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Global Competencies for High School Graduates, with Abby Falik, Global Citizen Year

Global Competencies for High School Graduates, with Abby Falik, Global Citizen Year

FromSocial Entrepreneur


Global Competencies for High School Graduates, with Abby Falik, Global Citizen Year

FromSocial Entrepreneur

ratings:
Length:
24 minutes
Released:
Nov 27, 2017
Format:
Podcast episode

Description

Global Citizen Year is a program that offers a year of travel, discovery, and growth for high school graduates. What does it take to succeed in a work world that is volatile, uncertain, complex and ambiguous? How does a young person succeed as a citizen of an integrated global economy? While traditional, fundamental skills are still important, so are empathy, ease with ambiguity, resilience, grit, and global mindset. But how many high school graduates possess these skills? Abby Falik describes her high school self as an “excellent sheep.” She remembers graduating from high school exhausted. “I had gotten into Stanford, which was very exciting, but I wasn’t super motivated to go,” she explains. Abby looked for an opportunity for a year of service, similar to the Peace Corps, but she found none available to high school graduates. Abby went on to college, but by her second year of college, Abby found that she needed a break. She took a year off. She lived and worked in Latin America. “Everything I have done since has been a response to how transformative that year was.” Abby says she returned to college with confidence and a new sense of purpose. Upon graduation, Abby spent the next ten years apprenticing at various organizations, a period that she describes as a learning process. Eventually she ended up at Harvard Business School, which helped her solidify her plan for Global Citizen Year. The defining moment for Abby and her dream was a talk she gave at PopTech in 2008. “I recognized at some deeper level that this was the time. I had been cooking this up, incubating the idea since I was 18 in some form or another.” However, she says she was still unprepared for what she was about to do. “I had just graduated from business school. I had a business plan but no clue. No money. No team. No idea what to do next.” It was the response to that talk that convinced her she was on the right path. Abby describes being overwhelmed by the reception as it seemed her idea had resonated with many, many people. “I could never have imagined how right this idea would be and how timely.” Abby says she was confident that they would have up to 10,000 students participating within two years but was surprised when that did not happen. One of the major challenges has been to change the mindset of parents and students, she says to me.  “We are up against so much cultural inertia that says this is how we have always done it. So, the primary challenge that we have faced in growing as quickly as my ambitious, outlandish goals had suggested, is coming up against that fear.” She says it is a fear that young people and parents have that the child will fall behind or damage their place in the world. “High school has become a high-stakes game to get into college.” The toll that the pressure of high school takes on students can be seen in the statistics, according to Abby. In a comprehensive study, the National Student Clearinghouse Research Center found about one-third of college students drop out after one term. There is a question of how ready students are to enter the workforce. “There was a recent Gallup poll that said that 96% of college presidents think their graduates are ready for the work force. Eleven percent of employers agree.” Abby says she feels students need to develop a more global view before they head to college. “Kids are being taught in a way that encourages them to follow a checklist and discourages risk-taking,” she explains. “Kids are not learning how to learn. They are moving along this conveyor belt that frankly will lead many of them to the edge of a cliff.” Young people need to learn to be resourceful, gritty and resilient, she says, which is something her program teaches. The program is more than a gap year, which implies aimless wandering around the globe. Instead, the time is spent doing intentional, community work. Following a rigorous admission policy, students undergo leadership training. The core part of the program has the stu
Released:
Nov 27, 2017
Format:
Podcast episode

Titles in the series (100)

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