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How to Live with an Adolescent

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Title: How to Live with an Adolescent


1
How to Live with an Adolescent
  • Parenting Workshop 2
  • League Academy of Communication Arts
  • Merry L. Cox, Principal

2
The Roller-Coaster Years Raising Your Child
Through the Maddening Yet Magical Middle School
Years
by Charlene C. Giannetti, Margaret Sagarese
3
Getting a View from the Ferris Wheel
  • Imagine for a moment what life is like for
    children ages 10-15 today
  • The biggest challenge in dealing with this age
    group is their roller-coaster emotions.
  • (Middle School teacher from Washington)

4
Adolescents today
  • Yearn for independence, yet are still being
  • told what to do
  • Eager to voice opinions but have trouble forming
    coherent arguments
  • Worry about their appearance just when nature is
    wreaking havoc on their bodies
  • Worry about their school work just when it
    increases in workload and responsibilities
  • Maintain a hectic schedule with school, sports,
    and extracurricular activities, when their bodies
    need more sleep

5
Parents, Dont Be Fooled
  • Do you feel your adolescent child
  • Needs parents less than younger children?
  • Needs to be left alone to become independent?
  • Cares more about what their peers think than
    parents?
  • Does not want you in their personal lives?

6
Young Adolescents need Parents More not Less
  • Parents, when your child says, Leave me
    alone, take another look
  • What your child may be trying to say is,
  • I want more privacy than you are giving me
    now. But dont go too far. I might need you
    later.

7
Strategies Discover Your Past as Middlers
  • Find a photo of yourself when you were this age
  • Call your parents or siblings. Recall with them
    what it was like during this age.
  • Play some music or songs popular when you were a
    Middler.
  • Find your report card from this time period.

8
Are You Spending Enough Time with Your Middler?
  • According to a 1995 New York Times Poll
  • 93 of 9-12 year olds consider being a part of a
    loving family more important than owning material
    things
  • 88 credit family as their greatest source of
    self-esteem
  • 72 wanted to talk more to their parents about
    schoolwork

9
Middlers are Funny
  • My son or daughter fun?
  • Are we talking about the same kid?
  • Middlers are really three children-
  • The one who behaves as your child
  • The one who shares with other adults things they
    wont share with you
  • The one who hangs out with other kids

10
Playing Mind-Reader
  • Skillmasters
  • Begin to build and exploit their own unique
    abilities coming into their own
  • Look for opportunities to relish in their
    accomplishments
  • This self-discovery may sometimes resemble
    arrogance, indifference and anger if they fall
    short of goals

11
Playing Mind-Reader
  • Great Thinkers
  • Begin to develop sophisticated reasoning
  • Looking for deeper meanings
  • Applies new intellect into problem solving
  • Still may need some help in formulating his
    arguments, making decisions

12
Playing Mind-Reader
  • Attention-Seekers
  • Still need and want approval of parents and other
    adults
  • Desperately seeking adult compliments, smiles,
    kind words, and respect
  • Dont want parents to fix their hair and clothes
    in public

13
Playing Mind-Reader
  • Activists
  • Resemble the freshman congresspeople who come
    into Washington in a storm following elections to
    change the world.

14
Playing Mind-Reader
  • Idealists
  • Develop their own sense of values.
  • Will catch adults saying one thing and doing
    another Gotcha!

15
Playing Mind-Reader
  • Social Workers
  • Sympathetic and with guidance, begin to see and
    meet the needs of others
  • Sweet and giving nature that comes out in
    unexpected ways

16
Playing Mind-Reader
  • Innocents
  • Still look at the world in wide-eyed wonder
  • Caught between childhood and adulthood
  • Try to make sophisticated arguments often with
    incorrect facts or use words in the wrong context

17
Playing Mind-Reader
  • Comedians
  • Begin to develop a sophisticated
  • sense of humor
  • Moves past bathroom humor to more sophisticated
    humor that reflects increased vocabulary
  • Humor can backfire still trying to figure out
    the difference between satire and sarcasm
  • Can be too blunt, though not intending to be rude

18
Suggestions for living with a developing Middler
  • Leave them in charge
  • Encourage their enthusiasm
  • Assist them in finding ways to help others
  • Feed their intellectual growth
  • Build a bridge from home to school
  • Ease the transition from childhood to adulthood
  • Teach correct social behavior

19
Develop the Art of Adolescent Affection
  • Find a moment each day to show your middle school
    child how much you love them.
  • Write notes
  • Leave voice mail
  • Tell them when you see them
  • Give hugs, especially after you have punished
    them

20
House of Mirrors Am I Normal?
  • When Middlers look in the mirror, they see
    distorted images
  • Supersensitive about their bodies
  • Increased weight 20-30 pounds-10 pounds a year
  • All parts of the body dont grow at the same time
    or rate
  • Feel as though they have been invaded by a body
    snatcher
  • There is NO Normal!

