio 97.3 FM. And if that timing, or our location in […]

2 days ago

Angela Poe Russell: The bold policy every school should adopt now