a) Children develop and mature at different rates. There are however certain expectations for their development between the ages of 0 and 19 years.…
When walking down the street there is an eight-year-old sitting on the side of the street crying, with dirty, ripped clothing. The young child is nothing but skin and bones from not eating for a week. If there was not a set age for becoming an adult this would be a common scene. The law recognizes an 18-year-old as an adult. If there was not a set age for adulthood, parents could stop caring for their children at young ages. The law requires parents to care for their children up to the age 18. If adulthood was recognized based on maturity, a parent could say their kid was mature at age eight. Yet, the kids aren’t allowed to work until age fourteen. This could leave the kids in starvation, and critical life situations. Therefore, kids become…
The human brain does not fully develop until the age of 25. For example Adnan was 17 years old when he was tried and sent to jail, but if you look at him know he has gotten awards for good behavior. This example shows that people could change in the future, but he did not get that chance. Instead he got sent to jail for 30+ years. In addition, this shows that Adnan changed if he had been given rehabilitation he would have been a different person now. In short, People younger…
However, age alone does not exempt one from making bad decisions or behaving in an impulsive manner. The main reason younger people are more commonly seen as being rash is because in general, younger people have not yet developed a strong sense of responsibility that is more commonly matured in older, more experienced people. Nevertheless, circumstances often mean that some young people are grounded in a very strong sense of responsibility, which reflect in their actions, while several older people feel no need for responsibility in their lives, and thus act in an impetuous or reckless…
Researchers studying the brain say the last section to develop, the frontal lobes, may not mature until a person is age 25 or older. You could say the frontal lobe is the executive center of the brain, the part of the brain that 's responsible for planning, organizing, anticipating the consequences of one 's actions. I am not suggesting raising the age to 25, but my studies have shown that the frontal lobe matures 60% in the one year between 16 and 17. Therefore I believe raising the permit age to 16, the age for a restricted license to 17, with opportunity for a full license at 18 years old would make a significant difference.…
Several would argue that the 21 year old drinking age is possibly too low, some even think that the age should be lowered, and some even think the age should be at 25. I believe that the drinking age should remain the same at 21 due to the fact that there are already plenty of issues with underage drinking. “The Age of Responsibility” by Alan Greenblatt, goes into depth about the different problems and aspects that go into searching for a golden age to entrust people to have the ability to accomplish certain things. Considering that there are an excessive amount of issues that relate to drinking, I feel that there are countless efforts that could be put into decreasing the overwhelming volume of underage drinking, drunk driving, and alcohol abuse. There are copious amounts of conflicting arguments that believe the drinking age should be decreased to 18, whereas some feel that the age should even be increased to 25.…
According to Vogel this suggestion, many people would make the argument that teens are not in full control of their actions due to immaturity and lack of knowledge of the world (Vogel, 1994). However, the government has already deemed this age group able to have a job or drive a car. Think about it, how is it that these people that the government puts responsible in some ways are suddenly too immature to realize that they are pointing a gun at someone or physically or sexually assaulting another human being well that is where society is wrong in believing they are mature. Where is the magical line drawn that says one teen is responsible and mature and another is not? The truth is that state and federal guidelines simply attach an age to privileges. Why is it not such a simple process for determining if someone is of legal age to stand adult trial, I will tell you why because society wants to give them another chance to regain their mentality? Another concern that opponents of sending juveniles to adult court for violent crimes would argue is that these “kids” are not in control of their actions or responsible for their crimes because they have been in poor home and…
The twenty-one restriction look as if it’s out of date in today’s society. Many guardians of today’s teenagers were legally permitted to drink at the age of eighteen. Teenagers today face more responsibility and are treated much differently from the way their parents were treated. If twenty-one is considered so mature, then why is eighteen considered an adult? At the age of eighteen, an individual can vote, serve on a jury, stay out without a curfew, leave home, drive,…
Lowering the drinking age to eighteen, mistake or a way to stop larger problems? I have found a website that, if you are for lowering the drinking, will clear a lot of these kinds of questions up. Choose Responsibility is a non-profit organization founded by President Emeritus John M. McCardell Jr. of Middlebury College, when McCardell was approached by the Robertson Foundation, a foundation interested in investigating the consequences of the 21 year-old drinking age. The Effects of the 21 Year-Old Drinking Age: A White Paper was completed in September 2006 after more than a year of writing and research by McCardell and a team of assistants. Upon the report’s positive review, McCardell received additional funds to start Choose Responsibility. Choose Responsibility is a great site to seek out all those answers that you are longing for to be answered about the Amethyst Initiative. The Amethyst Initiative supports informed and unimpeded debate on the 21 year-old drinking age.…