21
Haunted House
  • Coping is a challenge for all of us
  • Four traits of happy people
  • Like themselves
  • Sense of personal control over their lives
  • Optimistic
  • Extroverts
  • Middlers are manic depressive en masse
  • up one minute and down the next

22
Haunted House
  • Classic Worries of Middlers
  • Social anxiety
  • A parent dying
  • Divorce
  • School
  • Bodily injury
  • The future
  • Gender woes
  • Racial inequality

23
Haunted House
  • Warning signs
  • Inability to sleep or too much sleep
  • No interest in friends, school, activities
  • Marked changes
  • Risky behavior business
  • Rebellion directed toward parents or teachers
  • Death or suicide themes

24
Haunted House
  • What to do? Unconditional love.
  • Help them like themselves more
  • Nurture them towards positive self-determination
  • Teach your Middler how to acquire control over
    life be a stress busting example
  • Steer them towards rewarding relationships
  • Turn your pessimist into an optimist

25
Haunted House
  • Help them manage worry
  • 98 of worry is wasted
  • 40 of worry time focuses on things that never
    happened
  • 15 of fretting wasted on things that turn out
    better than they expected
  • 35 lost on things that cant be changed
  • 80 revolves around petty insignificant items

26
Haunted House
  • What can we do?
  • Enlighten your worrywart
  • Burst some worry balloons
  • Help them determine whether the worry is within
    or beyond control
  • Let worry be a call to action or otherwise turn
    it off

27
Escape Artist
  • Battle for Independence
  • Issue is control-YOU have it THEY want it!
  • Its not FAIR! Nobody listens to us!
  • World is overrun with rules, regulations, and
    restrictions

28
Escape Artist
  • Incorporate the three Rs
  • Reward, Recognize, and be Rational
  • Reward good behavior
  • Recognize which discipline efforts work most
    effectively
  • Consistent-Punish each time
  • Appropriate-Let the punishment fit the crime
  • Results-Make it results oriented
  • Each- They are individuals
  • Swift- Dont put off the punishment until later
  • Rational Time yourself out when you are losing
    it.

29
Escape Artist
  • Battle Zones
  • Everyones doing it or going there
  • The messy room
  • Mouthing off
  • Privacy
  • School and schoolwork
  • The look

30
Escape Artist
  • As you encounter the battle campaigns of the
    Middlers, make sure you dont win the short term
    battles and lose the war by forfeiting their
    affections.
  • It is not easy being a parent.

31
Three Ring Circus
  • Why is your Middler
  • Distracted, Disorganized, and Disinterested?
  • Distraction Concentration on tasks for a length
    of time is difficult
  • Research shows that between the ages of 12-14 a
    childs ability to learn slacks off when demands
    in classes may be increasing.

32
Three Ring Circus
  • What should I expect?
  • A temporary lag in homework or disappointing
    grade here and there is to be expected during
    this time
  • If you see dramatic changes in performance and it
    continues to slide then you may have a red flag
    indicating a problems

33
Three Ring Circus
  • Do you find your Middler to be Disorganized?
  • Constantly forgets things
  • Messy room
  • Constantly loses things
  • Underestimates the amount of time to complete a
    task
  • Does homework but fails to turn it in
  • Seems oblivious of time

34
Three Ring Circus
  • What can I do to help with Disorganization?
  • Arrange a good place to work
  • Use the Agenda
  • Make lists
  • Use visual and verbal reminders
  • Use an oven timer
  • Break up large tasks into smaller ones
  • Back up written assignments if they are often
    lost
  • Clean out the backpack weekly
  • Set a good example
  • Prepare the night before

35
Three Ring Circus
  • Disinterested Interests shift during this age
  • Privacy becomes important
  • They want and need time alone

36
Three Ring Circus
  • Master Middler-Speak
  • Fine
  • Nothing
  • I dont know
  • Stop-Look-Listen approach to communication

37
Three Ring Circus
  • Three Rules for 3-D Middlers
  • Dont retreat
  • Control your reactions
  • Be an advocate

38
Ringing the BellHelping your Middler succeed in
school
  • A good parents involvement is always welcomed
    when it leads to a partnership among parent,
    child, and teacher.
  • (Middle school teacher)

39
Ringing the Bell
  • Grades alone do not define a successful
    adolescent
  • Brains grow at different rates
  • Doing well in school may be eclipsed by
    popularity
  • Discover the opposite sex
  • Complicated times to grow up

40
Ringing the Bell
  • How can I help my Middler succeed in school?
  • Stay informed
  • Prepare your child for learning
  • Maintain high expectations
  • Nurture your learner
  • Make learning a multimedia experience
  • Keep criticism of teachers and school to a minimum

41
Ringing the Bell
  • Parents should be seen and not heard
  • (at least in a Middlers presence)
  • Cheerleader
  • Chauffeur
  • Chaperone
  • Committee Member
  • Resource
  • Volunteer
  • Club sponsor or assistant

42
Ringing the Bell
  • Stay informed and help keep us informed!
  • School newsletter
  • Electronic Weekly News
  • PTA and SICA
  • Agenda
  • School Calendar
  • E-mail and phone calls

43
Thank you!
  • Next Parent Workshop
  • Date March 26th
  • Noon and 630
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