試す 金 - 無料
The Difference A Gap-Year Makes
The Morning Standard
|September 09, 2025
What does it truly mean to educate a young person? Is it simply about filling their heads with formulas, dates, and grammar rules, or something more profound and lasting?
Is education supposed to only prepare students to pass exams and get jobs, or should it also shape them into thoughtful, independent, and self-aware human beings who can navigate life with confidence? Denmark appears to have answered these questions in a manner few other countries have dared to attempt. Its fascinating efterskole system offers 15-year-olds a precious gift: an entire year spent not chasing grades or test scores, but exploring who they are, what they enjoy, and how to live well with others. This isn't a dream for nearly one in three Danish teens—it's a reality.
For that year, these young people live at a boarding school. They cook their meals, clean their rooms, share chores, and learn to manage their daily lives. Sure, they still study core school subjects like math and languages, but the real focus is personal growth. Music, drama, art, sports, or technology become pathways of self-expression. There are no formal exams; no cramming for tests. Instead, they learn something most school systems forget to teach: how to be human. And the results are striking.
Research shows Danish students attending efterskole are more likely to finish high school. But more than that, they emerge from the experience as confident, adaptable, and emotionally mature young adults. They are better equipped not only to study but also to live. They know how to share space with others, handle conflicts, and organize themselves; most importantly, they have a better understanding of who they are.
このストーリーは、The Morning Standard の September 09, 2025 版からのものです。
Magzter GOLD を購読すると、厳選された何千ものプレミアム記事や、10,000 以上の雑誌や新聞にアクセスできます。
すでに購読者ですか? サインイン
The Morning Standard からのその他のストーリー
The Morning Standard
For the Sake of Truth
Filmmaker Madhur Bhandarkar talks about his upcoming film, The Wives, and his \"no camp\" policy in Bollywood
2 mins
January 11, 2026
The Morning Standard
The Heartbreak Manifesto
It is ironic that the latest book, Heartbreak Unfiltered, by India's first Mills & Boon author, Milan Vohra, is about love... followed by loss and heartbreak.
2 mins
January 11, 2026
The Morning Standard
The Quiet Power of Surrender
Let the new year bring devotion, humility, and understanding.
2 mins
January 11, 2026
The Morning Standard
More than a Vendetta
Panji Tengorak is not a straightforward revenge drama. While it retains the simmers beneath the surface.
1 mins
January 11, 2026
The Morning Standard
The Right State of Mind for Manifestation
January is that time of the year, when many insist on cloaking everything with a patina of putrid positivity.
2 mins
January 11, 2026
The Morning Standard
The Little, Nasty Bump on Your Feet
Do you ever look down at your feet and think \"What is that weird bump and what is it doing there?\"
2 mins
January 11, 2026
The Morning Standard
The Making of a Young Carnatic Mind
At just 18, vocalist Rahul Vellal is singing with the poise of a veteran- and thinking about music with the curiosity of an engineer
3 mins
January 11, 2026
The Morning Standard
A Busy Person's Guide for Personal Discipline
French novelist Gustave Flaubert once said, \"Be regular and orderly in your life, so that you may be violent and original in your work.\"
2 mins
January 11, 2026
The Morning Standard
KARNATAKA'S STANDALONE HATE SPEECH BILL FACES HEADWINDS
KARNATAKA'S joint legislature in December passed the country's first standalone hate speech legislation that is decidedly more stringent than provisions of an omnibus Central law.
6 mins
January 11, 2026
The Morning Standard
A Sobering Effect
How a zero-proof moment is reshaping youth drinking, rituals and brands
9 mins
January 11, 2026
Listen
Translate
Change font size
