Every parent faces this choice: to send their child to English and robotics courses or to talk to them about goodness and conscience? To bet on grades or on the ability to make friends? This is a false dichotomy. In fact, morality and education do not exclude each other, but priorities still need to be set.
Great education is a ticket to the future. Good grades open doors to prestigious universities, provide scholarships, foster diligence and discipline. The child learns to set goals and achieve them. They get accustomed to intellectual labor. However, there is a flip side. A "straight-A student" with the "straight-A student" syndrome often fears mistakes, cannot accept defeat, and envies those more successful. Without a moral backbone, knowledge becomes a tool for manipulation.
Morality is a system of filters: what is good, what is bad, where is truth, where is lie. A child who has internalized principles of honesty, empathy, and mutual assistance from a young age grows up to be a person who is trusted. Such a child may not be a gold medalist, but they will not betray or deceive for their own benefit.
A moral person knows how to take responsibility for their actions. In the long run, it is this quality that makes leaders.
If you bet only on education, you can raise a cold, egoistic "wonder" who will look down on a cleaner and boast about their diploma. If you bet only on morality but ignore knowledge, the child will not be able to realize their good intentions — they will lack qualifications.
The most dangerous scenario: parents who scold for a four but do not notice that the child has pushed a button under their neighbor. And vice versa, those who are delighted with "kindness" but the schoolchild skips classes.
Do not oppose one to the other. Learning poetry is a memory exercise, but on the example of poems about friendship. Solving math problems is logic, but on moral content problems (how many apples need to be given out so that everyone has an equal share). Praise not only for a five but also for honesty. The moral foundation is laid not in special lessons, but by the examples of parents: how you react to a beggar, how you discuss colleagues.
If you have to choose what is more important, then the moral foundation is the foundation of the house, and education is its walls. Without a foundation, the walls will collapse. And without walls, the house is not fit for living.
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