It is incredible
that in the Sri Lankan family, children are loved and spoilt and then
sacrifices are made to send children to distant prestigious schools, but
parents lack the skills to instill moral and life skills on their children. After
this expensive education, youth are completely lost not knowing how to find a
suitable course for their skill and financial level, as well as a direction in
which to study, without any knowledge of what they would like to do once they
have achieved this goal.
The parents
merely believe that the financial sacrifice is sufficient and that their time
in trying to understand the unique set of problems their offspring face, is not
forthcoming. It was particularly apparent recently when 3000 students went to
the Human Rights Commission in Sri Lanka to protest at the unfair treatment
meted out from the Z score fiasco, which was orchestrated as part of a Facebook
campaign, with hardly a parent in sight to help them. This after an expensive
education, whose results were what the dispute was about.
I am constantly
faced with advising young people in their twenties about the options available
to them, and realize that only if their parents in the formative years of the
kids from say 12 to 18 gave them some direction and interest in some area, they
could then pursue that particular course of study without coming to their mid
20s and look around for anything available not knowing what is possible and practical.
Young people are not practical, as their demands are not congruent with their
abilities. When they are offered jobs in keeping with what they can do, they
are disappointed and upset that a better alternative is not forthcoming.
The parents owe
it to their offspring to understand what is going on in their lives, rather
than say the youth of today are different, they cannot understand their desired
and then give up. The classic case being the Z score fiasco referred to.