| (Due to the length of this document only the Executive Summary has been posted. Please click here for a full, Adobe Acrobat, version of this report. For your convenience, a list of bookmarks has been incorporated
into the document to allow you to easily link to different sections within the publication. To view these bookmarks, select "View" from the toolbar and then select "Bookmarks and Page" from the list.)
Executive Summary
The following report is the product of nearly two years of
extensive research and consultation carried out by a team of
children and youth experts in Poland. It is the first report of
its kind to thoroughly document the situation of Polish children
and youth, painting a picture of the issues and trends
influencing their development.
It is our hope that the report will be useful to funding
organizations, nongovernmental organizations, academicians,
researchers, policy makers, the media, and others seeking to
better understand the complexity of youth needs and opportunities
in today's Poland. Poland has a high proportion of children and
youth, making it a demographically young country. For this
reason, it is all the more important to safeguard their
development and thereby the country's future.
Two national surveys of children and youth were conducted in
December 1992 especially for this report. Both were commissioned
by the Polish Children and Youth Foundation (PCYF) and carried
out by the Public Opinion Research Center (Centrum Badania Opinii
Spo ecznej), a polling service. Other data sources are specified
in each chapter. In general, data comparisons are made within the
time period 1988-1992.
During that period, Polish children and youth were exposed to
great social and economic upheavals. Politically, the communist
government fell in a peaceful revolution, and democratically
elected officials began the arduous task of changing the country
over to a free-market economy and Western-styled democracy.
During this transition period, great economic stresses resulted
from the transition from a centrally planned economy dependent
upon a bloc of Eastern socialist countries to a more
capitalistic-based, marketplace orientation with strong ties to
Western Europe and the United States. Families were greatly
affected by job layoffs as factories and industries were
reorganized, downsized and privatized.
Currently, forty percent of Polish families live below the
poverty level. A growing number of young Poles are pessimistic
about their chances of a better life. The youngest surveyed were
not aware of signs of economic crisis in their families, but the
older ones became concerned over financial circumstances and just
as pessimistic as adults about prospects for improvement. Deep
concern and pessimism are widespread among Polish youth regarding
their futures#151;only forty percent believe that they will have
a better life than their parents. Other areas of particular
concern highlighted in the report include:
Education#151;At the elementary school level,
conditions are generally overcrowded and more schools should be
built. All schools follow the same national curriculum and use
the same textbooks. While the number of youth pursuing secondary
diplomas has grown (as has the number of those entering college),
there are negative factors, including a high student-teacher
ratio and authoritarian teaching methods. Current educational
methods are believed to contribute to passivity and apathy among
Polish youth.
Health#151;One-third of all schoolchildren should be
provided with regular medical care because of ill health. Five
hundred thousand are chronically ill or disabled; 70 percent of
these are mentally disabled. Some 550,000 children and youth are
hospitalized each year. Seventeen percent of hospital patients in
the 5-19 age group are victims of road accidents. An equal number
are hospitalized for respiratory problems resulting from
environmental pollution. One in three poles under the age of 19
lives in an environmentally degraded area.
Community life#151;The involvement of young Poles in
community life is hampered by two factors: a lack of proper role
models and a lack of self-reliance. Polish parents do not
encourage their children to be responsible for themselves, and
young people's start in life takes place late by Western
standards. Young people are discouraged from becoming involved,
and do not believe that they can shape the reality around them.
On the positive side, young people adapt faster to change than
adults. They are becoming more aware of team approaches to
problem-solving and more are joining a variety of organizations.
Values and Beliefs#151;Only a small percentage of
those youth surveyed placed particular value on independence at
work, creativity and the possibility of making important
decisions in the world of business and politics. Since the
1980's, there has been a tendency among young people to
concentrate on family and social life and to shun involvements
outside the family and a small circle of friends.
Career Prospects#151;Widespread unemployment has
affected the young generation of Poles, who fear that they will
be unable to get jobs. Retraining and job development programs,
which are basic forms of alleviating unemployment, are almost
non-existent in Poland, or are available to only a few.
In light of the pressing needs of Polish children and youth,
the Polish Children and Youth Foundation was established to
identify and support programs that have demonstrated their
effectiveness in meeting young people's needs. PCYF is working to
strengthen the nongovernmental sector serving children and youth
in Poland through providing networking and leadership training
opportunities. PCYF is also working to increase philanthropy
among local and international donors while positively influencing
policies and practices beneficial to Polish children and youth.
We hope that you will find the information contained in this
report useful and will join with us in efforts to promote the
positive development of Poland's young people at this critical
juncture in the country's history.
Maria Holzer
Executive Director President and Chief Executive Officer
Polish Children and Youth Foundation
Rick R. Little
International Youth Foundation
|