Many people say a teen is not responsible enough to drink alcohol so they shouldn’t be allowed to. This argument gets completely erased with the fact that 18 year olds have the ability to serve in the military and can even vote for the countries leader. These two facts alone show that they are responsible enough to make their own decisions as to what the can and want to do. As the responsibility factor…
The drinking age of 21 seems to still cause problems, and many experts and opinionated citizens believe lowering the drinking age is a viable solution. Barrett Seaman, the current president of Choose Responsibility, often discusses and debates the pros and cons of lowering the legal drinking age in the United States. Seaman believes lowering the drinking age may be a solution to the problems often found across the country, especially on college campuses. Seaman states in a Boston University article, “I look to Canada and to the rest of the world and I see that people can drink at a younger age and be civilized about it” (Daniloff). This may be true, but many adolescents are also irresponsible and senseless. Thousands of adolescents, young adults, and community members get killed each year due to alcohol related causes. In 2013 alone, 16.6 million adults had an AUD, and only 1.3 million of those ill people received proper treatment at a specialized facility. Alcohol isn’t just a liquid depressant used for entertainment at a party, or to cope with a broken relationship, it is a serious problem in the United States, and throughout the world. When the drinking age was raised to 21, the number of deaths caused by alcohol decreased. Lowering the drinking age will only cause more adolescents to drink irresponsibly resulting in an added number of…
My essay paper revolves around personal responsibility that deals with individuals and education. With the references I chosen, I have researched many articles on the subject personal responsibility that has to do with education and have found that these articles is highly related to what I have to say in my essay. One of the articles that I have chosen is mostly based on statistics and surveys, which could give me a better understanding of a wide range of people. While the other articles goes in depth on how personal responsibility relates to higher education. I have learned a lot from these articles and have better and bigger understanding on how personal responsibility should be related with higher learning.…
Personal responsibility is the key to personal, professional and academic success because it cannot be achieved by anyone else. We cannot decide which obstacles life will through our way, only how we respond to those obstacles. It is these choices in response to such obstacles that shape our lives and determine our ability to succeed. For that reason we must think carefully before deciding on a course of action. One should consider a course that is in line with their personal, academic, and professional goals in order to keep on track. It is my opinion that we each decide what we make out of our lives. Either we choose to use each obstacle as an excuse for failure or we can choose to accept personal responsibility, take appropriate action, and live a better life.…
Some provinces have the upper age limits set at 16, and others at 19. However, this doesn’t make sense to me, as children across Canada should have a standard of adulthood to look to. Furthermore, upper age limits affect a child’s ability to access social services, and developing a nationwide standard at age 18 will ensure that all children in Canada under that age will have access to the services they need. Furthermore, the YCJA legislation that allows provinces to set age limits for youth sentencing, is an incredibly discriminatory practice, as children in one province are being treated completely differently than a child in another province. There should be a standard that exists throughout Canada in order to ensure that all children are being treated equally and fairly. My culture also has an impact on my viewpoint on upper age limits. The culture that I was raised in, determined “childhood” by puberty, so once a child had hit puberty they were no longer a child. This was a very sad experience, as children are often forced to grow up long before they are ready to. That is why I believe the nationwide standard should be 18, as this age allows for children to have access to services, and environments to properly develop…
So this is the deal: society today frowns on giving the individual responsibility. We are governed by a set of rules that limits the ability of any individual to make a choice, because we believe that the individual will make the wrong choice, for either himself, others, or both. For example, take traffic rules. Rules such as stopping at stop signs and not running red lights should be entirely optional. A cop should not have jurisdiction or the responsibility to enforce such rules; they should merely be considered as social "recommendations." "You are recommended to stop here, but you may proceed without stopping at your own risk." Sitting at a red light when no traffic is coming makes one feel like a fool and a cog. Why do we sit there, comfortable in our upholstered seats, staring at a red light waiting for the green when we can obviously see that there is no cross-traffic and that it is safe to cross? Because we are scared that we will get a ticket. Why are we scared that we will get a ticket? Because we are scared of what others may think when they find out that we got a ticket for running a red light. Because we will be ostracized by our peers, and considered an unsafe driver. Because we are scared that it will go on the infamous, anonymous "record" and that we will be scarred for life as if with a scarlet letter. Why do we respect the "record"? Why do we place such value in not even making a single mistake if we can help it?…