Beneficial

Having a job during high school is no different than any other extracurricular activity many students choose to partake in. While common student extracurricular activities, like sports, help with responsibility, jobs provide help with these aspects of life plus more.

Photo by Andrew Gotshall
Taya Llapitan waits tables during her shift at a local restaurant.

The greatest benefit of having a job as a high school student is the aspect of responsibility. Having and maintaining a job along with regular coursework as a student is one of the most efficient and effective ways one can learn leadership skills as a youth; few other situations or experiences can instill such a prominent sense of responsibility in someone. With a job, students not only have to focus and develop their maturity in order to succeed with keeping up with homework, attending school, maintaining good grades as well as the responsibility of showing up on time for work, being productive, and not letting down employers or fellow employees.

The most obvious and desirable benefit of working as a student is the paycheck. Everybody could use extra money. With more money, students are given the ability to do myriad things: buy personal goods, chip in on family bills, save for college, and chip in on bills.

The most common job available to and taken by high school students are those working in retail or food, such as being cashiers for fast food places or retail stores. While customer service is widely agreed upon as grueling and tedious work, it’s perhaps the most beneficial for personal growth and development of teenagers into adulthood. For introverted and shy students, social interaction and talking with others can be an agonizing experience. Yet communication and social skills are a vital part of life that only better and benefit the quality of ourselves and our experiences. And, like any other skill, they are always improved with practice. These common retail positions provide valuable opportunities to advance these communication and social skills through the common obligation of interacting with and assisting customers.

Beyond the tangible interpersonal benefits of taking on the responsibility of a high school job, specifically, the manner in which student workers grow more adept at communicating and working through conflicts of interest that may arise in the workplace, those social abilities extend beyond the position one holds in high school. When interviewing with prospective employers in the future, however, such speech and problem-solving abilities will serve to complement the palpable résumé improvement synonymous with work, regardless of the station, concurrent with academics at the secondary level. By establishing connections to employers early on in one’s vocational life, they attain valuable references who can vouch for their work ethic, character, and qualifications, improving their likelihood of being hired in their next line of work, provided they view their job as an opportunity rather than an obligation and act accordingly. Moreover, by demonstrating their ability to manage their time properly by balancing their focus and effort on class and customer service, prospective college students can not only place high school jobs on their résumés but on their college applications, where students can demonstrate how they have advanced their interest or skills in a desired profession. Rigorous post-high school education necessitates the ability to manage one’s time between self-care, academic pursuits, extracurricular activities, and their social life, and such aptitude rarely goes unnoticed or uninitialized, both after high school and after one’s first job.