I'm now 63 years old and enjoyed a very long and successful career first in journalism and now in advertising. I have a bachelors degree and graduated cum laude.

Looking back on my years in school, the most useful thing I studied in high school was personal typing. I've been tested at around 110 words per minute.

In college the most important thing I learned was simply this: you can't be late for the 6-o'clock news. That phrase "you can't be late for the 6 o'clock news" was a truly important life lesson. It means, first of all, you can't be late. As my professor Stan Alten at Syracuse University told us, you can't come on TV at 6-PM and say "we're not ready yet... we'll start the news in two minutes." And that's the way it is with life -- you can't set your own time schedule because the rest of the world has a time schedule too.

And that brings me to the point of this post.

Linda has a 15-year old son who goes to a top-rated school here in Ventura that doesn't have a structured class schedule. While I had to be in classes at 8-AM or 1-PM or 10:30-AM, he doesn't. He gets assignments for the week or for the semester, does the work at home on his schedule, and shows up at school several times a week for tests. Test times are open -- for example today he can show up anytime between 10am and 2pm to take a test that will last about 15 minutes.

He is doing well and getting good grades. He is even taking some college level classes at the local community college. That's pretty impressive for a 15-year old.

But except for the college class which does have a set time, there is nothing "set" for high school.

I think that's going to create a problem in the future.

I learned you can't be late for the 6-o'clock news, but without a set time schedule in high school, when will he learn that he has to be on the job at 9-AM or that the deposit must be in the bank by 2-PM, or that he can't sleep till noon?

When I was in school I remember one of my teachers telling me that the most important thing we were learning was not about the French revolution, or tangents and square roots -- but how to grow and mature and function in society.

How does a 15-year old learn to grow and mature and function in society when there is no classroom with other students to interact with and no structure for being in classes and for paying attention to teachers who are writing on chalkboards or blackboards or white boards?

Sure these kids in this high school might excel in their studies, and this school might continue to pump out scholars who achieve great scores on standardized tests, but what kind of functioning adults will be developed from an unstructured school life?