WHAT IS STRAND DISCRIMINATION?
WHAT IS STRAND DISCRIMINATION?
It is a serious challenge because it endangers the batch's unity. It also encourages people to be violent and distrustful of one another.
Today's schools have introduced the K-12 model, which adds two years to our educational careers, including Senior High School. Senior High School is a two-year program of specialized upper secondary education in which students can specialize based on their aptitude, interests, and school competence. The substance of a student's subjects in Grades 11 and 12 will be determined by the vocational path they choose. Academic, Technical-Vocational-Livelihood, and Sports and Arts are the three tracks available to students in Senior High School. Accountancy, Business, and Management (ABM), Science, Technology, Engineering, and Mathematics (STEM), and Humanities and Social Sciences (HUMSS) are the three strands that make up the Academic track (HUMSS). Strand discrimination occurs when students are treated unfairly according to their strand.
Depression, mental confusion, sense of division, inferiority, feeling out of place, sadness, and, in some cases, suicide are some of the impacts of discrimination.
According to research, 90% of people believe their strand is discriminated against.
It's ridiculous and a waste of time to make other students fear they won't achieve anything in life because of the pathway they choose. Why? Everyone has different ambitions, and neither of us has the authority to dictate which strand he or she pursues.
Based on Martin Luther King’s Speech entitled “What is your life’s blueprint?” is a motivational speech for everyone where we don’t have to follow what others want us to be, follow yours as long as we do it happily and with a contented feeling.
PLEASE STOP STRAND DISCRIMINATION. WE ARE ALL EQUAL. Because we all want to graduate and have a certain objective in mind for the future, such as our ideal job, which for me is to be an interior designer. It's not about the strand; it's about how you study diligently to prove to everyone that our country can make significant progress.