With the  approach of Youth Sunday, May 29, the editorial in the Catholic Times  returns to this controversial issue. In a recent survey gauging several  factors affecting youth in China, Japan and Korea, the happiness index  of Korean youth was found to be the lowest. Blame was given to the  educational system's procedures for preparing students for the entrance  exams to college, in effect taking away the dreams and hopes of many of  our less competent young people.
The editorial  asks what has the  Korean Church done to return the  dreams and hope to  the young. Also, in the  OECD list of countries, Korea is near the  bottom when rating the happiness index of the participating countries.  The first step, according to the editorial, is to have a common  awareness of the problem and to formulate programs for change.
There is a   movement in Korea for alternative schools which have a different  atmosphere and are not geared for college entrance exams.  The editorial  is asking Catholic alternative schools to be an example. They have been  set up to be freer, diverse in their teaching, and directed to the  whole person. There are many ideas on what has to be included, but they  all agree on the education of the whole person. 
There are   attempts to  change the thinking that getting into a prestigious school  or getting  a good job should be the motivation for education.  The alternative schools are the means of giving dreams and hope to our  young people, and for the most part are meant for young people who find  the present educational system unattractive and forbidding. 
The editorial  quotes from Pope Benedict's 2011 message to youth: "Dear young people,  the Church depends on you! She needs your lively faith, your creative  charity and the energy of your hope. Your presence renews, rejuvenates  and gives new energy to the Church." And also from the same message:  "True enough, it is important to have a job and thus to have firm ground  beneath our feet, yet the years of our youth are also a time when we  are seeking to get the most out of life. When I think back on that time,  I remember above all that we were not willing to settle for a  conventional middle-class life. We wanted something great, something  new. We wanted to discover life itself, in all its grandeur and beauty."
The editorial  ends with a plea that young people again begin to dream and hope, for  this will also guarantee a bright future for  the Church.
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