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Chopper
Down
Parents Get Conflicting Signals About Nurturing Teens
by
Stephen Wallace, M.S.Ed.
March 1, 2006
So-called
"helicopter parents" have been recently criticized in the popular
press for hovering over their adolescent children, hyper-involving themselves
in young lives more in need of independence than nurturing. Such recriminations
follow on the heels of studies suggesting that parents are not paying enough
attention to teens, thus spawning an epidemic of destructive behavior.
So, whos a parent to believe?
Encouragingly, new Teens Today research from SADD (Students Against
Destructive Decisions) and Liberty Mutual Group suggests a middle course,
pointing parents towards paying attention to the right things at the right
times.
There is no question that as young people turn the corner from childhood to
adolescence they have innate needs for both space and independence. Each fuels
an important developmental quest for personal identity and a peer group with
which to assimilate. But neither requires the emotional abandonment that often
accompanies the teenage years.
In truth, teens very much want some signal that the adults in their lives
notice and appreciate their advancing maturity. Yet in the midst
of the modern-day, frenetic American pace, we either forget or simply fail
to provide the meaningful, ritualistic celebrations of transition to newfound
independence and responsibility to the family and community that marked transition
for earlier generations.
According to Teens Today, almost half of high school students (42 percent)
and more than one quarter of middle school students (30 percent) say Mom and
Dad arent recognizing their important milestones.
The result? Teens whose parents pay the least attention to important adolescent
transitions, such as puberty, school changes, and key birthdays, are more
likely to engage in high-risk behaviors, including drinking, drug use, early
sexual intercourse, and dangerous driving. They are also more likely to feel
stressed and depressed.
It seems clear that, absent reasonable recognition of their advancement, many
teens simply make up their own rites of passage, seeking alternative routes
to "maturity" that frequently include destructive choices.
Alarmingly, these are choices parents often dont know about.
Matching self-reported activities of teens with the perceptions of their parents,
the new Teens Today research confirms earlier findings of a "reality
gap" that leaves many families frighteningly disconnected. For example,
compared to what their own parents say about them, high school teens are:
Its
time to bridge the gap.
Traditional recognitions of passage prompt the type of parent-teen dialogue
proven to reduce the likelihood of underage drinking, drug use, early intimate
sexual behavior, and risky driving. They also link generations through tangible
acknowledgements of physical and sometimes subtle social and emotional change.
Just as important, marking important steps in adolescent lives helps teens
build bridges between whom they were, whom they are, and whom they are becoming
crystallizing their search for purpose while preparing them for a less
egocentric, more collectivist role in society.
Heres what parents can do.
Identify significant transitions.
Figuring out which transitions are most important to your teen is a critical
first step. What "counts" for one teen (e.g., turning sixteen, getting
a first job, going on a first date, receiving a drivers license) may
not matter much to another.
Communicate about and celebrate important life events.
Sending the message, whether through dialogue or a special time together,
that you are "dialed in" to your teen as he takes significant steps
toward adulthood is an important way to say, "I love you, I care about
you, and I see that you are growing up!"
Encourage teens to explore healthy growth opportunities.
Supporting your teens involvement in structured activities embedded
with real opportunities for achievement and reward will help her climb the
rungs toward and find initiation into adulthood.
Six years of Teens Today research make clear the incredibly influential
role that parents and other caring adults can play in guiding teens toward
safe, healthy choices. This latest report provides even clearer examples of
how underscoring the payoff for paying attention.
Chopper up.
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