The Struggle All Seniors Face
As the summer before senior year comes to an end, many seniors began to be affected by a disease called Senioritis as they return to school. *Senioritis occurs at different times for different students, but at some point, all seniors feel the need to be done with high school.* Many seniors will struggle to get through their last year of high school, but they need to realize how important it is to finish strong. The poor decisions they make can negatively impact seniors in many ways, both short and long term. Senioritis is “an ebbing of motivation and effort by school seniors as evidenced by tardiness, absences, and lower grades”. Many seniors experience this as they struggle through their last semester of high school. Parents struggle, as they find themselves in constant conversation with their child on why they need to continue to push to the end. They are ready to get out in the real world and meet new people, have more freedom, and move away from home but before any of this can happen they must finish their senior year of high school. They are focused on graduation and the future that lies ahead of them. While it’s easy to understand why seniors get senioritis, they should be more cautious of the consequences.
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They are becoming adults and want to experience the adult world. Many seniors are more focused on their social life, friends, and the parties they are planning for the weekends. Although there are many causes, seniors should be aware of the consequences. Many seniors feel the need to skip school, not complete homework, and quit studying for important tests. Education is a must to be successful in your adult life and it is very important that your high school transcripts support higher education. Often it is not until seniors begin to apply for college do they learn the importance of their high school
Walking into Walnut Hills High School right now would have anyone thinking the just walked into the middle of a tornado. Everyone you look there are students running in and out of doors, in and out of cars, and most certainly either turning in missing assignments or retaking tests. There is only one way for you to explain all this ciaos, Senior Year, the year that all teens await with so much excitement and ambition and the year that every single hour long study dates pays off. For the class of 2021 this isn’t just their final year at Walnut Hills this is the year that friends separate and head off to their different university to follow their dreams.
The average age of high school graduates is 18 which constitutes them as adults. Many students believe they can survive on their own right out of high school because they are legally considered
The idea of having to go to school every day for at least twelve years conjures a lot of different emotions – some may be excited about the idea of learning new things and exploring their minds, while others may be exasperated just by imagining the curriculum they must complete during this time span. The term “senioritis” is derived from the feeling of irritability during a student’s last year of high school; this can cause a nosedive in GPA, lack of effort in assignments, and leaves the student with little to no determination to finish the school year. With this said, as years pass through a student’s academic journey, their passion, if there ever was any to begin with, is likely to dwindle down by the time
Many high school students are unsure or do not want to attend a four year college. These students feel pressured into doing something they do not want to do because the expectations of high school students is to set off for college to become successful in life. Adults paint the picture that without college education young adults will be failures. Adults believe college will make you superior and an automatic success. But that is an incorrect statement. A hand full of students who attend college eventually drop out for many reasons. Some students do not like the campus they are on because it is too distant from home. Maybe they do not like the community or professors that are present at the university. They become homesick
Senioritis is defined by the “sickness” of high school seniors. It has the biggest impact on students during the second semester of senior year and it is characterized by the lack of motivation to stay engaged. Many of the soon-to-be graduates tend to slack off by the end of the school year. Students who are experiencing senioritis do not have the energy to even get up in the morning, so they surely do not have the enthusiasm to go to school and be told what to do for eight hours straight. That is the main reason why students at this time of the year tend to skip more and more classes. This results in a drop of their GPA, it enervates their overall academic record, and may interfere with the admission to a chosen college or university. The College Board website claims that “every year, colleges rescind offers of admission, put students on academic probation or alter financial aid packages as a result of ‘senioritis’.”
Walter Kirn successfully unearths some of the worst aspects of senior year. However, these reasonings are not sound enough to condone the discontinuation of it. Any issues found are the fault of the student or the school administration, not the grade level itself. Senior year is worth holding on to for both the persistence of learning and for solidifying relationships. Kirn mentions with pleasure his choice to leave high school early. Nonetheless the four year high school experience should not be demoralized by those who wish to value it for the irreplaceable opportunity it is.
“In a study entitled “The Lost Opportunity of Senior Year: Finding a Better Way," released in 2001, the commission found that for many students, that year "becomes party-time rather than a time to prepare for one of their most important life transitions. ... Many students reported 'ditching ' senior classes because the atmosphere encouraged them to consider senior year a farewell tour of adolescence and school." The commission also suggested that senioritis may, in fact, be most pervasive among the "best and the
As students near the end of the academic year, they are constantly faced with some of the same choices the generations before them have been presented with too. The biggest question a lot of seniors in high school have to answer is if they are going to be attending college or not. There are a lot of legitimate reasons as to why a person might not attend a college, but I personally feel like everybody should have a higher education if they have the opportunity to do so. One of the biggest reasons that people do not have the opportunity to pursue higher levels of school is the fact that they do not have enough money to pay for it. With the staggering amount of debt, the majority of students incur in college, it is becoming a
The Millennial Generation was brought up in a different time than the generation before them. WIth increased tragedy and the ability to see it as it is happening, parents have risen to the occasion and kept their children as sheltered as possible. In the past when children went on to achieve education beyond high school, parents considered that a step into becoming an adult. Millennial parents play taxi to any all extra curricular activities to
Senioritis is in fact real and slowly making life harder for the high school seniors. As a senior in high school, I know first hand the consequences on having senioritis. I have been through senioritis for a moment as I would be tardy for my first hour almost constantly.
Preparing for college starts well before senior year in high school. The primary purpose of a high school is to get students to go to college. The purpose of going to college is to gain work-related skills and knowledge on the career path a student takes which will eventually be their future. Also, students are investing a lot of money to attend colleges, so they count on high school to prepare them for what they are going to expect in college.
Senior year. The year known for its “lasts” of everything and the start of one 's adulthood. It’s also a busy part of life- college applications, college acceptance, graduation, and even get to know what the terminal disease “senioritis” feels like. Senior year is the last year that I will get the chance to cheer on the football team every Friday night, running track every Thursday, as well as seeing my favorite teachers on a day to day basis. This year is my year, the year that is going to change everything that I have ever known. Senior year is the year that will impact myself, my friends, my family, as well as everyone that surrounds me. It will be the year of change.
Being a senior to me means more that just one thing. It means my last ten football games, senior project and, graduating. It seems like yesterday that I was in eighth grade watching my brother play football on the same field I am now. Back then being a senior in high school seemed so far away that I never took the time to think about it or anything. Now that it’s here I wonder where the time went.
As freshman, we came home from school with the mentality that we were no longer children, but rather had entered into a new stage of life. Everything seemed different and new; we weren’t the big kids on campus anymore. We no longer were the persons being looked up to, but rather were the persons looking up to an entire school of older students. We remember joining our firsts clubs, going to dances, and having Orientation days.
Having spent twelve years of my school life in just one small red brick building, the years tend to fade into each other. But the year I remember most clearly and significantly is my senior year of high school, where I finally began to appreciate what this institution offered to any student who stopped to look. Before, school had been a chore, many times I simply did not feel motivated toward a subject enough to do the homework well, and seeing the same familiar faces around ever since I was 5 years old grew very tiring soon enough. But I began to see things from a different angle once I became a senior.